The doctor put some drops in my eye and looked at it under a blacklight to check for corneal abrasions. Everything looked normal. No big surprise, because if I did have one, I should have been in a lot of pain. Whew! It was even kind of cool because he brought me to the mirror so I could see my eye fluoresce under the light. Then he pulled out the Ophthalmoscope and checked for debris...and found that my black dot was indeed a piece of metal. He tried swabbing it out with a q-tip, but found that it must be below the surface. So the doctor was really nice and called up a buddy who's an opthamologist to get me squeezed into their schedule. Here's where things get really fun.
After a bit of a wait, the doctor checked out the dot and away we went. They gave me a numbing drop, let that sit for 10-15 minutes and gave me a second. From there, he removed the dot with a needle, swabbed the piece off with a q-tip, and used a drill to smooth out the disturbed surface. A needle. In my eye. Take a moment to squirm on that one. Actually it wasn't that bad and didn't hurt at all. It was like someone just touching my eye. But I didn't get off that easy. I told the doctor that my eye was also irritated all the way out on the side. So he swabbed it to make sure we got everything. Swabbing here was not a light dabbing. It was pulling back the eyelid, jamming in the q-tip, and running across the eye. I yelped...and spent the next couple days feeling like someone punched me in the eye from the inside.
Everything has been fine for a few days now. And dear readers, the important lesson is:
"Safety GOGGLES, not safety glasses"
Oh, and if you're squeamish...you probably shouldn't have read this. ;)

6 comments:
your eye is full of peanut butter.
Gah. Gaaaah. GAH.
Mmmmm peanut buttter eyes.
Ew. Gah. Blech.
Did he use a Dremel to smooth the surface?
eye am hoping you are feeling better.
It was hard to read, and It is very funny that the warning label is at the BOTTOM OF THE PAGE.
Tee hee hee, hope your eye feels better soon.
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