Is it commonplace to have three different sets of prescription spectacles – one for reading, one for screen work and one (varifocal) for general use? I have all of these plus another set of varifocals that are photochromic so that I don’t have to carry sunglasses around as well. I should also mention the several pairs of off-the-shelf readers that are strategically stashed around the flat, the campervan and even my wallet, where I keep a pince-nez the size and thickness of a credit card – just in case. For the first 45 years of my life, I didn’t need any of these. Is it payback time or something?
Not that I
should complain. Before the invention of optical lenses, people born with
impaired vision just had to live with it. As for those whose sight deteriorated
with age, things were more complicated. If, for example, you were apprenticed
to make a living from a skill that required acute vision, you could find
yourself prematurely redundant by middle-age. As for reading and writing, for
most of history, most people were illiterate. In places like palaces and
monasteries literacy was perpetuated by employing scribes – a renewable human
resource. But the invention of lenses spawned the business of optometry. The
eventual spread of literacy led to its growth into a vast and sophisticated
industry.
So much for
the potted history; I was on my way to get new photochromic varifocals to
replace the old, battered and scratched pair, when I passed the barber’s shop and
saw a chance to get smartened up. There are two barbers working the chairs, one
from Iraq, the other from London. I prefer the Iraqi, so I check through the
window to see he is free before I go in. On this occasion, he was apparently applying
the finishing touch to an almost bald client and there was no queue. I hopped
in, hopefully. But, within minutes, I was followed through the door by the
Londoner, who peeled off his coat, looked at me and said, “Next?”. I made my
way, like a man condemned, to his chair.
The Londoner
was trained in the ‘bish-bash-bosh’ school of hairdressing, where he boasts of
having been taught that it should take no more than 15 minutes to accomplish a
“decent” haircut. He usually clocks in well under. The results are decent
enough but, compared with the Iraqi’s more lavish attentions, one is left
feeling short-changed.
Then there
is the conversation. The Iraqi (who owns the shop) is quite happy not to
converse but to listen to the songs of his budgies, who live in a cage in the
corner, while he attends meticulously to every individually misaligned hair. The
Londoner expresses views, the most annoying of which is his theory – based
entirely on anecdote – that thousands of young men died of heart attacks after being
vaccinated for covid 19. He knew at least one of them, personally. I would have
argued the case for statistical analysis but for fear of an even worse haircut
– that and the limitations of time: I was out of the chair in about nine
minutes.
I went on to
meet my Other Half at the opticians, where she was set to approve the style of
frames I had previously scouted. “I’m the one who has to look at them when
they’re on your face,” she had said, but it turned out my choice was acceptable
to her – and modestly priced, to boot. Job done, she took off and I sat with
the salesperson as he totted up the cost of the specified lenses and put
forward a case for the more expensive, branded ones (who knew that lenses sold
per prescription varied in quality according to brand?). I opted for the ones
that cost the lesser of the two fortunes quoted.
When I was
on YouTube that evening, a prolonged advert popped up selling some wonderful
German-made specs that, so they claimed, would suit everyone’s needs and
eliminate the need to have different specs for different uses. I don’t know
whether Alexa had been listening in but, if she had, her timing was
unfortunate. What I would give for such a marvel!