
Working on the periphery – impostor syndrome
If you have impostor syndrome, you're not alone!

If you have impostor syndrome, you're not alone!

I had cataracts – nothing else. No dry eye, no light sensitivity, no ocular surface discomfort. I had never struggled with irritated lids, gritty eyes or blurred vision beyond what could be attributed

As the self-appointed scribe on the less formal side of sight loss, I've always felt that self-regard is important to the average Blindy. I've dealt with personal attitude at some length in the past but somehow failed to point out in any detail that it is in fact a two-way street. Now the ‘communica

If you ask a room full of clinicians whether they value fairness, evidence and merit-based opportunity, almost every hand will go up. Those of us working to optimise vision are trained to notice subtl

As much as I love what we have here in New Zealand, when I get to be on the other side of the world I always look with envy at what they have there. It’s amazing how much more you can do when you have enough people. You notice it in all kinds of ways, large and small. A good restaurant can sustain i

The ODOB has dismissed my previous view – that it was protecting its right-to-be over practitioners’ and the public’s best interest – as "misunderstanding the Board's core remit”. But the mathematics of 96% increased-costs-delivering-zero-improved-outcomes remains unchanged, regardless of who prese

LINK: https://www.nzoptics.co.nz/live-articles/in-the-dark/

David Slack on his dad's cataract surgery and the eyecare professionals who make it all possible

An analysis of how the Optometrists and Dispensing Opticians Board’s submission to Government reveals a fundamental disconnect between institutional interests and professional needs.

In my early days of cane use I was always struck by people’s reaction to the thing. I suppose wheeling along three feet or so at the back end of a white stick separates the user a bit from the norm. The adults were a study on their own – everything from polite consideration to a wariness more suited

Chalkeyes calls for collective effort, for optometrists to stand together to gain real advocacy and reform

I will forever marvel at the thought that all this life around us began as nothing more than an amoeba on a rock – from the iridescence of birds or the perfect tiny hands of a baby to the anatomical closeup of the human eye as I sit waiting in a clinic to learn if my sight is in peril.
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