Imagine never needing your glasses again. No surgery, no contacts, just… fixing your eyes yourself. That’s the big promise of Endmyopia, a popular online method created by Jake Steiner. He claims you can reverse nearsightedness (myopia) just by changing your habits.
It sounds awesome, right? But before you throw away your glasses, you need to know that most eye doctors and scientists say it’s not that simple. Here is the lowdown on what this method is, why people try it, and why the medical consensus says it probably won’t work like you think.
The big claim: “Your glasses are the problem”
Endmyopia is based on a simple idea: your eyes aren’t broken; they are just reacting to your environment.
It starts with a muscle cramp
The theory goes like this: when you spend hours staring at your phone or laptop, a focusing muscle inside your eye gets tired and cramps up. This is called pseudo-myopia. At first, your vision is only blurry because of this cramp.
Then your eye grows longer
The controversial part is what happens next. Steiner says that when you wear glasses to fix that blur, your eye physically grows longer to “adapt” to the lenses. A longer eyeball is what causes true nearsightedness. Basically, the method claims your glasses trap you in a cycle that makes your vision worse.
The “fix”: training your eyes
To reverse this, Endmyopia tells you to do two things:
- Use weaker glasses: Instead of your full prescription, you wear weaker glasses for close-up work (like homework or gaming) to stop the eye strain.
- Practice “Active Focus”: This is a mental trick. You look at something far away that is slightly blurry (like a street sign) and try hard to make it clear just by focusing. The idea is that this effort forces your eyeball to shrink back to its normal size.
What science says
Here is the problem: Eye doctors agree that once your eyeball grows too long, it usually stays that way. It’s like your height – once you grow tall, you don’t shrink back down just because you want to.
Your eyeballs aren’t like muscles
You can train a muscle to get bigger, but you can’t really train an eyeball to get shorter. While atropine drops or special contact lenses can slow down eye growth in kids, there is no scientific proof that you can reverse it significantly once it’s happened.
Wearing weak glasses might backfire
Trying to fix your eyes by wearing weaker glasses can actually make things worse. A famous study (Chung et al., 2002) showed that under-correcting vision (wearing glasses that are too weak) made kids’ eyes grow faster, not slower. Blurry vision seems to signal the eye to keep growing, which is the exact opposite of what you want.
Why do some people swear it works?
If science says it doesn’t work, why are there so many success stories online? Read on Reddit: I was able to effectively fully cure myopia with my own methodology of eye exercises and discussions about do eye exercise really work?.
Brain training vs. Eye shrinking
When you practice looking at blurry things, your brain gets smarter at guessing what it’s seeing. This is called blur adaptation. You might be able to read a sign further away, not because your eyes are fixed, but because your brain is better at decoding the fuzzy image. You are “seeing” better, but your nearsightedness hasn’t actually disappeared.
Is there any hope?
Interestingly, some new research on red light therapy shows that specific light treatments might slightly shorten the eye.
Is it worth trying?
Trying to fix your eyes this way takes a huge amount of time – years of daily practice. Walking around (or driving!) with blurry vision can be dangerous.
Sources & related information
Study: Weak glasses make eyes worse (2002)
A major study showed that giving kids weaker glasses actually made their nearsightedness get worse faster.
Experts: Can you reverse myopia?
Eye doctors explain that while eye spasms can be fixed, the actual shape of a nearsighted eye is permanent.
Endmyopia Website
The source of the “active focus” method and the theory that glasses are to blame.
Red Light Therapy Study (2022)
A study showing that a specific type of red light therapy could shrink the eye slightly, proving some change is possible.
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