I had been bumping my head on unseen obstructions (edges of cabinets, open cabinet doors, tree branches and other low hanging objects) and couldn't understand why I was suddenly so clumsy. My optomlogist as part of her annual exam of my eyes (Gluacoma) had me do a visual field test. The upshot of the test was that the upper third of my visual field (including peripheral vision) was very poor. She looked back at my visual field tests over the past 10 years and saw that my vision had been gradually decreasing in that I had been seeing less and less in that 1/3. So another visual field, this time with my brows and eyelids lifted with tape. WOW. All the difference in the world. She said that the loss of the field of view was due to genetics, age, gravity, and fatty deposits over the eyelids that were pushing the upper eyelids down. It was present to some degree even in the late 80s when I was trying to wear contact lenses that had to be weighted due to astigmatism. The weight of the upper lids and the deposits would push them out of position and I had to give them up.
So on Dec 8, I had a Blepharoplasty and brow lift. The procedure took less than an hour, and involved taking a bit of the lid and some minor liposuction of the fatty deposits that were bearing down on the lid, sliding a couple of thin wires from behind my hairline to my brows and gently lifting them up. So you wind up with sutures in your scalp (they need a good run to make a shallow groove in the frontal bone. For about 4 days you have swollen eyes (but not bad) nicely developing black eyes, swelling around the eyes and the sutures above the hairline, and not really wanting to see yourself in the mirror for awhile

. I am still recouping (still some slight swelling and numb areas associated with the swelling, and some remaining "self dissolving stitches, and oh yeah, some black eyes and some other minor bruising), but the difference in brightness in the world, and in the size of the area I can see are amazing.
A nice side effect is that I now have upper eyelids and lashes again, my eyebrows are lifted and gently arched and my forehead is nice and smooth!
So if you happen to be over 50, and notice in the mirror that you seem to have no upper eyelids and your lashes fit flush with some upper lid bagginess, have a visual field and see if you are losing your upper visual range to it.
There is a solution.
Carolynn
"It’s not given to anyone to have no regrets; only to decide, through the choices we make, which regrets we’ll have,"
David Weber – In Fury Born