What are you doing today?

Fun aspect of our healthcare system: looks like one eye will be done in Dec. and the other in Jan. That way I get to pay two insurance deductibles :-(
Generally, surgeons prefer to let a few weeks pass between the two procedures to enable healing in the first eye get well underway and address any issues like infection before proceeding with the second. I was able to pull some strings to get mine done ten days apart, but that was the minimum they'd allow. The worst part for me was all the eye drops. It usually took me a few tries before I hit the target.
 
Generally, surgeons prefer to let a few weeks pass between the two procedures to enable healing in the first eye get well underway and address any issues like infection before proceeding with the second. I was able to pull some strings to get mine done ten days apart, but that was the minimum they'd allow. The worst part for me was all the eye drops. It usually took me a few tries before I hit the target.
The issue isn’t the time interval. It’s that the time interval spans two calendar years. I’d be happy to do Jan. 1 and Feb. 1, for example.

And, yeah, I’m never used eye drops, so that’s going to be an adventure.
 
Generally, surgeons prefer to let a few weeks pass between the two procedures to enable healing in the first eye get well underway and address any issues like infection before proceeding with the second. I was able to pull some strings to get mine done 10 days apart.
Mine were scheduled 2 weeks apart. Gave me enough time to “see” how everything was working and to be rid of the nighttime cover.


The worst part for me was all the eye drops. It usually took me a few tries before I hit the target.

That one drop that felt like a shock. Hated it.
 
Count your blessings.
I have to convince my dog to hold still for her drops every evening...
In honor of you guys I bought some eye drops today and have been promising. So far I have about a 25% hit rate. I have about a month to figure it out. I’m finding the big problem is that I can’t calibrate how hard to squeeze the bottle, so I squeeze then blink involuntarily but there’s no drop, and I struggle with that for a few seconds until it finally comes out. I need a fancy electrical eyedrop appliance that drops the drop as soon as it is properly lined up. Patent that, somebody,
 
Try waiting until the drop has accumulated and is almost falling (in the right position) and then give the bottle a tiny twitch.
 
Try waiting until the drop has accumulated and is almost falling (in the right position) and then give the bottle a tiny twitch.
everyone has advice! My daughter is making fun of me.

I’ll learn.
 
In honor of you guys I bought some eye drops today and have been promising. So far I have about a 25% hit rate. I have about a month to figure it out. I’m finding the big problem is that I can’t calibrate how hard to squeeze the bottle, so I squeeze then blink involuntarily but there’s no drop, and I struggle with that for a few seconds until it finally comes out. I need a fancy electrical eyedrop appliance that drops the drop as soon as it is properly lined up. Patent that, somebody,
My problem was getting the drop in the right place. Sometimes I was off by just a little bit, so most of the fluid streamed down my face. Occasionally, I blinked as the drop was on its way. But I found that head position made a huge difference. I used to administer drops while sitting or standing with my head tilted. Now I just lie on my back and look up as much as I can, which makes it easier.

As for the amount of pressure needed, just practice with the eye drops you bought. However, every bottle is different, so try 2-3 drops with the meds when you get them.
 
My problem was getting the drop in the right place. Sometimes I was off by just a little bit, so most of the fluid streamed down my face. Occasionally, I blinked as the drop was on its way. But I found that head position made a huge difference. I used to administer drops while sitting or standing with my head tilted. Now I just lie on my back and look up as much as I can, which makes it easier.

As for the amount of pressure needed, just practice with the eye drops you bought. However, every bottle is different, so try 2-3 drops with the meds when you get them.
I’ll have to be a little careful after the right eye surgery - for that one I am not supposed to be face-up (though, thank goodness i don’t have to do the “sleep for a month on my stomach” thing that comes with a lot of other retina surgeries). So I’ve been practicing with my head at around 45 degrees. (I’m sure a few seconds face up would be fine, but the last thing I need is something else to get anxious about).

I’m glad you guys triggered me to practice, though. It would have been unfortunate if the first time I tried this was after the surgery.
 
We're eye drop addicts so we can get them in our eye when just waking up, on a car, while running, when riding a roller coaster ...

We can shoot them across the room into each other's eyes.
 
In honor of you guys I bought some eye drops today and have been promising. So far I have about a 25% hit rate. I have about a month to figure it out.

It will be much easier if you just get your wife to do it. Then you get the surprise of not know exactly when the drop will hit your eye. LOL
 
We were up a few months ago for the Nephews graduation party, had a ball, stayed downtown (aka, DON-TON), hit some great bars, walked a bridge over to the Southern Tier brewery (right next to PNC park), had great food/beer, went to the Museum of Illusion which was a BLAST, and hit the up the amazing Pittsburgh zoo and aquarium.

Heck a view from our room, stayed at the Fairmont off Market Street (super fun area):

1762368983297.png
Sounds like an awesome trip! Pittsburgh really does surprise people once you get out and explore a bit. Staying downtown and being able to walk everywhere is such a huge perk. The bridge walk to Southern Tier has such a cool vibe, and the Museum of Illusions is way more fun than most people expect. The zoo and aquarium are always solid choices too.

And that Fairmont view? Honestly hard to beat. With all the graduation celebrating you mentioned, I’m sure your nephew was rocking a sharp grad stole at his party — those little touches make the milestone feel even more special.

Sounds like you all really made the most of the trip!”
 
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