I've been tempted to try contacts, but the idea of touching my eyes is...unnerving.
There is an adjustment period. And in fact you don't touch your eye except partially when taking them out. I use one hand to keep my lids open more, and the contact is on the tip of my other pointer finger. You just move your finger closer to your eye until you feel the wetness of the contact touch it, and then liquid surface tension takes over and the contact slips on to your pupil. Your finger never actually touches your eye. When I take them out, I use two fingers and touch near my pupil (on the contact.) That's generally enough to make it slip off onto my other finger.
It sounds and initially feels a lot tougher than it actually is but that's because it takes awhile to learn how to apply a light touch. Contacts today are so thin and porous that your eyes barely notice they're there, as long as they're
spotlessly clean and not months past their expiration date.I don't deny that it takes some ocular fortitude to get used to putting them in, but once you do and figure out your technique it doesn't hurt anymore. I don't even use a mirror anymore. It takes longer to rinse my contacts off in the morning that it does to put them in.
It's nice to not have glasses on if and when you choose to, especially if you play any kind of sports. I finally decided to try contacts after I got cross-checked playing soccer and was cut up by my own glasses.