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Hammerknife !7ITukp3Pj2
So there's a chick in my microbio class who one would think be an uppity prick - perfect body, redhead, all that, except her left eye is crossed inward, so it's hard to make eye contact. So she's actually a quite engaging person, probably by necessity.

Which got me brainstorming - I know I see little kids with eyepatches running around, but does that same therapy help older people with crossed or lazy eye?
>> Anonymous
not sure, i would imagine so, but it might not (unfortunately) be covered by the big sons of bitches health insurance companies ;_; check with yr doctor, i'm sure we've invented some surgery for that by now :D
>> Anonymous
There absolutely is a surgery for it. They simply shorten the muscle that isn't being favored in the eye and BAM, instant straight eye.

The problem is that it is eye surgery. Not very comfortable. Also, I have no idea whether visual dysfunction can affect this. I.E., if the brain creates a proper image despite the cross-eyedness, surgery could actually cause a rather odd screw-up in vision.
>> Hammerknife !7ITukp3Pj2
>>30416

Yeah, that sounds both expensive and unpleasant. But what about that patch therapy, they just put a patch your good eye and force you to use your bad eye and adapt it? That work on non-teenagers?