DuckHairback wrote:
In the latest installment in my wonderful daughter's sensory issue saga, we have...glasses.
I'm hoping someone may have some experience/advice.
She's 10 by the way, and she's just broken her latest pair.
Much like her shoes, she feels like her glasses are going to fall off (they aren't, she can shake her head around and they don't move, it's a sensory feedback thing).
So she constantly bends them to try and get some feeling of security and one of two things happens:
1. She has them clamped on so hard she has serious marks on her nose and around her ears.
2. The arms break.
With shoes we've been able to find ones she can't do up too much but glasses - there just aren't that many options.
She gets annoyed with us telling her not to bend them and that they're pressing into her nose too much and she sometimes just refuses to wear them. But then she's wandering around a world she can't see.
Any suggestions?
TR 90 frames are your friend. They're virtually impossible to destroy shy of burning them or purposefully cutting them with a scissors. You can sit on them, you can bend them a lot farther than you'd expect and really, they tend to be pretty light as well.
Depending upon where you get them, the frames themselves only cost $5-10 to manufacture, so one of the smaller non-luxottica sites should be able to sell them for practically nothing with the actual lenses being the most expensive part of the whole thing.
I've personally got a few hundred sunglasses that use the material just for the tip of the arms, and they're quite comfortable. I don't have any that would take a prescription lens, but they'll fit securely without digging into the head. And, if need be, you can always attach a retaining strap if that's not enough.
EDIT: If you google tr90 prescription glasses, I see a fair number of shops with a pair for well under $100, with at least one being closer to $50.