Eye floaters

It comes with vitreous detachment. As you age, the vitreous becomes more liquid and loses attachment to the retina. The flashes of light indicate retinal detachment which requires urgent attention. The floaters become less annoying with time. They don’t get better but you just get used to them. You can laser blast them but instead of one larger one, you get a bunch of fragments.
 
I had what I’d consider a flashing flower looking shape in the lower right field of view of my left eye back in March. It was only visible in bright light, like outdoors in full sunlight. I just so happened to have an annual eye exam within a week of noticing it and my optometrist referred me to a retinal specialist. I had a retinal detachment that had apparently been there for a few months based on the color. I had surgery a week later, a scleral buckle. They cut the white of your eye, and put a silicone zip tie around the eyeball to keep the retina from detaching further. The way the surgeon explained my reitnal, it’s like trying f to wallpaper a room that is just slightly larger than the amount of wallpaper you have, so the edges pull away. The buckle changes fhe shape of the eye by making it more egg shaped than round.

I’d definitely get it checked out and keep an eye (no pun intended) on it. They told me it’s much easier to prevent vision loss than to try and get it back. My Rx changed a lot so now I’m no longer nearsighted in that eye. I’m in my early 40s, most of the people in the waiting room were 65+ by the looks of them.
 
I had an "eye stroke" about 8 years ago. It resolved but I had one instance of a floater. Glad that was only a one off. It was unpleasant. I'm not one to run to the doctor but if it's your vision and something new, get it checked out by an ophthalmologist pronto.
 
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