Life returns to Manchester
Yesterday, marked the
first full week of the easing of lockdown measures with the opening of non-essential
goods shops. Returning from church, the town centre was busy, tables and chairs
outside for alfresco dining, crowds milling around as if the memories of a
pandemic had long been forgotten.
Our penchant for
queuing had opened up to a new order, with specific entrance and exit door,
walking routes laid out in the shopping centre to help with social distancing,
even though some just ignored the signs.
I first visited the
public conveniences before going to the opticians. I last had an eye test 3
years ago and the right arm of my lens frame was beginning to disintegrate. The
composite 3 layers were coming apart and when I tried to glue the bits
together, I had more bonding of my fingertips than the object of repairs.
Fast-tracked on
choice
They offered a 4:00 PM
appointment which did not sound convenient if I had to return to the city
centre to attend, so, I chose an early morning slot for Saturday. Then, I decided
to look at the frames display, in the hope that something might catch my eye.
Now, literally, all eyeglass frames are made by manufacturers in Italy, we are
mostly paying exorbitant rates for brand names, the design aesthetic hardly having
much diversity.
I found an O’Neill
frame and asked a member of staff about setting it aside for my Saturday
appointment, but before I knew it, I was fast-tracked into a consulting room where
a whole battery of tests began, reading charts, blurred and clear dots, air
blasted at my eyeballs, lights shone into the recesses of my eyes with pictures
of blood vessels vivid to be scary, peripheral and field vision, my eyes were so
tired after then workout short of popping the eye out and giving it a cold
rinse before tossing it in a frying pan of hot oil and sticking it back in the
socket.
Seeing everything anew
By the time we were
done a good 90 minutes later, I had ordered two pairs of glasses with lenses
exhibiting every quality of sight improvement except X-ray vision. The second
cheaper pair offered at half-price and to be delivered to my home in about a
fortnight. The eye test came free because there is a history of glaucoma somewhere
in the family, which requires I return for eye tests annually rather than leave
it until when my glasses or frames are falling apart.
I hope I made the
right choice, in more convenient settings, I would have sought the advice of
Brian before my selection. In the end, he might like them after taunting me
about needed two pairs of glasses because there was a time, I forgot I had a
pair on and donned another pair, I have never lived that down. Obviously, my
comeback is just as embarrassing for him.
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