Do you know this?

India
November 13, 2009 9:09am CST
I came to know from my friend that when we aged our eye colors changed. I doesn't know whether it is true or not. Do you heard about this?
4 responses
• India
13 Nov 09
yea it is true..in most cases it does change..but it is because we are losing the eye pigment..nothing else..kinda like also means that we're losing our eyesight or our eyepower is decreasing a lil bit..nothin based on beauty anyway
• India
13 Nov 09
well it depends..if you;re a person who isnt wearing glasses or dont have any kinda eye problems ..you'll be ok till aout 60 or 65..and if you have ne problmes for your eye may be earlier..ofcourse there is always luck and god's grace..hehe
• India
13 Nov 09
Ya you are correct. But i want to know at what age we will lose our eye sight.
@menolly22 (217)
• United States
13 Nov 09
They do change to a point. As we get older the pigment in our eyes fades. Or the eyes become milk looking. I'd say they just kind of fade.
• India
13 Nov 09
but what i heard was our eye color changed to blue.
1 person likes this
• United States
13 Nov 09
I work in a nursing home and most of the residents there have not had their eyes change. They just kind of get that milky color to them and the color itself dulls.
@ravinskye (8237)
• United States
13 Nov 09
I've heard that. Most babies are born with blue eyes and their eye color can change up till a year old I think. My oldest and youngest have blue eyes and they stayed blue but my middle one was born with blue eyes and they changed. She has more of a hazel brown color in her eyes now. After a year of age though I've never heard of eye color changing but I guess it's possible.
• India
13 Nov 09
So nothing is permanent in this world for us. I think so.
@MJay101 (710)
13 Nov 09
I know that it's true in my case. I used to have bright blue eyes and blonde / fair hair (as a child); now, I have dark brown eyes and dark brown hair. Who knows what it'll be like in the future? (Well, grey hair!) As long as I don't get red-eye... Not quite sure about the scientific reason; I think it has to do with pigmentation in the iris.