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Likewise when you look at something close-up like a book or some sewing, the eye adjusts, muscles lengthen the area known as the vitreous chamber – the gelatinous bulk of the eyeball that lies between the lens and the retina. Your eyes do adjust, but some people find the strain gives them a headache. The same happens if you strain to read a book in dim light. If you switch a light on, it feels unbearably bright until your pupils have had time to readjust once more. If you are in a dark room, for instance, when you just wake up, this process allows you to become gradually accustomed to what initially feels like pitch-black darkness. Cells in your retina, called rods and cones, use this light to provide information to the brain about what you can see.
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If you are trying to read in the gloom your pupils dilate in order to take in more light through the lens onto your retinas. Our eyes are cleverly designed to adjust to different light levels. Wearing glasses or contact lenses solves the problem, but it doesn’t answer the question of why some people develop short-sightedness in childhood while others don’t. Short-sightedness or myopia means that a person can easily see things that are close up, but objects in the distance such as the number on a bus or the menu board in a restaurant look blurry. When you dig a little deeper and look at the scientific evidence, the story becomes much more complex. Carry out a quick internet search, though, and you’ll discover that this is apparently a myth. Whatever you heard, the warning that people shouldn’t read regularly in dim light is a familiar one. Or perhaps you used to hear that it’s easy to spot the studious children at school because they were the ones who had spent so long with their head in a book that they had to wear glasses. If you were ever caught reading in low light, or using a torch under the bedcovers to read after lights-out, your parents might well have warned you that straining your eyes would damage your eyesight.