# Eye Strain

> Eyes burn from hours of screen time, needs targeted eye-muscle relief.

- **Canonical URL:** https://wakeout.app/exercises/eye-exercises-for-screen-fatigue
- **30-second demo video:** https://wakeout-assets.b-cdn.net/demos/eyeStrain.mp4
- **Exercise count:** 19
- **Positions:** sitting, standing
- **Where:** desk
- **Time of day:** mid

## When to reach for this pack

Eyes burn from hours of screen time, needs targeted eye-muscle relief.

## Why this happens

Staring at a screen all day puts the eyes in a state they weren't designed for: fixed focal distance, reduced blink rate, and sustained ciliary muscle contraction as the lens holds the near-focus shape. After a few hours, the result is computer vision syndrome — burning, blurred vision, headache, dryness. The eyes normally cycle through thousands of micro-adjustments daily, relaxing and contracting the ciliary muscle as focus shifts between near and far. Screens eliminate that cycling entirely, and the muscle develops a stuck-contraction pattern similar to any other overworked muscle. This pack addresses three specific mechanisms: ciliary relaxation via deliberate distance-focus shifts, saccadic reset through rapid gaze changes, and blink restoration through conscious blink cycles that restore the tear film. Four minutes once or twice during a long screen day substantially reduces the end-of-day burn. No equipment, no screen required — done eyes-only.

## About this routine

Best for anyone spending more than four hours a day on screens. All movements are eyes-only and can be done from any position, taking about three minutes. Skip this pack if you have recent eye surgery, acute eye injury, high myopia with retinal issues, or any diagnosed retinal condition — some of the rapid-focus movements could aggravate those. If your eye pain is sharp, one-sided, or accompanied by vision loss, see an ophthalmologist — that's not computer strain. Safe during pregnancy.

## Exercises

1. **Alternating Winks**
2. **Blink**
3. **Draw A Circle**
4. **Draw An 8**
5. **Draw An Hourglass**
6. **Eye Rest**
7. **Eye Squint**
8. **Eyes Left Corner**
9. **Eyes Right Corner**
10. **Look Down**
11. **Look Left And Right**
12. **Look Up**
13. **Look Up And Down**
14. **Near And Far**
15. **Scan The Ceiling**
16. **Scan The Floor**
17. **Top Left To Bottom Right**
18. **Top Right To Bottom Left**
19. **Wide Eyed**

## Frequently asked

### What is computer vision syndrome, and is it serious?

Computer vision syndrome describes the cluster of symptoms — eye strain, blurred vision, headache, dry eyes, neck pain — that come from sustained screen use. It's extremely common among desk workers and generally not dangerous, but it's persistent and cumulative. It doesn't cause permanent vision damage in most cases, but chronic dryness and fatigue can worsen existing conditions. The underlying problem is ciliary muscle overwork and reduced blinking, both of which are mechanical and reversible with breaks.

### What is the 20-20-20 rule?

Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds. The rule gives the ciliary muscle — the one that adjusts your lens for focus — a chance to relax from the near-focus contraction screens hold it in. It's the single most effective habit for preventing screen-related eye strain and the foundation of this pack. If you can only do one thing for your eyes at work, this is it. The pack adds targeted movements that go further, but the 20-20-20 rule is the baseline.

### Why do my eyes feel so dry at the end of a screen day?

Screen focus drops your blink rate from about 15 blinks per minute to around 5, which means the tear film that coats the eye isn't being refreshed often enough. Combined with air conditioning and dry office air, this produces classic computer vision syndrome dryness. The pack includes deliberate blink cycles to restore the tear film, but if the problem is severe or persistent, lubricating drops (preservative-free) and a humidifier help. Chronic dry eye warrants seeing an ophthalmologist.

### Do eye exercises actually improve vision?

They don't change prescription-level refractive errors — if you're nearsighted, these won't undo that. What they do is reduce strain, fatigue, and dryness from overuse, the same way stretching doesn't change your bone structure but absolutely helps tight muscles. The benefit is real and mechanical: ciliary muscle relaxation, tear film restoration, reduced eye-related headaches. Manage expectations accordingly. These help the symptoms of overuse, not underlying vision conditions.

### Can I do these while still looking at my screen?

No — the whole point is to disengage from the screen. Most of the benefit comes from shifting focus to varied distances, closing the eyes for brief rest, and deliberate blinking, none of which work while you're reading. Close the laptop, turn away, or at least stare past the screen for the three minutes. If screen-free time isn't possible right now, at minimum do the blink cycles and the palm-cover rest segments — those give partial benefit even in a meeting-heavy context.

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Wakeout — desk exercises that break the sit habit. iOS: https://apps.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1242116567 · Chrome: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/wakeout-new-tab-desk-exer/pgepchplpmblclpfgklclelgdiinoihb