The Real Cure for Eye Strain : More Experiences from People Around the World

Nav
4 min readApr 16, 2021

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This is a followup on my earlier article about the cure for eye strain (including the need to check with a capable ophthalmologist, since myopia and eye strain can have various other causes).

Before reading this, please first read what I wrote about The Real Cure for Eye Strain. Somebody seems to have un-indexed it from search engines.

A healthy break by closing the eyes, taking a nap when sleepy, ensuring 8 hours of uninterrupted sleep each night and getting a well balanced diet of properly cooked food, can do wonders. [Image attribution: Pexels.com]

1. Sanjeev’s experience

[Clicking the rectangle above, will take you to the website]

Sanjeev’s doctors were unable to figure out the cause of his eye pain. He theorizes that his problem arose from poor posture, and he developed a set of exercises to overcome the problem. Without knowing more about his condition and his lack of response to my communication, I’m not quite sure if his assumptions were accurate. I would assume he may have automatically reduced his computer use, which may have been the real reason for recovery.

2. Dmitriy’s experience

His experience seemed similar to mine, where he lost sleep and used the computer too much. The doctor had no clue about how to solve it (as he mentions in the end). He found my article useful. Hoping to hear from him once he gets cured.

3. Jack’s experience

Same problem. No doctor could help. Sadly, he suffered much longer than me. He mentions the strain began after he got a programming job, but he also believes that a neck injury may be another reason. I’d vouch for the excess hours of programming being the reason. The comments on his blog show a sad pattern of severe eye pain being faced by many…and inexperienced doctors sometimes thinking that the patient is lying.

4. Neil and Perry’s experience

These highlight other causes of excruciating eye pain and the danger of constantly using some kinds of eye drops. It also hints at severely affected nerves being a cause of the pain. What’s heart-wrenching here, is the same problem I’ve been through: dismissive doctors thinking that the patient is lying.

5. My experience

My experiments and process of getting cured led me to the commonsense solution of obtaining proper uninterrupted sleep for 8 hours, taking breaks by closing my eyes after 20 minutes of strenuous eye involvement and obtaining a well balanced diet of properly cooked food (proteins in particular). So far, this has been the only solution that worked. The fact that my eye power reduced a little, gave me more assurance of its efficacy.

Note to Employers

Dear employers, please make sure employees get the rest they need. Lack of rest can lead to errors and costly corrections. Rather than nudge people to work longer, try improving the way timelines and buffers are planned. No matter how urgent work is, let employees take periodic rest by allowing them to close their eyes or take a nap to rest. There’s already decades of research on productivity, which shows that long working hours are neither helpful for the employee nor the organization.

Protect your eyes

The number of people facing eye strain appears to be increasing. However, certain solutions/cures being provided to them and the constant pressure of school/college/work and digital-screens/sleep-loss/bad-food does not seem to allow them to heal. We need to come together to do more to build a healthy planet with healthy people. The gift of normal vision is especially too precious to ruin. It’s sad that people are being prescribed spectacles and eye drops and are made to work longer instead of being advised and allowed to get rest and recover. How many people’s eyesight needs to be ruined to make a living?

All this being said, one shouldn’t rely solely on self-diagnosis. Periodic checks by a capable doctor is necessary. If the strain is being caused by some other reason, even if the doctor couldn’t figure out the problem immediately, the diagnostic procedures may help eventually figure it out. But no matter what the doctor prescribes, never forget to do the three fundamental things:

1. Eight hours of uninterrupted sleep every night.

2. Closing the eyes after 20 minutes of strenuous eye involvement (also relax the face & neck muscles), and waiting till the strain subsides.

3. Getting a well balanced diet of properly cooked food.

Any responsible, sensible, competent doctor will prescribe these three things too.

I’d love to hear your opinions and experiences in the comments. Also, please tell more people about the cure. Not enough doctors are telling eye strain patients to get proper rest and sleep.

My next article: Understanding and helping people with eye strain.

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Nav
Nav

Written by Nav

An eye strain veteran who learnt from a decade of experience

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