Difference between revisions of Zero diopter reset

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When introducing a reduction it is not advised to just slap them on your face, as a rule you never want to wear your new lower normalized on the same day as your previous normalized correction. It is better to do a "zero diopter reset" (or in the cases of high myopia probably wear [[differentials]] for this). What you do is take a day you can manage with no correction (or low correction) from the beginning of the day for as long as reasonably possible, this way when you introduce your new [[normalized]] the relative standard for expected clarity is that this is a good change. 
When introducing a reduction it is not advised to just slap them on your face, as a rule you never want to wear your new lower normalized on the same day as your full correction or previous normalized correction. It is better to do a "zero diopter reset" (or in the cases of high myopia probably wear [[differentials]] for this).  


==How to==
What you do is take a day you can manage with no correction (or low correction in the case of high myopia) from the beginning of the day for as long as reasonably possible. This way when you introduce your new [[normalized]] the relative standard for expected clarity is that things are much clearer and this is a good change. The good association with your new correction is a big advantage.
==References==
Hear it from Jake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzrQb4pCFkQ
Hear it from Jake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzrQb4pCFkQ

Revision as of 14:32, 18 May 2021

When introducing a reduction it is not advised to just slap them on your face, as a rule you never want to wear your new lower normalized on the same day as your full correction or previous normalized correction. It is better to do a "zero diopter reset" (or in the cases of high myopia probably wear differentials for this).

How to

What you do is take a day you can manage with no correction (or low correction in the case of high myopia) from the beginning of the day for as long as reasonably possible. This way when you introduce your new normalized the relative standard for expected clarity is that things are much clearer and this is a good change. The good association with your new correction is a big advantage.

References

Hear it from Jake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzrQb4pCFkQ