Thanks for confirming that. I noticed that too, even with raw Paleo carbs (I know, the holy grail that it's a crime to report any negative effects from ), but wasn't sure if I was imagining it. The problem for me is, if I forego carby foods completely, then I start to get other negative effects, so it's a difficult balancing act.
Interesting. Can you direct me to info about this type of eyeglasses?
I was going to attach the forum link that explains it better than I could, but apparently it's not a public forum.
Basically, I took two months of exercises to get rid of ciliary muscle spasm 'fake myopia'. Between that, and the fact that I was way over-prescribed by my previous optometrist, lead to a new prescription quite a bit lower than the original one:
After the first two months my vision was already improving. They had me do some tests at home with a Snellen chart under different conditions (before and after working on computer, before and after peripheral vision focus, and different lighting conditions). With the results from all that, and adjustment from my previous astigmatism, they gave me a new prescription.
Originally I was at -4.00, the first round took me down to -3.00 (that was a lot of work but went by very fast). I could see 20/20 with the -3.00. The current one is -2.75 and -2.50, with which I'm exactly at a borderline. I can see 20/20 with good lighting, if I don't spend all day on the computer, and if I don't drink or eat carbs.
Otherwise, things get blurry. Alex refers to it as taking away the no-guilt eye prosthetic, the strong glasses with which you see sharp no matter how much you abuse your eyes.
It's pretty genius how they do the whole thing.
If I'm 100% paleo for a while (takes me a month almost), I can read almost a whole extra Snellen line. Pretty big difference. Just one or two nights of pizza and beers (happens, circle of friends) sets me back quite a bit.