#920 Getting the eyelash out of your eye

Home freeEyeballs do not want to be touched.

I mean, have you ever put fingers, algae-filled lake water, or shampoo in there? Yeah, that gets your eyes screaming in pain pretty quick, doesn’t it? Unless you’re using Johnson & Johnson’s No More Tears shampoo of course, in which case feel free to lather your eyeballs right on up, no worries.

But seriously, your eyes have their own plumbing system so they’re pretty self-sufficient. Technically they’re called tear ducts but they may as well be called Eye Toilets because they just flush your eye out. Nope, no need for any assistance folks, because your Eye Toilets have it all under control. Dust, dirt, tiny little microscopic bugs — flush, flush, flush away.

Yes, your Eye Toilets are really quite good at their job …

… unless, of course, a rogue eyelash gets in there! Yes, when a rebel lash quietly unhinges itself from the confines of your eyelid and attempts a poorly planned escape to freedom it’s not good. If you’re like me and are cursed with poorly-attached eyelashes, then your lashes just give up and die all the time, flipping down into your eyeball and annoyingly scratching and clawing you right in the cornea. The Eye Toilets start madly flushing, but to no avail — that lash is just sticking in there tight and it ain’t budging.

Now, I don’t care how many barfights you’ve been in or how many times you’ve been shot, you know as well as I do that when there’s an eyelash in your eye it’s incredibly painful, it’s incredibly annoying, and it requires a ton of focus to get through. You might even have to try one of these eyelash-removing methods:

  • The Pinch and Squeeze Method. This is where you close your eye real tight, and then pinch ‘n’ squeeze all your eyelashes outwards, hoping to grab onto a tiny piece of the rogue lash and pull it out, too. I recommend doing this one first to see what happens. You miss here, you still got plenty of options.
  • The Get Someone Else To Blow Into Your Eye Method. If you’re the blowing friend, you can either do a Surprise Blow to prevent the blowee from defensively closing their eye just before you do the deed, or you can do the real surgical technique, where you get them to lie down, hold their eye open, and line up your blow exactly at the eyelash. That last one takes trust and a very dry, stiff blow. Think mighty birthday candle blowout not warming up your hands at the bus stop in winter.
  • The Hard Winker Method. A solo sport, this is where you just keep winking your eye really, really hard and hope the lash will eventually ‘pop out.’ Not a bad technique, though sometimes the act of hard winking just forces that eyelash in there deeper. Bit of a double-edged sword.
  • The Eyelid Flapper. My friend Scott taught me this method when we were little kids. You just pinch the skin of your eyelid with your fingers and keep popping it in and out real fast until the lash gives up and lets go. This method is a little bit gross to look at and comes complete with a marvelously wet and disgusting suction sound.
  • The Wash. If nothing else works, I guess you can always just splash some water in there. Or, if possible, use one of those dusty eyewash stations hanging out in the back of the woodshop. I’ve always wanted to see someone use one of those things. They look like they’re from a 1950s version of the future.

Anyway, whatever your strategy, one thing is certain: You aren’t doing anything until that eyelash comes out. You might get the job done in five seconds, you might work at it for ten painful minutes, but whatever the case, whatever your style, it sure does feel good when that eyelash finally does get out of your eye. Suddenly the sun rises again, the weight is lifted, and your life can get back on the road and just keep on trucking.

AWESOME!

If all else fails, use the machine

Photos from: here, here, and here

233 thoughts to “#920 Getting the eyelash out of your eye”

  1. I love what you guys are up too. This sort of clever work
    and coverage! Keep up the wonderful works guys I’ve incorporated you guys to blogroll.

  2. The hard wink method worked in a few minutes. Nothing else did: rapid blinking, flushing with water, putting my eye open under the shower faucet head: I moved the faucet every which way! Now my eye is just a bit sore, but the sharp pain is gone! Thanks.

  3. Given that this article is the first search result for the eyelash issue, that which most people wold only search while currently experiencing said issues, would it not make sense to cut to the chase immediately rather than abuse my lash-laden eye for several painful lines of useless witty text (anyone can be witty; the internet debatably contains more wit than solid facts)?

    P.s. Thank you for the awesome advice. The eyelid flipper worked splendidly.

  4. The easiest way to remove an eyelash is to wet your finger with saliva and then place the wet finger on the eyelash. The eyelash will stick to your finger easier than the dryer surface of the eyeball.

  5. #920 Getting that eyelash out of your eye.I can totally relate because it happens to me all the time I try to take my eyelash out of my eye in the mirror but I don’t see anything. So I just leave it in my eye or try to rub my eye but it never works I decide to give up. It takes a while to come out and it gets me frustrated like when I go to the movie theater and there’s no seats left but the front seats. It take a few minutes or sometimes hours to come out and I start to throw a Tantrum or start yelling to get it out of my eye. When it does come out and I don’t feel the aching pain I’m happy like when I get free candy from the candy store.The stress is off my back and I can go on with my normal day its totally,AWESOME.

  6. I had an eyelash in my eye and what I did was I kept on blinking until the eyelash went to the red bit of your eye then gently poked my nail in the red bit and I got it out. You should try this!!! IT REALLY WORKS!

  7. Just wash it out by cupping water in your hand and putting it against your eye an dthen open your eye as if your under water and it will wash it out or make it easier to get out.

  8. Q-tip Works fine when moisturised with a disinfectant! just need to locate the hairstrand which could be quite irritating.

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