01/03/2026
Why Are So Many People Okay With Mediocre Vision?
Here is something funny I’ve noticed about life:�
Whatever I worry about… rarely happens.
Seriously.�The things I lose sleep over?�They don’t show up.�And one of the biggest examples of this is something small—but incredibly personal for many humans, young and old.
Wearing glasses.🤓
People worry:
* “I won’t look like myself.”
* “I’ll look older.”
* “People will judge me.”
* “What if I hate them?”
* “it’s a sign of weakness and dependency”
So instead… they squint.�They strain.�They adapt.
They borrow their buddys glasses to read a menu.
And no one talks about how strange that actually is.
The Invisible Compromise
Here’s the thing about vision loss:�It’s sneaky.
You don’t wake up one day and think,�“Wow, I suddenly can’t see.”
It happens slowly.�So slowly that your brain just fills in the gaps.
Blurry leaves on trees?�Normal.
Stars that look like fuzzy blobs instead of sharp points of light?�Normal.
A dusty-looking world when you’re watching a crystal-clear HD TV every night?�Also normal.
And that’s what fascinates me.
We demand high definition in our screens…�but we accept low definition in our lives.
Why?
The Fear Isn’t Glasses
There’s no official medical term for the fear of wearing glasses, but if there were, it wouldn’t be about vision.
It would be about:
* Fear of change
* Fear of judgment
* Fear of the unknown
Because once people do put on glasses, almost no one says:
“Wow, that was a terrible decision.”
What they usually say is:
“Why didn’t I do this sooner?”
That’s not regret.�That’s realization.
You Don’t Know What You’re Missing
There’s a special kind of FOMO we don’t talk about.
Not fear of missing out on events…�but fear of missing clarity you didn’t know existed.
You don’t miss individual leaves moving in the breeze�if you’ve never seen them clearly or not since your youth.
You don’t miss depth, contrast, sharp edges�until—suddenly—you see them.
And that moment?�That quiet “oh”?
That’s the sound of your brain recalibrating reality.
Glasses Aren’t Just About Seeing
Here’s where it gets interesting.
Glasses don’t just change how you see the world.�They change how the world sees you.
They can make you look:
* Smarter
* Cooler
* More serious
* More approachable
I’m not just a frustrated Optician, I am also a Real Estate advisor aka Realtor, and I’ll admit this openly:�I own different pairs of glasses for different situations.
One pair makes me look warm and friendly—great for first impressions.�Another pair makes me look more intense—perfect for negotiations or difficult conversations.
Same person.�Same brain.�Different frame.
And it works.
One pair says,�“I’m friendly. You can ask me questions.”
Another pair says,�“I read contracts for fun. Don’t test me.”
Same face.�Different attitude.
The LASIK Plot Twist
I know someone who had LASIK.
Perfect vision.
Still wears glasses to work.
Why?
Because glasses don’t just correct vision— They may just say,�“I’m in charge here.”
Not for vision.�For presence.
The Unexpected Benefits
Cosmetic:
The right shaped glasses hide dark circles.�They soften tired puffy eyes.�They stop squinting—which, by the way, causes that permanent furrowed brow people later try to erase with Botox.
In the long run, glasses are cheaper than Botox.
Safety:
If you have only one functional eye and one that’s limited, glasses aren’t optional—they’re vital protection.�If you work around hazards, any lenses are better than none.
You cannot get replacement eyeballs on Amazon.
I checked.
So Why the Resistance? Denial? Pride? Vanity?
Part of it is confusion. It’s a science that most do not seek to understand.
Also cost confusion. Dollar store cheaters vs online optical services vs brick and mortar shops. �Part of it is branding. Assuming all glasses are expensive.�Part of it is being rushed through big-box experiences that treat glasses like fast food. Not pleasant.
In. Out. Next customer.
And a big part of it for many is this:
That “good enough” is good enough.
And we carry that belief—literally—on our faces. Your face (and friends and family) deserve better! It is the first thing your people see and have to look at while interacting with you. Properly fit and styled frames and lenses add confidence that you dont have to yank your glasses off when either speaking publicly or one on one. I thing I often say is “the best place to keep your glasses so you don’t lose them is on your nose”. For those who say “I dont need glasses, I just need them to read up close” it means you NEED glasses. (denial?)
Progressive lenses allow you to keep the lenses in front of your eyes all day….hands free! Not hanging on your shirt collar or on the top of your head as a make shift headband.
The Truth
Here’s the truth I wish more people knew:
Worrying about glasses is almost always worse (and more cumbersome) than wearing them.
The fear doesn’t come true.�The identity crisis doesn’t happen.�The judgment rarely exists.
What does happen is clarity.�Relief. Convenience.�And a quiet sense of wonder. Wow….I see leaves…..and stars! Ewww, and dust!
It’s natural to fear the unknown.
But one day, after you finally see clearly,�you’ll look back and realize how tightly you were tying your stomach in knots�over something that only made your world sharper, brighter, and easier to live in.
And you’ll wonder…
Why was I ever okay with mediocre vision?
PS: just Googled why consumers have an aversion toward wearing glasses, I found a surprising trend. Due to not understanding the science behind how corrective lenses help us see better and why our eyeballs need them, some young adults had anxiety about whether what they were seeing through the lenses was reality and preferred the blurry vision because it was more familiar. Makes sense in this world of AI and VR, but no less mind blowing for me. 🤯. I have to say it makes me a bit sad for them. 🥺.