

The Boarding Glasses are the latest in a series of anti-motion sickness innovations going back thousands of years. There is also a special limited edition pair being developed for the Citroen auto company. The €90 ($106) glasses are now in pre-order and will ship in December. Father and son now run the company together, with father handling innovation and son handling business. Hubert Jeannin patented his innovation in 2004 and tested the Boarding Glasses prototypes with the French navy, and, although the exact results are confidential, his son says it was extremely successful-some 95 percent of users found the glasses helpful within 10 minutes. The glasses were invented by Jeannin’s father, Hubert, who spent a career working in optics before dedicating himself to the problem of motion sickness. Usually this cures you of nausea for the rest of the journey, Jeannin says. You put the glasses on at the first sign of sickness, leave them on for 10 or 12 minutes, and then take them off. “Your eyes always get the reality of the movement and get a signal that is consistent with the balance system perception,” Jeannin says. With the Boarding Glasses, the liquid moves with the movement of the boat or vehicle, creating an artificial horizon. “Motion sickness comes from a sense of conflict between what your eyes can see and what your balance system and your inner ears can feel,” says Antoine Jeannin, CEO of Boarding Ring, the company that makes the glasses.

The Boarding Glasses look like swim goggles for some four-eyed alien species, with two round lenses in front and two on the side, the hollow rims each half filled with blue liquid. Recently, a French company has begun selling a pair of glasses it says can reduce motion sickness in 95 percent of cases. Many people become less susceptible with age, while others (hello) become more. Women report more and worse sickness, as do migraine sufferers. Almost everyone is susceptible to some degree-about 5 percent of us are severely affected, while another 5 percent are relatively immune.

Reading in a car on a winding road? Not unless you want to see what I had for breakfast.Īs a sufferer of motion sickness, I’m not alone. These days, simply sitting on a park swing makes me queasy.
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A full day of loop-de-loop roller coasters at a nearby amusement park was the highlight of the summer. Time-tested ways to prevent motion sickness include sitting in the front seat of a car, eating something light before you travel, and focusing your gaze on something outside the nearest window.As a kid, I could read for hours in the back of a car zigzagging through the mountains, no problem. But like with any new technology meant to treat a medical condition, users should be cautious. The company claims the spectacles show positive results 95 percent of the time, and the technology it uses won an INNOV'inMed award for health innovation. SEETROËN is currently out of stock at Citroën's lifestyle store, with the next shipment estimated for September. After staring at a still object like a book through the glasses for 10 to 12 minutes, you can remove them and continue to enjoy the benefits as you proceed with your trip, the company claims. The accessory isn't exactly fashionable, unless maybe you're going for a space-age look, but you shouldn't worry about appearing goofy for too long. By having an "artificial horizon" to look at when you're in the back of a bumpy car, your visual senses should realign with your sense of balance, and you'll no longer feel queasy. SEETROËN tackles this problem in a simple way: Liquid at the bottom of all four rings (two in front of the eyes, two at the peripheries) responds to gravity and changes in movement the same way the fluid in your inner ear does.

Motion sickness occurs when the information we receive from our inner ear doesn't match up with what we see in front of us. Their glass-less spectacles, called SEETROËN, implement technology first developed by the French startup Boarding Ring. According to Visuall, the French car company Citroën has made a product that allows you to fight motion sickness without medication. There's nothing like a sudden wave of nausea to ruin a scenic road trip or a cruise.
