Skint? 1. D.I.Y. Spectacles.

It may surprise anyone who reads certain posts to discover that whilst I may well own and get to do all sorts of things, I live on an income that according to Government tables is below the poverty line, the tehnical term they use being, "Destitution".

Obviously, I either do crime, claim benefits, OR am unusually resourceful. A means test I undertook at the C.A.B. Confirmed that it is of course, the latter as I do not do crime for my money, nor do I qualify for benefits. After filling in a big questionaiire designed to show where I could manage my money better the only thing they could recommend was that I have my six monthly haircut done cheaper by students. (So I bought a set of clippers from ebay using my O/H's account that were as cheap as a single haircut, and apparently they do an acceptable job.)

One thing I do not do is go to spec savers at 75 quid for ONE set of specs, oh no, I of course do my own eye test at the reading glasses stand in B&M!

I work though the pairs using the little numbers printed on them until I find a pair that gives me the best view right across the store, then setting those aside, I work through the pairs looking at the small print they give you to look at and find the best pair of those, IF there are choices of frame in those sizes, then using the mirror I pick the best looking frames for the reading glasses, and the best frames for the driving glasses, and I get two( or if I am flush and they have them, three) pairs of each. I just bought a year or twos worth of specs for under a tenner...

This only works for age related steady degeneration happening equally across both eyes, and opticians can measure down to a quarter dioptre wheres cheap specs come in half dioptres but I've had 30 cheap years of cheap specs wearing, and when my G/F's curiosity got the better of her and she MADE me have a proper eye test, about ten years ago, my figures were within a quarter dioptre of their prescription.

The effort of trying different specs and deciding which ones work best, I feel gives one a reassuring sense of knowing what works and what does not, as well as saving me a shedload of money. on a 3x2 inch cutout in a panel (or similar) with my regular glasses on I can apparently clearly see a discrepancy of 5 thousandths of an inch which the guy who made it needed to measure before he'd quit arguing.

If you have more complex problems then you will need a more specialist approach, but for most older people this is an opportunity to never be without specs again, but not being bi- or vari-focal, you always need to have at least the two sizes.

You really often do NOT need the services of a professional even with vitally important stuff, like your eyesight. I've been at this thirty years and in that time I've lost a half dioptre per decade I.E. my prescription would have changed three times, but I've enjoyed much better "spectacle availability" and done way less hunting for my specs than most people who do it "properly".

Also since shopping for aesthetics now costs 2.99 a pair maximum instead of 79.00 minimum I can and do buy the occasional pair on a whim, which makes the availability aspect even better and occasionally you get a really cracking nice durable frame with a really nice lens that last 7 years or like my best "long focus" ones currently have.

Just because I'm destitute and off grid, does not mean I need to suffer a reduced visual acuity at all!  You don't need a degree to be able to tell whether your eyes are working correctly, nor do you need a degree to evaluate whether B&M glasses will work for you. 

Of course wearing incorrect glasses will not be good for (or even damage) your eyes, so you make damn sure that you don't wear the wrong glasses, by testing which ones work for you... 

Ker-ching!

  • There are autism friendly special dentists. But as with everything getting access is potentially a challenge. I don't know how you can do it, all I can relate is how I managed it.

    I broke a tooth and didn't have a dentist so I had to get an emergency appointment with a random dentist, obviously quite traumatic. Now I also have the problem of having arthritis in my jaw which makes it harder for them to work on my teeth and painful for me, so the manager spoke with me about referring me to the specialist dentist who works in a small local hospital. I was probably stressed and upset too, not sure which was their main reason for referring me on! My recall is poor for this event as it was now a few years ago and my brain seems to block details of some traumatic events. But the special dentist in the hospital is really good. Others here have also mentioned the special dentists and may have better info than me on how to get to see them.

    The only real problem is that they seem to only there for the actual heavy dental work. I need several fillings and sedation, and covid intervened half way through a root canal so I have been with them for a few years now, but I do get the impression this is not normal so I am really quite apprehensive about what will happen when they finish all the fillings! But they are super helpful and really go out of their way to make it as less unpleasant as possible.

  • I recall back in the early 2000's I did an interview with a company who were offering glasses with perscription lenses on-line, quite an innovation at the time, at a much lower price than the high street.

    At the time I worked part time as a financial journalist and the company were coming to the market so were keen to get the word out there. I got to interview the owner to write an article and got to see how their business model worked.

    Even back then the lenses were really cheap to make in bulk in China so the bigger cost for then were the frames, especially anything with a name (i.e. "designer" frames). They had their own generic frames that were selling with lenses fo around £10 which was quite something.

    Their profit margin was high on the very generic stuff and even with the designer frames, they still made a healthy profit in spite of the royalties they had to pay to the designers.

    I think they were swallowed up by another company not long after but seeing how cheap the components can be makes it so shocking when some stores are charging £90 for their budget frames and lenses.

    As I'm not in the UK I need to order online these days and use a site that charges £6 per pair with my prescription so it is still so much cheaper than the high street.

    Just some random stuff to throw into the mix Slight smile

  • Optician eye exams are useful for spotting early signs of glaucoma and other conditions. I now know that I have a small cataract in one eye and have now switched to UV blocking clear lenses in my everyday glasses. Also, about 10 years ago, I had what I think was a blockage in a small retinal blood vessel, my sight was affected, and was referred to the eye hospital. Of course by the time I was seen, the problem had resolved itself, but still, had it not the referral would have been useful. Having an eye test/exam every 5 years or so is a good idea.

  • Mine were £99. £30 for the check-up, £50 for the lens and £19 for the frame.

  • Glasses in the UK can be mad ridiculous prices too.  Rimless vari-focal with titanium frames = mega bucks......if you have money to burn.

  • Glasses in the US can cost a couple of grand. 

  • I get an eye test at Specsavers, family members have Glaucoma so my test is free. In our town is a “Savers” store. Glasses are £1.29 per pair, I match my prescription to the glasses. My work is often respraying cars, the clear coat sticks to the lenses and the glasses need binning afterwards. At £1.29 I can cost that into the job. Binning a £75 pair isn’t an option and glass lenses are mega expensive.

  • I gave up on dentistry,or rather it gave up ion me, when I had no money and too many issues back in 2014.

    However, during Covid, whilst trialling methods of improving my own personal defences against the virus, (because I believed I knew better than the low level vaxx pushers about whether it was possible to vaccinate against corona virii) I discovered that my personal "battle with plaque" got won, as a side effect. 

    That's down to one a day vitamin D oral spray which I take once a day with gaps when I get out of the habit, and start to notice the return of the plaque and other issues. 

    I WISH I'd known about this when I was younger, it s my firm belief it would have saved me a lot of dentistry over my life. 

  • Yeah, I was hinting at that, but reluctant to make the claim overtly.

    I can also double up two pairs for reading stupidly small serial numbers, inspecting solder joints etc.

  • I wish that too! Also a big trigger for me. I haven't been to the dentist since I was 11. The last time was horrible experience for me so I never went again. We could do with autism friendly dentists.

  • I wish B&M and/or Boots would offer dentistry.  Dentists seem to be my "meltdown" trigger = not fun (nor especially safe) for ANYONE within the building!

  • B&M are good for things like that and so are Boots. I prefer things like that than professional places as professional places seem to unsettle me and cause meltdowns for me...

    The last time I had a proper eye test I had a panic attack and then a massive meltdown which was distressing for me and also highly embarrassing as everyone saw it.

  • I am a fan of cheap innovative workarounds (always).....but I also never fail to miss the opportunity to look at my own insides too!

    I recently had an extended eye test/exam...not so much for getting glasses, but for having a (comparatively) cheap and reliable(ish) health screening for a variety of diseases and conditions that can be spotted quite easily in the eye.

    For the record....despite receiving a definitive prescription for my close-up vision....I found that your B&M approach delivered a MORE satisfactory pair of glasses for my purposes.

  • Alas, I'm short sighted on my right eye; but perfect on my left eye.