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I got my glasses in 9th grade (~15 years old). I just went to school one day and realized I couldn't read the chalkboard at the front of the class anymore. Within a week, I had an eye exam and my first set of glasses.
Personally, it took me a couple years to adjust to them. I had 20/10 vision all throughout my childhood (I can see at 20 ft what most people see at 10 ft). My vision was better than perfect. So it was very distressing to all-of-a-sudden not be able to see clearly and it took me a long time to get used to it.
Also, glasses limited my range of view. Whereas I had a wide view normally, glasses put a smaller focused frame around my field of view, so I could only focus on details mostly straight ahead. Everything that moved in the corners of my vision spooked me because I couldn't focus on it without turning my head toward it. I was very jumpy for a long time.
My vision isn't terrible. Even at 41 years old now, my prescription is pretty weak. I'm nearsighted, so I don't even need my glasses for things up close, just long-distance viewing.
And thankfully, it's been stable for a long time. It's hardly changed in the last decade and a half. As of last year, my optometrist has been telling me my eyesight could potentially get much worse, now that I'm over 40. So I've been told to report back if I notice another sudden change in my vision. But I've been good so far.
I wanted to get PRK surgery for a while and I could've opted for a free surgery through the US military while I was serving. But things kept getting in the way of my request, and I finally decided to just leave it be. Especially as I got older; I was afraid I'd only be able to enjoy being glasses-free for a few years before I'd start needing reading glasses or something.
Also, my mother spent over 40 years working for the State Services for the Blind, so I grew up around a lot of blind people and always feared losing my vision. So I was a little terrified of getting eye surgery and potentially getting a botched job.