This is a genuine one-eyed column, thanks to my allowing a charming young ophthalmologist to dig around in one of my eyeballs with her knife and fork.
Cataract surgery is a commonplace operation, but facing the procedure for the first time, one cannot help feeling apprehensive about signing the forms that permit others to carry out the work on the presumed basis of all care - but no responsibility.
When a colleague inquired on what professional basis I had chosen my surgeon, I optimistically responded, "well, she's not bad-looking for a start."
I've inherited my latest professional from past specialists who've either died or retired. (You can tell you're really getting old when you've outlived most of the doctors who have valiantly held you together over the years.)
Previous visits to opticians have usually required only adjustments to spectacle lenses as the inevitable acknowledgment of the aging process, but this year I was earnestly advised that the reason I'm not noticing the beer and food stains on my tie any more is because of the increasing opacity creepily removing the clarity of my vision.