Hello
My oldest dd, 5 years, was just tested at the optomotrist's office and it was discovered that she is farsighted and has a lazy eye (left side). We had absolutely no clue there were any problems, but the school did a screening and she was flagged as having a possible problem. Her eye does not noticeably turn in at all. Neither dh nor I wear glasses, and she is learning to read, colours all the time, loves to write and draw pictures ... we had no idea and I am feeling really bad that I didn't discover this earlier.
Wow--this is EXACTLY what happened with our oldest. At kindergarten, the vision screening caught it; he is also farsighted and has a lazy eye--something we didn't know because it's slight. We were shocked, and I went through a lot of worry about it myself, and I felt guilty because looking back, I thought there were some little clues I should have picked up on.
Now the good part: he's 9 now, and an A student who just won a district wide competition for writing and illustrating his own book. He actually LOVES his glasses because he can finally see. When we got the first pair, he looked around at the store in amazement because he had been missing all these things for so long, and he hadn't known they even existed. We wondered all along why he hated the zoo--and realized that he hadn't been seeing the animals that well.
He feels no stigma with the glasses and actually thinks that they make him look good. One of our August routines now, in addition to back to school shopping, is getting a new pair of glasses--which he enjoys picking out.
Kids have been good generally, with only 1 or 2 in all these years ever saying anything. He patches wherever and whenever he needs to. On our last WDW trip, we fashioned a pirate patch which he wore with his pirate hat, and he got all sorts of comments from CMs about being a Captain and the like. It was really fun.
On the vision front, his has improved with each opthamologist visit because we do patch regularly, just like we're told.
So my advice is don't stress about it. Follow the doctor's orders for patching--be serious about it! Your daughter will probably be fine. You might come across kids who tease her or who stare (the latter does bug DS still), but it's generally not so bad. And I know the feeling. I remember feeling sick to my stomach when I'd look at my sweet little kindergartener with the patch on his eye; we're beyond that now, so he's my big 3rd grader who has to be reminded to patch but does it because he knows that's the way to improve his vision.
Plus, each year of school, a couple more kids in his grade get glasses, too!