Not sure if this means anything to anyone in their suggestions.
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So you’re farsighted. That’s what the + sign means in front of the numbers.
I don’t know much about farsightedness. But if the numbers graduate in the same way, you have a low power rx.
When the doctor measures the distance between your eyes they also are setting the spot on the lens that is the most clear, or in other words the ideal focus point. Since your eye moves but your glasses do not, there is technically only one spot that is “perfect“.
You probably won’t notice it with such a low prescription. Before I got cataracts, I had -9 and -10 rx, so looking out the sides of my glasses caused noticeable degradation in image quality.
Anyway, my point is for most people they set the focus point so if you’re sitting at a table and reading a book, the text is the sharpest it can be. That point is a little lower than dead center in front of your pupil.
People like me should really have two pairs of glasses, one for shooting and one for general use.
Why? Because as a right hander, behind the gun I’m really looking through the upper left quadrant of the right lens. I find that using contacts when shooting makes everything easier. But again, with your low RX I don’t think it’s going to matter.
Also, people like me get high index plastic lenses because the glass lenses in my rx weigh a fucking metric ton. In your case I don’t think it’s going to matter but ask. Glass lenses used to be sharper, that’s probably still the case but ask around.
The only consideration either way would then be shatter resistance which would help you determine if you should wear safety glasses when shooting or not.
There might be other factors to consider, but again, I’m not familiar with farsightedness.