Jane says...
> From what I've read, the majority of people who try
> monovision can adapt to it, but a minority cannot. When
> someone has never attempted monovision before, modified
> monovision (AKA blended vision) might be a better bet.
Thanks very much for the reply.
It occurs to me that one should be able to test how he might
like monovision by investing in a cheap pair of
single-vision glasses, and wearing them for a few weeks before
the surgery. The dominant eye would be corrected to
distance, and the other eye to either near or intermediate.
Wouldn't this give you the same effect as post-surgery
monovision would? Well, except for the cataract of course,
but at least you would have an idea whether monovision makes
you want to throw up. What do you think? Worth doing?
otisbrown@embarqmail.com - 04 May 2008 02:12 GMT
Dear George,
Yes, it would be a good idea to test mono-vision -- before
the final operation.
Mono-vision works better with contacts.
But does your brother wish to do it?
Enjoy,
> Jane says...
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> but at least you would have an idea whether monovision makes
> you want to throw up. What do you think? Worth doing?
Jane - 04 May 2008 05:46 GMT
On May 3, 7:12 pm, otisbr...@embarqmail.com wrote:
> Dear George,
>
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
>
> - Show quoted text -
I agree with the above post. I don't think monovision would work with
glasses--you'd probably end up with double vision. You'd have to try
it out with contact lenses. Unfortunately, if cataracts were a real
problem, this might not be possible. For someone who has never
attempted monovision before, modified monovision would be a much safer
choice.
Dan Abel - 04 May 2008 20:51 GMT
> Jane says...
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> but at least you would have an idea whether monovision makes
> you want to throw up. What do you think? Worth doing?
There's a lot of issues here, and I don't know very much about some of
them. Since your brother already uses one eye for distance and the
other for close, I would think much of the potential problem is already
eliminated. I have been told that glasses don't work for monovision,
and that contacts are much better. However, toric soft contacts don't
work for everybody.
Having posted the above, I wore monovision glasses for five years. I
wore them for one or two hours a day, after removing my contacts. They
worked OK, but not well. My doctor told me that they wouldn't work, but
after I explained that I had nothing to lose, since I couldn't see with
both eyes through glasses anyway, he wrote the prescription.
Best of luck to your brother. I have had cataract surgery in both eyes,
and it made a tremendous improvement in my vision.

Signature
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
dabel@sonic.net