Don’t get me wrong, I am the first person to value, and promote progressives. It’s just that some things, while generally beneficial, are not the answer for every situation. And when wrong—things can go wrong quickly and in unexpected ways.
Rick and I have just finished installing a largish tongue and groove ceiling. Overhead work is always a bitch—but we’re getting on in years, and that kind of work poses extra challenges. Even though it’s at the ceiling, it’s actually close work. But my eyeglasses are backwards to the cause. In order to see close up, I have to strain my neck waaaaay back because the close-up part of the prescription is at the very bottom of the lens. This leads to neck and back strain—which, in my case, leads to bruxism. It makes me grind my teeth.
That brought me to the dentist, which is leading to a new night guard (splint), and possibly two crowns. We’ll see. In the meantime, my progressive lenses may well contribute to a monarchy—two crowns.

Get some help. Someone prolly needs the work. And it will cost you less than the medical care. I.E. work smarter not harder. ❤️
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That’s not likely–the retired builder has standards. (But in a year or so, we have a big masonry project, and we’ll hire out for that.)
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I have trifocals, but I also have reading glasses for up-close work. The tri of the trifocals can be very trying!
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remember Dad had special glasses made with the close up on top. Makes sense now.
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I wish I had a pair of those.
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I too have this problem. I need to see the eye dr as my glasses aren’t working well at distances. I am going to get a set of reader glasses for close up work. I have saved an old frames just for this purpose. I also grind my teeth so hard that I literally fracture my two front teeth and had to have them crowned! Wear the bite plate!
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A change in eyesight at our age (especially if things improve) can be a sign of cataract progression. See the Dr.–and yeah, especially now the splint is essential. (45 and bruxism brought me a crown on the other side.)
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I tried progressives…(and trifocals)…until I needed a cataract removed, which brought me to my current situation, trifocal implants. Over the years, I’ve done my fair share of overhead work )(drywall, wood and a lot of metal) Neck and back strain is no fun!
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Yeah, cataracts are on the distant horizon–and that would resolve the eye issues. The rest is about overhead work–not that I have more in my immediate future, but neither can I rule it out. Part of the angst is aging and its effects on multiple systems at once. Sigh. Vision, Neck and Back, Dental.
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62 here…pretty much everything becomes more difficult. The body reminds me almost on a daily basis that I’m getting older, as does my brain (left my debit card in the ATM machine last week). It’s one of the reasons I keep going to work. I have to lift, climb stairs with heavy crap, walk a zillion steps, use muscles I didn’t know existed to tear down engines, run some complex machines, stay on top of a convoluted freight system. Eyesight isn’t great – I wear trifocals to drive, readers to read.
I would opt out of ceiling work – my neck would never forgive me. 😊
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Rick and I whine, just a bit, about the work. But the constant building, the gardening, maintaining the orchard and harvesting deadfall for firewood keep us busy and active. Beats a membership to a gym.
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For sure – my daughter was out visiting – helping me split wood. She was a cross-fit fanatic at the time. As she was trying to catch her breath, she says ‘yah farm fitness is totally different than gym fitness’.
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Active, is the key. We joke that the young folk would have difficulty keeping up with our summer schedule.
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