HELP

Here, look at this for a minute or two.

Attached: vision recovery trick.gif (500x500, 206K)

>This property led to non-redundant effects being reported by people who had used computer monitors with uniformly colored phosphors to do word processing.
> These monitors were popular in the 1980s, and commonly showed text as green on black. People noticed later when reading text of the same spatial frequency, in a book say, that it looked pink.
> Also a horizontal grating of the same spatial frequency as the horizontal lines of the induction text (such as the horizontal stripes on the letters "IBM" on the envelope for early floppy disks) looked pink.

too fast tho

I work for Nestle and I approve this post.

Don't close your eyes or get some sleep tho. Just drink until.

>he uses a IPS screen with lightbleed and low contrast

>he doesnt use OLED matte screen
>he doesnt use dark themes on his phones/pc
>he doesnt use HiDPI font above average size

Enjoy your premature blindness.

>He doesn't work in VR so your eyes can focus on the infinite instead of straining on a screen
Enjoy nothing.

eye strain, go to a doctor and he'll give you glasses. welcome to the club

Serious reply.

This happened to me a few times when I really went overboard.
It should clear up after a few hours tops, no permanent damage to your vision unless you keep programming all day in the dark too often (I do, slight vision loss but nothing alarming).

If you only have it in one eye, just close it and keep coding with the other one. That's thoroughly unhealthy, but you probably don't care since you've already gone too far.

I'm using a TN monitor

lol that will make it worse.

Stop working for hours on end. Switch between watching close stuff and far away stuff. Also OP probably has got dry eyes.