She has been wearing 0K lenses for nearly five months now. Along the way, although she was not used to the lenses at first, and even had the dangerous experience of crying in the middle of the night when the lenses slipped off and her eyes became red and swollen, after a period of time, her wearing condition stabilized. The pair of not too small eyes converged again, and the pretty little face had the vigor of the past, and our parents’ anxious hearts were finally put down a lot. This summer, my colleague recommended OK lenses to us. On August 5, we brought our daughter, who has been myopic for almost two years, to the ophthalmology department of the Sixth Hospital. The person who tried on our daughter was Dr. Wang Yuwen’s assistant, Jia Dazhou. Although Dr. Jia is a male comrade, just like his fresh and beautiful appearance, his professional skills are so skillful, trying on the lenses, spotting the phosphor, measuring the fit of the lenses with the pupil, and determining the curvature of the lenses, each action is so clean and precise. Dr. Jia also patiently explained to us parents, and his kind words were like a cool breeze to remove our anxiety and anxiety. After two hours of trial and error, my daughter’s vision did not improve as much as the other girl who tried it on with her, so we were at a loss. He explained the situation to us and we decided to wear OK lenses. About a week later, the lenses were ready. On that day, I was worried: I didn’t know if I would be able to put the lenses on my daughter smoothly? Would I accidentally damage my daughter’s cornea? Would my daughter sleep comfortably with the lenses on all night? Before going to bed, my daughter and I were ready to read the instruction manual over and over again for half an hour before finally placing the two small, clear lenses in my daughter’s eyes, at which point we both breathed a long sigh of relief. Three days passed, and according to the self-examination during the day, our daughter’s vision in her left eye was significantly improved to more than 1.2, but her right eye only stayed at 0.6 or 7, and our hearts seemed to be hanging in the air, like we were going up and down. At that time, another unexpected event happened. On the sixth night, my daughter suddenly ran out of her room in the middle of the night, and it turned out that the lens had accidentally slipped off. After removing the lens and giving her some anti-inflammatory drops, we rushed to take my daughter to the hospital for a review as the day finally dawned amidst the anxiety and waiting. There were fine scratches on the cornea, but they were not serious, and the doctor ordered us to stop wearing them for three days. Fortunately, the vision in the right eye came up very quickly during these three days, which gave us a piece of mind. I thought that since the vision in both eyes had gone up to 1.2, as long as we kept wearing them, the effect would definitely come out. After that, my daughter and I were more careful when wearing them. Day by day, my daughter and I got used to it, and the wearing time was shortened from half an hour to about ten minutes, as if we had to brush our teeth and wash our faces before going to bed. The results of the daily self-test also gave me confidence in keeping my daughter’s vision, because even in the evening, my daughter’s vision was the same as when she first woke up in the morning, and her eyes, which had been slightly deformed, were gradually recovering and looking better, and the two small white dots on the bridge of her nose, which had been formed by wearing frame glasses, were also gone. The holiday was over, and when my daughter could finally take off her frames and go to school, I sighed in my heart: OK glasses, it’s good to have you with me!