mike

Thanks for your experience. I too found a good optometrist, but my progress has not been as good as Martin's. I have only been doing therapy every 2-3 weeks since late January 2019.

@martin - Is this a Brock String that Mike is talking about? When I try to focus on any bead, the X that I'm supposed to see actually comes before the bead and not at it like it's supposed to. I also have had deep suppression -- where the brain only considers the input of one eye. I'm currently using a TransLid Binocular Interactor (TBI) that flashes a light between two eyes at 9 times/sec to re-train the brain to consider both eyes.

I've also been doing:

  • Eccentric Circles exercise
  • Accommodative Rock (plus/minus lens in one eye)
  • Binocular Rock (same as before, but with both eyes)
  • Brock String

Gurm I have anyhow consumed so much time without finding a solution, that following a therapy would be the least of my problems. Unfortunately, those kind of specialists are not available everywhere. So far the closest I found is about 11 hours by plane in a different country. Besides the traveling expenses, I would not have medical cover, so it not doable for me right now. It is certainly in my future plans.
It is a shame that in many advanced countries alternative treatments to standard ophthalmology are considered witchcraft.

I'm glad you are finding success.

However, I'm not sold on the eyes being the issue. There is no issue for people when reading from paper or many other close up things.

The following is not meant to argue or debate your issue in any way, it's simply to advance the conversation.

I'm convinced the light and flashing of the screens changes something in the brain, that's why the symptoms can last for months, and the symptoms start affecting people in ways that have NOTHING to do with close up vision. For example, people who have their symptoms get really bad have a hard time with any light source, even when not reading or looking at things up close. This suggests this issue goes beyond just your eye muscles.

Like I said, I am very happy you are seeing progress and if others feel this will help them, I encourage them to look into it. But overall, the majority of symptoms people have don't line up with this being a simple eye issue. However, it is possible doing these exercises can provide some help or in some cases, drop you below the threshold of having an issue. Although when new screens are released, the problem will most likely just come back.

One more thing, if people are having issues with this condition, I would not suggest using your phone for 2 hours at a time unless it is absolutely needed for your job or something. Just surfing and texting on the phone for 2 hours is not a very smart thing to do. Go read a book or exercise if you need to kill some time. But don't spend time in front of a screen unless you are doing something absolutely necessary.

As I said, I'm glad you are finding success and thanks for sharing your story and findings.

    screenjunky people who have their symptoms get really bad have a hard time with any light source, even when not reading or looking at things up close. This suggests this issue goes beyond just your eye muscles.

    That is me. If I just stare at, for example, an S10 without reading or focusing I go nuts, and recover takes at least a day.
    Besides, I develop symptoms by simply sitting in an environment with "bad" lighting without doing any reading or watching.

    I find that @martin's approach is correct because we can't change the technology ourselves, and so we are left with strengthening our body to at least tolerate better. I would do the same if only I could find a specialist.

    I totally agree with you on usage. I am currently not using a phone, and I limit all the unnecessary time on electronic devices. My symptoms have recently become so bad that I worry what will happen on the long-term, given how I struggle to reach the end of the day at work.

    Maxx PWM symptoms even with restaurant flickering LED lights. I do not get any symptoms if there is no flickering light. Are you guys sure that it is not the flickering or dithering? E.g. my Surface Laptop is unusable, though it does not have any sort of PWM, but there is some temporal dithering or some other sort of flicker. Now at work my Lenovo t470 is completely fine, as it does not have PWM nor the dithering problem. Though it is still unclear to me what the difference between the Surface Laptop and Lenovo screens are.

    My point is that maybe you have not tried a display that does not have PWM nor dithering and you think your problem is in your eyes or focusing, when it is just the flickering light?

    Anyways, not so much related to this post, but I wonder why nobody is really interested in trying the DC dimming phones nor trying the Lenovo laptop that I noted to be problem free. Please do not get insulted by this, but somehow I get a vibe from this forum that people want to have this problem and have it be something more mystical than just flickering light. If you have the problem, try a flicker free device that has been confirmed to be OK by a person who has the same problem. My devices are Sony Xperia Premium (no problems whatsoever even when used for hours a day) Lenovo t470, HP ZR2740w,

    • AGI replied to this.

      Maxx Lenovo t470

      Which OS are you using?

      Maxx Sony Xperia Premium

      What is the exact model?

      Which symptoms do you have when you used the Surface laptop? Thanks.

      Windows 10, not the latest but whatever my corporate IT puts there.
      XZ Premium G8141

      The symptoms with the Surface Laptop are the same as with any PWM device. Red irritated eyes. No other symptoms. I do not get any headache or anything else. Just bloodshot eyes.

      • AGI replied to this.

        Maxx Just bloodshot eyes.

        Very different from me. There is really a huge variety of symptoms. Thanks!

        screenjunky Don't say that, it's enough that the eyes give the wrong information to the brain. That then gives the wrong information to the eye muscles. Due to some visual defects in combination with dithering/flicker.
        But that's just a guess, I'm not a specialist.

        Those who have had problems longer than a couple of months may have damaged some muscle or something.

        What is so interesting is how it can be so much better for me when I covered one eye for three weeks. Has anyone else done similar tests?

        • AGI replied to this.

          When I cover one eye, I get symptoms only on the uncovered eye.

          mike Those who have had problems longer than a couple of months may have damaged some muscle or something.

          I have had three pretty bad years from 2013 to 2016 because I was forced to use certain hardware/software at work there was no way to get along with. 2016 to 2018, different job, were no problem, and I do work very long hours and all the time on laptop. For the past year it has been awful as never. Even before 2016 I had bad and good years, making me think my muscles are not damaged. I just need to remove the trigger to recover. It is clear that if I keep using bad hardware, because I need to work, I will not feel better anytime soon.
          That said, I am very concerned about the future too, and not necessarily in terms of eyes or muscles. I guess the enormous stress I am subject to may come at a high price. But permanent damages after 2 months sound excessive, in my opinion. At least I hope.

          • mike replied to this.

            AGI My worst years was 2014-2015, when it took about nine months to recover after I "overworked my eyes". In the beginning I could use my old computer 3x20 minutes over the day, and that was a bit painful. After 2-3 months, when it didn't get any better I started trying to sit longer and longer. I felt tension in the back of my head down my neck. For every week I made progress and the pain decreased in back of my head and neck. After about 6-7 months I could work fairly good.

            I wouldn't recommend what i did, but i worked for me. And as many pointed out earlier, our problems do not have to be exactly the same.

            I believe in training our eyes, and maybe the brain not to send the wrong signal to the eye muscles, or what goes wrong.

            I've had this problems since about 1993. Realized that my eyes get red from flickering displays with a Sony Trinitron display I got on 1998. It has not gone worse nor better. It's like putting my hand to a hot stove, burns but heals when taken off the stove. No permanent damage. Flicker = red eyes, no flicker no red eyes. Not other eye problems whatsoever.

              Maxx Is there any difference if you cover one eye?

              Maxx Wow, that's quite a while back. Could you use any CRT monitor without strain? Were CRT TV's/Games consoles comfortable for you?

              Thinking back to the 90's I do remember being affected by CRT flicker, but that was because everybody left it on 60hz. So automatically every time I went into school/friends house/library it was always set to 75hz minimum.

              The only other issues I remember were motion sickness on certain fps games. The original Wolf3D was a killer. Hexen/doom etc were tolerable for short periods.

              Most CRT's were OK, except Trinitrons. I have no idea why Trinitrons were bad. The refresh rate didn't seem to be such an issue at all. I could tolerate 60Hz and 120Hz no problem, if it was not a Trinitron. I used during 2004 to maybe 2009 a CRT at work, as all laptop screens back then were extremely problematic, due to PWM. But I did not know it was the PWM back then.

              TV's are OK, except now the new TV's. Cannot use any Samsung TV as they have 240 Hz PWM. My Sony TV is OK, as it does not have PWM. I had an OLED TV for a week, but it was unusable as it had the 240 Hz PWM.

              I have zero problems with any motion sickness or anything similar. I can game FPS games the whole night if I want, if the monitor does not have PWM or dithering.

              I have not really tried with my other eye covered, but I have noted that if I sit in a meeting where the display has PWM or there is a DLP projector which flickers, I avoid watching the screen as much as possible but the eye that is not "behind my nose" to the screen, i.e. the eye that gets most of the flickering light from the screen, gets irritated more.

              So I do not think my situation has anything to do with eyesight or dry eyes or anything like that. It's that my nervous system is sensitive to the flicker and that causes the bloodshot eyes.

              Any time I'm in a meeting at work and I have to watch a 240Hz screen for a couple of hours, my eyes get red in 15 minutes and the next morning they feel dry and a bit like I'd have some sand in my eyes.

              But the interesting thing is that at work all the screens flicker and many times I notice that after a meeting many others have also red eyes. Once I even paid attention to a very tan guy, who seemed to have very white eyes in the morning he attended the meeting, but after the meeting he had bloodshot eyes like I did. I noticed this because of his tan as the white eyes kind of popped from the tan skin, then suddenly he had bloodshot eyes.

              I think so many people are sensitive the the PWM, but just don't realize it. Keep applying eye drops for dry eyes. I have tried literally every eye drops there is in the pharmacy over 20 years, but they might bring just a temporary relief if the irritation is really bad, but give no relief the actual problem - drops will not prevent eyes becoming bloodshot and very irritated if I have to watch a flickering screen for a day or so.

              What amazes me is that I have been to tens of eye doctors and neurologists over the years, but literally none of them recognize the problem. I have showed them articles from Notebookcheck.net about PWM and from other sites, tried to explain about the flicker. They just claim that the eye is incapable of sensing over 120 Hz.

              But a funny thing one eye doctor told me - kind of got caught herself "I see a lot of even 16 year old patients nowadays with dry eye problem - previously dry eyes were only diagnosed in menopausal women. (Low estrogen causes the glands to produce less lubrication)" Well - if it is not the flicker from all the displays, why does she get 16 year olds with the "dry eye"?

              It would be an accomplishment to finally get even one single eye doctor or neurologist to understand that IT IS THE DAMN FLICKER, it is not the dry eyes. Because, the people who are sensitive to PWM do not get the claimed dry eye if the screen does not flicker, period.

                Maxx I'm really interested to know what happens from an R&D perspective with this new technology.

                Surely all these artifacts/flickering are known to the designers of this tech because it would have been designed by them. Taking away the energy-saving argument (which is one everybody will stand for now), there is no reason nowadays why we can't have a flicker free, artifact free display. We know it can be done, it just has to be implemented.

                  Dont forget to try reading glasses as part of the solution. orange tinted ones working great for me

                  dev