Anybody else going to....
Chase_The_Pain
Posts: 255 Member
stare at the sun with your bare eyeballs like a real man tomorrow?
I'm so over this eclipse shìt it's ridiculous. People buying $4 solar glasses and selling them for $7. I'd rather stare off into the sun and end it all.
I'm so over this eclipse shìt it's ridiculous. People buying $4 solar glasses and selling them for $7. I'd rather stare off into the sun and end it all.
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Replies
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You know when you were a kid and people would tell you not to stare at the sun...that just made me do it3
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I got some for free at the library. Otherwise I'd just watch on my computer.1
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Nope I'm using spare welding glasses lenses to watch.2
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I'll be at work so No.2
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I had the talk with my 21-year old and told her that at this location we'd be in a totality in 2024. She considered for a moment that this was not so far off and decided to sleep through the partial eclipse tomorrow.1
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I'm ready for it to be done with to be honest.1
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tammi19731 wrote: »I'm ready for it to be done with to be honest.
same here
Sun... blah, blah, blah
Moon... big deal
a lil' shade? so what
let's move on to what's really important....... Football Season
right?3 -
I have some glasses that are probably fake, I'm excited. It won't be fully covered here, onky 80% or something. I've never seen an eclipse... plus I'm a nerd2
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Chase_The_Pain wrote: »
Everyone is talking about it at the office this morning. I hope someone has extra glasses.2 -
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We always stared at it when we were told not to .
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I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?0
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Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
I was just reading you need about 400 regular sunglass to give the protection the solar ones gives.1 -
Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
I was just reading you need about 400 regular sunglass to give the protection the solar ones gives.
Good thing i have 400 pairs of sunglasses lying around, wouldnt want to have to buy those other ones2 -
Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.4 -
Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Simple answer...they're really friggin dark.0 -
RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.
I wish I'd known this last week. I had a theory that with enough of those roll up sunglasses you get from the eye doctor you could survive looking at the sun but I didn't have a supplier to help me test it out.0 -
Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.
I wish I'd known this last week. I had a theory that with enough of those roll up sunglasses you get from the eye doctor you could survive looking at the sun but I didn't have a supplier to help me test it out.
I can still send you some to test it out but I am pretty sure it is not going to work. You can't believe all the phone calls we have gotten this past week asking if they can just duct tape several pair of sunglasses together. Ummm no.0 -
RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.
I wish I'd known this last week. I had a theory that with enough of those roll up sunglasses you get from the eye doctor you could survive looking at the sun but I didn't have a supplier to help me test it out.
I can still send you some to test it out but I am pretty sure it is not going to work. You can't believe all the phone calls we have gotten this past week asking if they can just duct tape several pair of sunglasses together. Ummm no.
We don't have time, after today I have no reason to look at the sun again for the rest of my lifetime. The amount of emphasis they're putting on telling people to not look directly at the sun is somewhat humorous though. I have no doubt there will be plenty of busy eye docs after today though.0 -
Problem solved. I don't need to run around all crazy like looking for some cheap sun glasses...
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Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.
I wish I'd known this last week. I had a theory that with enough of those roll up sunglasses you get from the eye doctor you could survive looking at the sun but I didn't have a supplier to help me test it out.
I can still send you some to test it out but I am pretty sure it is not going to work. You can't believe all the phone calls we have gotten this past week asking if they can just duct tape several pair of sunglasses together. Ummm no.
We don't have time, after today I have no reason to look at the sun again for the rest of my lifetime. The amount of emphasis they're putting on telling people to not look directly at the sun is somewhat humorous though. I have no doubt there will be plenty of busy eye docs after today though.
There will be another solar eclipse in 2024. It's really not that far away, we can be prepared and yes, I am assuming people will still look at it and will be hitting up their doctors the rest of the week. Us included. Unfortunately there will be nothing we can do for them.0 -
I like the idea that we are all riding on a tiny little ball of rock and water, hurtling through infinite space, and we get to watch all the other balls of gas and dust and rock moving around out there. So today the moon goes between us and the sun and makes a shadow on us...woo-hoo!
The fact is that the sun can permanently damage your retinas, so BE FARKING CAREFUL!! I heard a news report that said that statistically it is predominantly young males between 16 and 30 who experience eye damage from eclipses, so USE PROTECTION! (No! NOT condoms!!) You know who you are...LOL!
Also...I read this on a post here on MFP and I liked it a lot, so I think it's worth repeating here: When you go outside and look "up" at the sky, you are really looking "down" into the bottomless abyss of the infinite universe, and gravity is the only thing holding your feet on the ground and keeping you from falling into it...I love it!2 -
I'm in Australia, so, no...0
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The funniest thing I have seen about this eclipse is the fact that people are warning you to keep your pets indoors. If it was such an issue wouldn't all the wild animals be blind? The only ones interested in the sun and what is going on are the humans. Animals are just going to start their night habits. I think there is much to do about nothing.2
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RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Caporegiem wrote: »RunHardBeStrong wrote: »Chase_The_Pain wrote: »I wonder what the difference is with the special ones they sell and regular sunglasses?
Regular sunglasses don't block near enough of the uv rays that will be coming through. The eclipse glasses will block 99% of them. They are literally pitch black and you can't see anything but the sun through them. Unlike regular sunglasses.
As an eyecare professional, it's not a hoax. You can go partially to fully blind if you look at the eclipse without proper protection. Even for a quick second, the rays will burn your retina without the proper eye wear.
I wish I'd known this last week. I had a theory that with enough of those roll up sunglasses you get from the eye doctor you could survive looking at the sun but I didn't have a supplier to help me test it out.
I can still send you some to test it out but I am pretty sure it is not going to work. You can't believe all the phone calls we have gotten this past week asking if they can just duct tape several pair of sunglasses together. Ummm no.
We don't have time, after today I have no reason to look at the sun again for the rest of my lifetime. The amount of emphasis they're putting on telling people to not look directly at the sun is somewhat humorous though. I have no doubt there will be plenty of busy eye docs after today though.
There will be another solar eclipse in 2024. It's really not that far away, we can be prepared and yes, I am assuming people will still look at it and will be hitting up their doctors the rest of the week. Us included. Unfortunately there will be nothing we can do for them.
But it wont be Totatlity for me like this one. 2024 won't have the same smell of burning retinas in the air like this one will.3 -
I'm going to watch it on live stream, I still need special glasses right?0
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SEAHORSES4EVER wrote: »I'm going to watch it on live stream, I still need special glasses right?
Yes, you're pretty much going to have a frickin laser beam coming through your computer screen.3 -
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