Put the eyeglass chain on your glasses. Hang the command hook upside down on the back of the monitor. Hang your glasses so that they hang in front of the monitor (that's why the command hook is upside down!) Then when you go to work your glasses are hanging in front of your monitor.
My suggestion is to think of the habit as a seed that you grow.
Intentionally practice sitting down at your desk and putting on the glasses. Aim to intentionally practice doing it once a day. Start now: sit down at your desk, put on your glasses, and then go back to whatever you were doing. Then set an alarm to practice the same thing once tomorrow.
After you've successfully practiced intentionally sitting down at your desk and consciously putting on your glasses once per day, several days in a row, then start doing the same thing twice a day (again by setting an alarm to practice). After several days of that, do it three times per day.
My guess is that, after doing this, you'll start doing it automatically whenever you're at your desk.
The one key is consciously practicing the habit on a schedule instead of trying to remember when you happen to sit at the desk randomly. The other key is starting small and building up.
You can do what I do and just wear them around the house 95% of the time. I actually tend to prefer wearing them to my distance glasses, as long as I'm in my house (and I work from home, so I'm mostly in my house).
Some things in the distance are a little fuzzy but I just got used to not trying to focus on everything in the house.
But also if I'm not wearing them at my computer I really notice and it's a little difficult to work without them. I sometimes forget to bring them to a Starbucks and I can still work while wearing my normal glasses, but it's not as easy.
That being said, your Optometrist might not recommend this behavior. I haven't noticed any downsides to doing this though, and I've been doing it this way for like 6+ years now.
1) Old laptop (because it has separate volume control and loudspeakers) that once an hour plays an audio file of a voice saying "are you wearing your glasses?". Perhaps even "Time to stand up, stretch, drink some water, check the CO2 level, check you are wearing your glasses and sit with good posture" if you want to take automated nannying to the next level.
2) From a brief google it looks like computer vision can be used to detect if a person is wearing glasses. A software development project with openCV running on a raspberry pi using a webcam to detect if you are wearing your glasses. Perhaps programmed to only activate during working hours. Perhaps it could flash some red LEDs.
If your body doesn’t tell you you need them, it is not medically critical. And you have plenty of time to acquire the habit.
You can also change monitor scaling.
When it comes to reading glasses, an abundaence of cheap glasses is probably easier than tracking one special pair.
They are $1.25 at DollarTree. Four bucks and up at Wallmart. Keep a pair in your shirt pocket, a pair in your hoodie pocket, and two pairs pushed back on top of your head.
Buy a glasses chain and hang them around your neck so you never lose them. I've been trying to get my wife (who is a nurse) to do that as she keeps losing her glasses.
I solve this by purchasing multiple pairs of prescription bifocals from Zenni for $11 each
You need two things:
1. Eyeglass chain
2. Command hook
Put the eyeglass chain on your glasses. Hang the command hook upside down on the back of the monitor. Hang your glasses so that they hang in front of the monitor (that's why the command hook is upside down!) Then when you go to work your glasses are hanging in front of your monitor.
My suggestion is to think of the habit as a seed that you grow.
Intentionally practice sitting down at your desk and putting on the glasses. Aim to intentionally practice doing it once a day. Start now: sit down at your desk, put on your glasses, and then go back to whatever you were doing. Then set an alarm to practice the same thing once tomorrow.
After you've successfully practiced intentionally sitting down at your desk and consciously putting on your glasses once per day, several days in a row, then start doing the same thing twice a day (again by setting an alarm to practice). After several days of that, do it three times per day.
My guess is that, after doing this, you'll start doing it automatically whenever you're at your desk.
The one key is consciously practicing the habit on a schedule instead of trying to remember when you happen to sit at the desk randomly. The other key is starting small and building up.
Good luck!
If you don't notice the difference maybe you don't need them.
Leave your glasses on the chair in front of your desk. You will remember or crush them.
P.S. unless you have a dog. Some love chewing on glasses
You can do what I do and just wear them around the house 95% of the time. I actually tend to prefer wearing them to my distance glasses, as long as I'm in my house (and I work from home, so I'm mostly in my house).
Some things in the distance are a little fuzzy but I just got used to not trying to focus on everything in the house.
But also if I'm not wearing them at my computer I really notice and it's a little difficult to work without them. I sometimes forget to bring them to a Starbucks and I can still work while wearing my normal glasses, but it's not as easy.
That being said, your Optometrist might not recommend this behavior. I haven't noticed any downsides to doing this though, and I've been doing it this way for like 6+ years now.
Somewhat facetious technological solution suggestions:
1) Old laptop (because it has separate volume control and loudspeakers) that once an hour plays an audio file of a voice saying "are you wearing your glasses?". Perhaps even "Time to stand up, stretch, drink some water, check the CO2 level, check you are wearing your glasses and sit with good posture" if you want to take automated nannying to the next level.
2) From a brief google it looks like computer vision can be used to detect if a person is wearing glasses. A software development project with openCV running on a raspberry pi using a webcam to detect if you are wearing your glasses. Perhaps programmed to only activate during working hours. Perhaps it could flash some red LEDs.
When you take them off, put them on your keyboard.
Start an AI startup that uses your camera to check if you have them on and raise $20 million.
Proximity. Put the glass next to the mouse or on the keyboard.
Time is how habits are acquired.
If your body doesn’t tell you you need them, it is not medically critical. And you have plenty of time to acquire the habit.
You can also change monitor scaling.
When it comes to reading glasses, an abundaence of cheap glasses is probably easier than tracking one special pair.
They are $1.25 at DollarTree. Four bucks and up at Wallmart. Keep a pair in your shirt pocket, a pair in your hoodie pocket, and two pairs pushed back on top of your head.
Good luck.
Put a post it note on your monitor. Hard to ignore :) Reading software solutions for this is just facepalm...
Buy a glasses chain and hang them around your neck so you never lose them. I've been trying to get my wife (who is a nurse) to do that as she keeps losing her glasses.
Use software / hard screen cover to polarize view screen. Have slip-ons for glasses to be able to read/view 'depolarized' screen.
your optometrist is like Windows...they offered a solution to a non-existent problem by giving you a problem
Put a small sticker of your glasses or or on the edge of your dispolay on your laptop. It works for me everytime but YMMV
Set the fonts so small that you need "coke bottle" glasses to read anything at all.
/s?