At the 2024 Paris Olympics, gymnast Steven Nedorosik won the individual bronze medal with a mesmerizing pommel horse routine and led the U.S. men’s team to a bronze medal, but he’s also become just as famous for his Clark Kent-style glasses. The 25-year-old is almost always Find a place to relax He always wore dark glasses, but when he competed he would take them off and show off his heroic athleticism. Now the glasses-wearing champion is back in the spotlight: He’ll be competing in the 33rd season of ABC’s “Superman.” Dancing with the StarsIt will premiere on Tuesday, September 17th at 8pm ET.
Not only are Nedorosic’s trusty glasses his trademark, but it turns out he has two eye conditions that affect his vision, as he’s said in the past. And the only reason he wears glasses is because off He said he didn’t wear one before competing in the Olympics because if he left it on, “it would fly away somewhere.” todaySo it seems he has gotten used to competing without being able to see clearly.
2022, Nedorosic Posted a TikTok video In the video, he explains that he has strabismus, which he describes as a condition in which the eyes are cross-eyed, and demonstrates how to switch eye dominance on command with both eyes open. Then, during this year’s Olympics, he commented on the video, saying he posted it because he wanted to know if anyone had a similar experience with strabismus, and that he can “switch the way he sees the world from one eye to the other, like switching a camera to the other eye.” [2 inches] Go away.”
Ophthalmologist in Portland, Oregon William Flannery, M.D.People passing by Dr. Glaucom Flecken,suggestion His own TikTok video This summer, it was announced that Nedorosic may have esotropia, a type of strabismus in which one or both eyes turn toward the nose. This common condition is often called “cross-eyed” and essentially involves a loss of muscle and nerve coordination. Normally, the eyes work together, but with esotropia, they work separately.