Duration: 5-10 minutes
- Sit comfortably and take a few deep breaths.
- Lean your elbows on a desk (place a pillow underneath to reduce strain on the elbows).
- Rub your palms together to warm them up.
- Close your eyes and cover
them with your palms. Your fingers should be on your forehead, and the
bottom of your palms should lean on your cheekbones.
- Make sure not to put pressure on your eyes by pressing your palms on them. To be sure, try blinking.
- Remain in this state for 5-10 minutes (it’s recommended that you use a timer).
- If your eyes still feel tired, repeat it.
4. Half-Closing Your Eyes
This exercise, taken from
traditional yoga, is meant to strengthen your eyelids, which have an
important role in supporting the eye.
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Duration: 1½ minutes
- Partially close your eyes, make sure your eyelids cover no more than half the eye.
- If your upper lids start shaking, concentrate until they stop. You can try focusing on a distant object.
- Remain in this state for 10-15 seconds, and then slowly close your eyes.
- Take a few deep breaths to
increase your blood flow. Visualize that the clean air you’re inhaling
going into your eyes. Exhale, then repeat for a minute.
5. Number 8 Movement
This exercise will strengthen the eye muscles and will improve their flexibility.
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Repetitions: 10 per direction
Sets: 3
- Imagine the number 8 lying down (∞).
- Track that shape with your eyes – do this slowly without moving your head.
- After completing 10
repetitions to one direction, blink for a few seconds, then perform 10
more repetitions to the other direction.
6. Massaging the Eyes, Temples, and eyebrows
This exercise relaxes the
eyes and reduces strain and tension by increasing blood flow to these
areas. Additionally, the mild pressure on the tear ducts will increase
the moistness in the eyes, which provides relief for tired eyes.
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Repetitions: 3
- Close your eyes.
- Lightly press on your upper
eyelids and gently massage them in circular motions using 3 fingers.
Perform 10 clockwise movements, and then 10 counter-clockwise movements.
- Repeat the same exercise on the lower eyelids.
- Use your fingertips to
massage your temples in circular motions. Do this 20 times in a
clockwise direction, and then 20 more times in a counter-clockwise
direction.
- Massage the point between the eyebrows.
- Apply gentle pressure on the inner edges of the eyebrows (by the nose), and then release. Perform this exercise 3 times.
7. Controlled Cross-eyed Focusing
This exercise will strengthen
your eye muscles, as well as train your eyes to focus on nearby
objects, thus relieving stress on the eyes.
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Duration: 5-10 Minutes
- Make a noticeable mark on a pencil.
- Hold the pencil vertically with your arm fully stretched, with the mark facing you.
- Focus on the mark, but do not proceed to step 4 until you’re 100% focused on the mark.
- Slowly move the pencil
closer to your face, while keeping total focus on the marked pencil. Try
and maintain a straight line with your nose. Your eyes will have to
adjust to keep the pencil in focus.
- Stop at the point where you start seeing double.
- Without moving your head or
the pencil, look away and focus on something else, and then take a
5-second break from the exercise. If the change in focus bothers your
eyes, close them for a few seconds. During this time, do not move your
head or the pencil.
- Once your eyes feel rested,
look back at the marked pencil, until you’re fully focused on it. If it
takes some time at first, don’t be discouraged. If you still see the
pencil twice after 2-3 tries, proceed to the next step.
- Slowly move the pencil away from your face while staying focused on it.
- Repeat for 5 minutes a day. Once this becomes easy, repeat for 10 minutes a day.
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