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Rayann’s -5.5 D: Optometrist Confirms Full Diopter Gains

By Jake Steiner|January 21st, 2018|5 Diopters, Optometrist Confirmed, Student Reviews|
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Alexandra: -4.50 Down To -2.00 (In 12 Months)

By Jake Steiner|January 15th, 2018|3 Diopters, 4 Diopters, Low Myopia, Student Reviews|
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Aza’s Optometrist Confirms: 1.50 Diopter Astigmatism Reduction

By Jake Steiner|January 13th, 2018|Astigmatism, Low Myopia (2 Diopters & Less), Optometrist Confirmed, Student Reviews|
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Sudden Onset Child Myopia: From 20/20 To -6 Diopters (in a day?!)

By Jake Steiner|January 11th, 2018|6 Diopters, Back To 20/20, Child Myopia, Student Reviews|
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What MEOW Means – Finally Revealed

By Jake Steiner|January 10th, 2018|News|
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Sander: To Good To Be True? (28cm To 38cm Gains)

By Jake Steiner|January 9th, 2018|Student Reviews|
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Pro Topic: One Eye Improves Quickly, The Other Does Not (Why?)

By Jake Steiner|January 7th, 2018|Glasses, Nearsighted: How To's|
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Nicole: Ophthalmologist Confirms -3.5 D Myopia Reduction

By Jake Steiner|January 6th, 2018|3 Diopters, 4 Diopters, 5 Diopters, 6 Diopters, 7 Diopters, 8 Diopters, 9 Diopters, High Myopia (10+ Diopters), Optometrist Confirmed, Student Reviews|
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Drone Flying For Vision Improvement

By Jake Steiner|January 5th, 2018|Video, Vision Health|
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Aniket: Optometrist Confirms 0.75 D Reduction

By Jake Steiner|January 3rd, 2018|Just With Blog, Optometrist Confirmed|
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Read Our Disclaimer!

All contents on this site should be considered research material only.  We are not offering medical advice or treatment or cures for any illnesses. The reduced lens method is strictly experimental. Before considering taking steps to control your own myopia, you should definitely visit a qualified ophthalmologist for a comprehensive eyesight checkup.   Specific diagnoses illnesses aside,  most) myopia may be considered to not be an illness at all.  Most myopia is likely just a matter of environmental strain, and excessive prescription use.  You yourself may be able to control and reduce your own myopia by 1) managing eye strain, 2) conservative prescription lens use, and 3) targeted positive stimulus. We recommend finding a prevention minded optometrist to supplement your journey with professional advice and prescription management help.  While not a requisite, a supportive optometrist may make your journey that much more enjoyable! Potential Side Effects: (1) You may experience astigmatism-like symptoms, especially if you reduce too fast or without paying attention to this (transient) symptom. Search our Youtube channel or Website for 'transient astigmatism'. This can easily be prevented or managed. (2) Some people report an increase in eye floaters when practicing active focus. In general floaters are considered harmless but a sudden increase in floaters should be evaluated by a medical trained professional, as they could be a sign of retinal detachment or other serious medical condition. Generally taking it easy, not over straining, practicing gently and with patience should help. (3) Headaches. You're taking on a very much unsanctioned self-experiment changing diopters. Anytime you overdo things or change too much or aren't educating yourself first, you may expose yourself to strain symptoms. You should be experiencing no pain, headaches, or discomfort if you do things correctly!
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