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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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wylies99

Joined: 13 May 2006 Location: I'm one cool cat!
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 1:55 am Post subject: Re: lasik |
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| The Lemon wrote: |
I have an appointment in January for LASIK, on my annual two-week visit to Korea. It's much cheaper in Korea than here in Dubai. Korea's quoting 1.2, though I assume for that low price they give you a laser and a mirror and tell you to do it yourself.
I've been reading the experiences that others have had, and the unpleasantness of the procedure as well as the following 48-72 hours are unnerving. But I want to live a contact lens-free life.
Someone who has done it kindly write something to convince me not to chicken out. |
That price sounds about right.
Everyone I know who has had it done said to expect dry eyes for months. Expect to use A LOT of eye drops. |
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Draz

Joined: 27 Jun 2007 Location: Land of Morning Clam
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 3:35 am Post subject: Re: lasik |
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| The Lemon wrote: |
I have an appointment in January for LASIK, on my annual two-week visit to Korea. It's much cheaper in Korea than here in Dubai. Korea's quoting 1.2, though I assume for that low price they give you a laser and a mirror and tell you to do it yourself.
I've been reading the experiences that others have had, and the unpleasantness of the procedure as well as the following 48-72 hours are unnerving. But I want to live a contact lens-free life.
Someone who has done it kindly write something to convince me not to chicken out. |
It was the worst 10 min of my life. I was so traumatized that I cried for the entire day after. I'D DO IT AGAIN!
If you feel scared, ask for more drugs. That was my mistake!! They were running behind, my drugs wore off, and I didn't want to hold it up longer by asking for more drugs. I really really should have. |
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blackjack

Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Location: anyang
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 6:30 am Post subject: Re: lasik |
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| The Lemon wrote: |
I have an appointment in January for LASIK, on my annual two-week visit to Korea. It's much cheaper in Korea than here in Dubai. Korea's quoting 1.2, though I assume for that low price they give you a laser and a mirror and tell you to do it yourself.
I've been reading the experiences that others have had, and the unpleasantness of the procedure as well as the following 48-72 hours are unnerving. But I want to live a contact lens-free life.
Someone who has done it kindly write something to convince me not to chicken out. |
1.2 million? for both eyes? That sounds way cheap. I paid 1.8.
The next day I was thinking what the hell had I done. The day after, why the hell hadn't I done this years ago. Just went in for my monthly check up all is looking fine.
Do it |
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tinamarie04
Joined: 25 May 2009
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 8:44 pm Post subject: |
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| I want to do this!! BUUUUUUT. I have horrible eyes, horrible... my contact prescription is like -9 and -8.5... glasses are around -10... has anyone had this done with eyes as bad as mine? Is it even possible? |
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The Lemon

Joined: 11 Jan 2003
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Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 11:26 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks everyone for your thoughts. "It was the worst 10 min of my life. I was so traumatized that I cried for the entire day after" is far more honest than what I read in the doctor literature.
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| If you feel scared, ask for more drugs. |
Truly, words to live by.
| Quote: |
| 1.2 million? for both eyes? That sounds way cheap. I paid 1.8. |
That 1.2 is from the Yonsei clinic down in Sanbon near Suwon. It's not far from my wife's parents' home, so transport will be convenient post-op. |
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daniel-andersson
Joined: 13 Jul 2009 Location: Seoul (but from Sweden)
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Posted: Thu Dec 03, 2009 12:25 am Post subject: |
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| tinamarie04 wrote: |
| I want to do this!! BUUUUUUT. I have horrible eyes, horrible... my contact prescription is like -9 and -8.5... glasses are around -10... has anyone had this done with eyes as bad as mine? Is it even possible? |
Hi!
I have -7.5 and it's no problem. However you can do a test and check, it's for free. It depends how thick your cornea is, usually people with big eyes have a thicker cornia and also higher degree of nearsightedness. |
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Xuanzang

Joined: 10 Apr 2007 Location: Sadang
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Posted: Thu Dec 03, 2009 6:21 pm Post subject: |
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| Would someone kindly let me use their name as a referral for the Dream Eye clinic? PM me if you're willing. Allegedly you will get a cosmetics set. |
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sqrlnutz123
Joined: 15 Jun 2009 Location: South Korea
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Posted: Thu Dec 03, 2009 7:50 pm Post subject: |
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| Does anybody know of a good clinic near Ansan? |
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daniel-andersson
Joined: 13 Jul 2009 Location: Seoul (but from Sweden)
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Posted: Tue Dec 08, 2009 10:16 pm Post subject: my story |
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Hi!
So I went to the Dream Eye clinic last Friday (4 Dec) and am happy with the result so far. I paid 1.8 even if they first said 2.2. There are clinics how does it for much cheaper (like 1.2) but some of those are not part of the Korean eye clinic associations. They also have older instruments and might charge you with small fees for eye drops etc. A good clinic that also could provide a good insurance was important for me even if I didn't do a lot of research, (a normal personal health insurance will not cover an eye infection).
The operation went fast. One hour after that we has started with the last minute eye checks I could leave. I didn�t wait 30 minutes since it was late and they wanted to go home. I had no pain during or the days after the operation so I think was lucky. As for the weekend I was lessening to a lot of podcasts, I liked DNTO and the Seoul Podcast.
The vision is not yet perfect but I can already see pretty well. I have borrowed a pair of sunglasses from a friend but later bought a good pair which can be read at this topic. |
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catchshime
Joined: 25 Jun 2009 Location: "I am not born for one corner; the whole world is my native land."
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Posted: Mon Jan 04, 2010 1:31 am Post subject: |
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| I am also getting Wavefront LASIK done for 2.0 mil at Myeong-dong Dream Eye Center in 2 days. Will post how it goes. My eyes are -3.0 and -3.25 L/R respectively, I am near-sighted. |
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kingpin
Joined: 23 Jan 2003
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Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 4:03 pm Post subject: |
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I had a consultation at Yebon Eye Clinic in Jongno yesterday and, while I'm eligible for either LASEK or LASIK, it turns out that I have rather large pupils (7 mm), which increases the risk of starbursts/halos/light-blasting after the surgery. I also have rather dry eyes, which could pose problems, too, but I'm more concerned with the pupil size issue.
I have a consultation scheduled for Dream Eye in Myeong-Dong as well, so I'll see what they say before making any final decisions.
For now, though, I'm curious to hear from anyone else who had similarly large pupils and went ahead with the surgery? How's it been for you? |
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nena
Joined: 19 Nov 2009
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Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:50 pm Post subject: |
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Kingpin - I did lasik about 4 months ago. I was also told by several eye doctors that I had large pupils, which would have made me ineligible for surgery a few years ago. Also, I've always had dry eye problems, which would definitely get aggravated by surgery.
I dont know the measurement of my pupils (how they compare to yours), but the issue of size was brought up to me by all the doctors I saw.
I did have really bad halos/starbursts/light-blasting for the first 2 weeks after surgery. After that, the "blasting" effect started to fade quickly. The halos and bursts also started to reduce in size/intensity. About 2 months later, I no longer saw any of these effects.
I actually see a lot better in the dark compared to when I wore glasses, so, I'm actually very happy with the results there.
My dry eye problem DID worsen with the surgery, though. Dry eye is an extremely common complication. I am on the prescription eyedrop "Restasis" to help my eyes produce more tears naturally. The winter cold doesn't help, but the dryness has improved a WHOLE lot. I use regular wetting eyedrops once or twice (at VERY most) a day. For the first month or two after surgery, I used wetting eyedrops between 5 and 15 times a day. Don't leave the house without a bottle, haha!
Anyway, so.. basically I wouldn't worry too much about the dry eyes. It will likely get worse after surgery, It's a minor inconvenience for a few weeks, that's it. I can't say if my pupils were as big as yours, but it seemed to be fine for me. All of my doctor consultants said taht my pupils were large, but, wouldn't interfere with the success of my surgery.
Hopefully you can confirm that by seeing another eye doctor.
Best of luck with whatever decision you make! |
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kingpin
Joined: 23 Jan 2003
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Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 10:37 pm Post subject: |
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| nena wrote: |
Kingpin - I did lasik about 4 months ago. I was also told by several eye doctors that I had large pupils, which would have made me ineligible for surgery a few years ago. Also, I've always had dry eye problems, which would definitely get aggravated by surgery.
I dont know the measurement of my pupils (how they compare to yours), but the issue of size was brought up to me by all the doctors I saw.
I did have really bad halos/starbursts/light-blasting for the first 2 weeks after surgery. After that, the "blasting" effect started to fade quickly. The halos and bursts also started to reduce in size/intensity. About 2 months later, I no longer saw any of these effects.
I actually see a lot better in the dark compared to when I wore glasses, so, I'm actually very happy with the results there.
My dry eye problem DID worsen with the surgery, though. Dry eye is an extremely common complication. I am on the prescription eyedrop "Restasis" to help my eyes produce more tears naturally. The winter cold doesn't help, but the dryness has improved a WHOLE lot. I use regular wetting eyedrops once or twice (at VERY most) a day. For the first month or two after surgery, I used wetting eyedrops between 5 and 15 times a day. Don't leave the house without a bottle, haha!
Anyway, so.. basically I wouldn't worry too much about the dry eyes. It will likely get worse after surgery, It's a minor inconvenience for a few weeks, that's it. I can't say if my pupils were as big as yours, but it seemed to be fine for me. All of my doctor consultants said taht my pupils were large, but, wouldn't interfere with the success of my surgery.
Hopefully you can confirm that by seeing another eye doctor.
Best of luck with whatever decision you make! |
Thanks for the information. I'll see what the folks at Dream Eye say and then make a final decision. |
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Yaya

Joined: 25 Feb 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2010 10:49 pm Post subject: |
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| kingpin wrote: |
| nena wrote: |
Kingpin - I did lasik about 4 months ago. I was also told by several eye doctors that I had large pupils, which would have made me ineligible for surgery a few years ago. Also, I've always had dry eye problems, which would definitely get aggravated by surgery.
I dont know the measurement of my pupils (how they compare to yours), but the issue of size was brought up to me by all the doctors I saw.
I did have really bad halos/starbursts/light-blasting for the first 2 weeks after surgery. After that, the "blasting" effect started to fade quickly. The halos and bursts also started to reduce in size/intensity. About 2 months later, I no longer saw any of these effects.
I actually see a lot better in the dark compared to when I wore glasses, so, I'm actually very happy with the results there.
My dry eye problem DID worsen with the surgery, though. Dry eye is an extremely common complication. I am on the prescription eyedrop "Restasis" to help my eyes produce more tears naturally. The winter cold doesn't help, but the dryness has improved a WHOLE lot. I use regular wetting eyedrops once or twice (at VERY most) a day. For the first month or two after surgery, I used wetting eyedrops between 5 and 15 times a day. Don't leave the house without a bottle, haha!
Anyway, so.. basically I wouldn't worry too much about the dry eyes. It will likely get worse after surgery, It's a minor inconvenience for a few weeks, that's it. I can't say if my pupils were as big as yours, but it seemed to be fine for me. All of my doctor consultants said taht my pupils were large, but, wouldn't interfere with the success of my surgery.
Hopefully you can confirm that by seeing another eye doctor.
Best of luck with whatever decision you make! |
Thanks for the information. I'll see what the folks at Dream Eye say and then make a final decision. |
Dry eyes are the major reason I won't get eye correction surgery. |
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The Lemon

Joined: 11 Jan 2003
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Posted: Sun Jan 17, 2010 12:45 am Post subject: |
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Sadly, no surgery yet. The doctor discovered that my contact lens prescription I've been using for the last 15 years has been wildly overpowered (those diagnostic machines in all the contact lens stores I've used throughout Asia are inaccurate, he says).
Since my eyes and brain adjusted to the (wrong) power, he was concerned about how they'd react to having LASIK done to the correct power. Therefore I have to gradually change my contact lens power down to the correct one, and if there's no problem I'll try again next year.
Thanks everyone for the advice. |
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