My visual field has worsened a lot again. I did not notice because it has only been a month that I have had a reasonably working solution for blinding glare, a mesh eyepatch with I love. So the perspective from behind the eyes has been that things finally improved this month because of the patch type. The woman who makes these patches provided me with so much by making and selling them. I plan to get more. Even if (or when) I lose the eye they will be more comfy than standard patches which heat up a load. So in the middle of next month I get to have another three hour evaluation and then probably a bleb revision surgery, so probably another invasive eye surgery is in my near future. That eye has less than 20% of its field now and because my pressure was too low for too long after the surgery in Spring I also have damage to the retina and lens. This time I will use a different surgeon than the well considered male diva in MA who left me with this mess and repeatedly forgot that people are actually attached to the eyes. (I am not a litigious person but in his case I considered making a sole exception especially for the behaviors that happened when he forgot that people are attached to eyes and that patients have a right to be involved in their care and be spoken to when something painful has to happen instead of signaling a coworker to pin the person against the head bar. Pain is not the problem; I know pain. Removing a patient's selfsovereignty is the problem. That was a lot worse than I make it sound and is still too painful to think about often, and not the way any surgeon has ever before treated me. I did not take him to court but for the first time ever in my many years I seriously thought about it due to his deprivation of my rights as a patient. He is someone who has made some progress for glaucoma so has done good in the world but needs to not make his own patient interface choices. I figure I can feel free to say this because I never said who he was and because this is the sorry reality.) FORTUNATELY there is now a surgeon in NJ who my ophthalmologist feels good about, but he will have to deal w a very narrow band. An IOP of 10 is now too high for my degree of damage, but 6, which is just above hypotony caused the added damage. The poor man is going to be asked to try something very, very difficult. We will see if it is possible. This one donates time to eye charities and is honest about the good and the bad on his website, so I feel much better about him for my needs, and those things are ones to be respected. He also is someone who has made advances in the field. I guess, though, it is like aging in a way. With age each day is the oldest a person has been, but it is also the youngest the person will ever be, so maybe in between mourning my vision (both interactive btwn the eyes and the vision of that eye specifically) I also had better appreciate what I have while I actually have it. Lori, sorry about not calling. We have had three human family seniors very ill, and Steve's dad died recently (so now two still ill). [Posted in FML 8019]