Optometrist Descriptive Writing

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Every year, the stress of visiting the optometrist at a nearby supermarket somewhat disturbs me. I feel like I’m nearly blind. On good days, I can only see fuzzy shapes and colors without any visual aid. My deteriorating eyesight has plagued me for more than half of the time I have been alive.
I was admitted into the optometrist’s office to sit on the leather-padded chair: the site where I would be informed of the concrete number that describes the degree of my eyes’ nearsightedness. I always feel anxiety before that moment of truth. After years of being chastised by my parents for damaging my eyes from spending too much time on the computer, this is the time that my nearsightedness was measured.
The projector was turned on and the list of capitalized letters was displayed on the wall. After a series of questions about my eyesight, the optometrist unexpectedly asked me if I was a straight A student. He asked me if I tend to overthink things, if I like being certain with myself. He wondered why I chose to read the second-to-smallest line of letters, when I could read the letters on the smallest line. Surprised, I implored him to tell me why he asked me this peculiar …show more content…

But the truth is, I’m not a speedy person. I would contemplate for several seconds about whether or not the letter was a “P” or an “F”. Even though I desired to answer the optometrist correctly, the eye exam is mainly a test of integrity, and honesty is a characteristic that I aim to embody, so I blurted out the letters that first came to mind to ensure that I wasn’t cheating myself. Even if I didn’t say the correct letter, at least I was acknowledging that whatever I perceived was a true measure of my eyesight, and whatever problems arose from being truthful were issues that I would have to face head on. Besides, is ignorance actually bliss, when I’m lying to myself

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