Question:

Does looking at far away things make your vision better?

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If looking at things close up gives you nearsightedness, why doesn't looking at things that are far away make your vision better?

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  1. Your question has a very logically sense. Indeed there is an effective exercise to improve the vision. I did it for 4 months and the result is really.  Just 5 minutes on day you look so close that you see your nose and immediately you look far to sky for example. I've made it 100 times each day.

    Good luck


  2. Looking at things close up does not give you nearsightedness.  vision issues are caused by many things. And looking at things far away does not make your vision better.  They have eye focusing exercises to help make your vision stronger.  Most vision issues have to do with the puple not being circular but more football shaped.

  3. I don't mean to be rude to the other answerer's.  BUT your pupil has NOTHING to do with it.  I believe Mel was trying to use the example of your eye shape.  Your pupil it what lets in the light depending how much is in the area your eyes are in.  bright room less light needed small pupil.  dark room more light needed large pupil.  

    as far as vision training.  It can be done, it mostly is for focusing.  It strengthens your muscles in your eye which bend and move the gel like pillow in your eye called your lens.  

    Nearsightedness (hyperopia) and farsightedness (myopia) are on the shape of your eye... there for where the image appears in the back of your eye.

    If you are on the computer all day long or read all day long and find your vision is bad in the distance which it normally isn't.  it is stain from looking up close... you might need something to help you.  IE glasses contact lenses

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