Iโve endured 18 years of bad vision. Iโve worn glasses or contacts since elementary/middle school.
In prehistoric days, bad eyesight might have been a death sentence. I couldnโt hunt prey, forage for berries or spot predators. In 21st century America, though, blurry vision is a minor inconvenience. Itโs also an expense that adds up faster than you might expect.
An annual eye exam and contact lens prescription costs about $300 a year (in todayโs dollars). That means fixing my vision has cost $5,400 over the past two decades.
That price tag nearly doubled on Friday, when I shelled out $4,000 for LASIK eye surgery. (It blows my mind that our society is advanced enough to operate on peopleโs eyeballs. I mean, really?) Assuming I never spend another dime on my eyesight again, blurry vision has cost me a little less than $10,000.
Is that a little or a lot? Thatโs relative. Millions of people have spent a lot more dealing with near-blindness or advanced eye disease. Millions more have never spent a penny on their vision.
Health-related costs are sheer luck of the draw. Some people shoulder huge health costs; others spend next-to-nothing.
If you havenโt needed to spend much on your health, youโre fortunate. Donโt squander your healthy days with extreme coupon-clipping and penny-pinching. Itโs a waste of your blessings. There are better ways to spend your life.
If youโve spent a lot of money on your health โ first, I hope for your strong recovery. Second, rest assured youโve spent your money in the best possible way.
Nothing Else Matters
Afford Anything is devoted to ruthlessly prioritizing your expenses. Slash the unimportant costs so you can spend wildly on what matters most.
99% of the time, I have no opinion about what expenses should hit the top of your list. If you’re passionate about travel, handbags, fancy cars or baseball cards, go for it. Spend outrageously on what you love.
But thereโs one expense that comes first no matter what: your health. Itโs ridiculous to compromise your well-being for the sake of saving a few hundred (or even a few thousand) bucks. What else are you going to do with that money? Youโre not going to enjoy travel, nice dinners or sleek cars if youโre in chronic pain.
Iโm infuriated by penny-pinchers who cut corners when it comes to their well-being. People will skip a doctorโs appointment to avoid the co-pay or avoid filling a prescription to save $100. At the same time, they have cable TV service and eat at restaurants. Thatโs a perverse ordering of priorities.
The same is true when it comes to safety. Thereโs no reason to go into debt to drive a shiny new Lexus. But if your car is so old that the seatbelt fibers are fraying, get a new car (or replace the seatbelt). If your car doesnโt have airbags, buy one that does. If your tires are bald, get new tires with traction.
Screw the Veggies!
Iโve heard penny-pinchers recommend eating nothing but pasta in order to save money. Screw the vegetables, weโll live on rice! That’s short-sighted and pound-foolish. (And it insults the ancestors who painstakingly built our advanced society).
Extreme penny-pinchers also forsake routine checkups and screenings because their bodies will “clue them in” if something’s wrong. Hogwash.
Take care of yourself, or life will catch up with you sooner than you expect. A seven-figure retirement account wonโt do you any good if youโve withered away by the time youโre 55.
“But I can heal myself with good vibes and lots of karma!” No, you can’t.
Thereโs no expense more worthwhile than preserving life. Get the treatment you need, even if you have to go into debt to do it. Yes, I am giving you permission to go into medical debt if necessary. It sucks, but itโs better than the alternative.
Youโll regret your bald tires when youโve broken a few ribs. Youโll yearn for that $1,500 deductible when your condition has advanced beyond care.
And for the love of God, if youโre self-employed or if you donโt have health insurance โ BUY SOME! – even if you have to wear clothes from Goodwill and skip flying home for Christmas to afford the monthly premiums. Want a defense against medical debt? It’s called insurance. It’s not 100 percent foolproof, but it’s the best chance you’ve got.
Money is unlimited โ you can always make more. Health is a scarce and finite resource. Once itโs gone, itโs gone.
Thanks to Louis Rabin for the photo.

