Astigmatism Stories

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astigmatism

11 Stories

  • What Is Astigmatism? by VivekWaghmare
    VivekWaghmare
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      Reads 6
    • WpPart
      Parts 1
    Astigmatism is a common eye problem. The problem is caused by imperfections in the curvature of your eyes causing blurred distance or near vision. Normally your corneas and eye lens are smooth and uniformly curved in all directions. Astigmatism is a refractive error caused by the irregular shape of your cornea.
  • More Glasses by damn_okay
    damn_okay
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      Reads 5,066
    • WpPart
      Parts 3
    Tony discovers that Peter fought in the Civil War practically blind. (Work is also poster on Archive of our own at damn_okay)
  • astigmatism ↠ lashton by CuddlyMikey
    CuddlyMikey
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      Reads 565
    • WpPart
      Parts 5
    astigmatism; light rays entering the eye are not uniformly focused on the retina. The result is blurred vision at all distances.
  • Beta Unfiltered Thoughts (not an A/B/O...) by Aristara
    Aristara
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      Reads 1
    • WpPart
      Parts 1
    Here I will write random things and express random opinions, thye may be strongly worded or thye may just be poems either way, enjoy my thoughts! Also if you get offended, sorry not sorry.
  • New Glasses by damn_okay
    damn_okay
    • WpView
      Reads 1,501
    • WpPart
      Parts 3
    Peters eyesight goes from bad to worse after the spider bite. (Work is also poster on Archive of our own at damn_okay)
  • The Weight of Being Whitney & Jack: Beneath The Mask by QUEENTYRAN0VA23
    QUEENTYRAN0VA23
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      Reads 381
    • WpPart
      Parts 23
    In the quiet, multi-generational home on Willow Street in Oakhaven, 11-year-old fraternal twins Whitney and Jack carry a burden heavier than any child should. Born with astigmatism that subtly blurs their vision, they've learned to see the world, and themselves, through a distorted lens. Both high-masking and autistic, they've perfected the art of pretending, presenting "Wyatt" and "Jessica" to their loving mom, Caroline, and doting grandparents, even playing with toys that feel fundamentally wrong. For Whitney, an unspoken parentification has twisted her yearning for feminine identity into a bittersweet, negative euphoria, finding validation in caregiving while losing her own childhood. For Jack, the constant performance of being "Jessica" has created an exhausting internal void. Despite a monthly stipend from a deadbeat dad providing comfort, it's the profound emotional neglect of not being their true selves that slowly crushes them. Until one evening, the carefully constructed masks shatter. The weight of their hidden lives becomes too much to bear, forcing Whitney and Jack into a raw, unplanned confession. This is the story of two siblings, bound by birth and by secret, who must now navigate the terrifying path to their authentic selves, hoping their family's love can embrace the children they truly are, beneath the mask.