09/15/2016 I quit smoking when I found out I was going to be a dad.
This was the catalyst that made me want to change my life for the better. After
twenty years of trying different ways to quit, it was the thought of not being
with her that helped me quit. I thought of my life, her life, without me in it.
I want to be there for her every moment I can, for as long as I can. Roughly a
month or so before I found out she was going to be in my life, I started
working at an online contact lens retailer, Contact Lens King. It was here that
I learned about contact lenses, the eye care industry, and overall eye health. I
knew smoking was bad for my lungs, my heart, and my overall long-term
well-being; and I guess it just never crossed my mind, but I also learned just
how bad smoking was for my eyes. Not only do I want to be alive with my
daughter in the long term, I also want to be able to see her grow and become
the amazing woman I know she will be.
Working in the contact lens industry I’ve read a lot of
horror stories about people who don’t follow proper contact lens care
directions and end up with gruesome results. Your eyes are the only organs that
get their oxygen from their surroundings rather than from your body. When you
smoke you pollute your environment and cause your eyes problems from the lack
of oxygen. Every smoker has felt the sting of smoke in their eyes. When you
wear contacts it compounds the inflammation, soreness, dry eyes and
irritability. Plus when you smoke it not only leaves tar and nicotine on your
fingers, but also on your contact lenses themselves causing a litany of issues
which I will lay out below.
The CDC estimates the United States alone has roughly
480,000 deaths a year attributed to smoking. That’s half a million people that
die each year from a preventable habit! The health risks associated with
smoking are well known and numerous:
Lung cancer, emphysema, heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke, a
reduction in my overall life expectancy are just several of the dozens of
concerns detrimental to my long term liveliness. This number does not take into
account those people who are still alive and suffering from the adverse effects
of smoking. More than 16 million
Americans are living with a disease caused by smoking. For every person who
dies because of smoking another 30 live with a serious smoking related illness.
Here are a few of the horrible diseases that can affect your eyes that will
make you want to stop smoking today.
-Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) starts as a loss of
central vision and makes it harder to read or see fine details in things.
Smoking increases the severity and triples the risk of this disease, which is
the leading cause of blindness in people over the age of 65. There are two
types of AMD, “dry” and “wet”, with dry being the most common. Dry AMD causes
fatty deposits to form in the back of the eye behind your retina, with vision
getting worse slowly over time. Wet AMD causes tiny blood vessels to leak or
break open, which in turn causes scar tissue to develop. Wet AMD is less
common, but more quickly to produce harmful vision results.
-Glaucoma is the gradual breakdown of the optic nerve cells
that sends visual information to your brain.
As the cells die, your vision slowly begins to deteriorate, usually
starting with your peripheral vision. This is often not noticeable until a
significant amount of nerve damage has occurred. Due to this, almost half the
people who have glaucoma may not be aware they have it. There are two types of
Glaucoma: Primary open-angle Glaucoma and acute angle closure Glaucoma. The
former is the most common type, which by the time you are aware of it, can have
already caused significant vision loss. The latter form of Glaucoma is less
common, but can come on more rapidly due to increased pressure on the inside of
the eye. Symptoms can include: eye pain, nausea, red eye, seeing colored rings
around lights and blurry vision. Smoking can significantly increase the risk of
developing open-angle Glaucoma, which can lead to blindness. Unfortunately,
presently there is no cure for this horrible disease.
-Smoking thins your blood, not allowing enough oxygen to
flow to the parts of your body that need to breath; like your eyes. Smoking
enhances your risks for developing diabetes and the potentially blinding
complications that come with it; one of them being Diabetic Retinopathy. Diabetic
Retinopathy causes tiny blood vessels in your eye to become blocked, leak or
break down completely. When new blood vessels begin to grow they can cover your
retina, which can cause extreme vision complications and even blindness. There
are four stages of Diabetic Retinopathy: mild, moderate, severe non-proliferative
Retinopathy and Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy; the last of which leads to
permanent vision loss. People with all types of Diabetes are at risk for this
additional complication. Roughly 40-45% of people with Diabetes have some stage
of Diabetic Retinopathy, yet only half are even aware of it.
-When you smoke it leaves a sticky brownish black residue on
your fingers which you can wash off; imagine the gunk it is leaving on your
eyes, this cannot be rinsed away. This
gunk over time accelerates the erosion of the lens in your eye, which can lead
to Cataracts. Cataracts are the leading cause of vision loss in the United
States, and smoking doubles your chances of getting them. Cataracts are a
build-up of protein in the lens of the eye which causes cloudy or blurry
vision. Generally cataracts take years to develop and can be undetectable in
the early stages of growth. This is why cataracts for the most part start being
noticeable in people age forty and older, although you can develop them when
you are young or even be born with them. Symptoms may include double vision,
cloudy, blurry vision, faded colors or a stark glare around light sources. Cataracts
are estimated to affect roughly twenty million plus people in the United States
over the age of forty; with this number set to double in the next twenty years.
Strangely enough, out of this number, 61% of those affected by Cataracts are
women. Cataracts can be classified by their location in the eye and length of
time they have been present. There are a few types of cataracts: Subcapsular
Cataracts develop in the back of the lens, Nuclear Cataracts develop in the
center of the eye, and Cortical Cataracts form along the edges of the lens and
point inward. The only solution to cure Cataracts is through surgery. This is
an expensive and uncomfortable in and out procedure. Luckily for the majority
of patients, the Cataracts don’t return after they’re removed. Only in about 10% of patients does a film
begin to develop over the lens again. Beyond smoking and aging other causes of
Cataracts can include: Excessive alcohol consumption, overt exposure to the sun
and other UV rays, Diabetes, certain medications and injury to the eye itself.
Smoking ruins lives. Not only does it affect you, but the
lives of those around you and the lives of those you love. I love my daughter
more than I’ve ever loved anything else in my life. I want to live for her as
long as I can, see her grow and see her experience life. I can’t do that if
smoking takes away my vision or worse yet my life. Whether it’s your eyes, your
lungs, your heart or any other part of your body; smoking is just not worth it.

Brand name contact lenses at discount prices.Since 2004, Contact Lens King has made it its mission to provide contact lens wearers with brand name contact lenses at the lowest possible prices. These lenses are the same exact lenses sold by your eye doctor. The difference is that you will save up to …
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