99% of optometrists are utterly clueless as to the needs of shooters.
Shooting glasses may help some - but I believe purpose-built glasses for shooting always lead you to a compromise sight picture. The compromise sight picture the optometrist thinks you need may be actually WORSE for how your brain processes the image.
If you can, talk to Dr. Alan Toler.
https://drtoler.com/I know Alan. He has prescribed and furnished shooting glasses for a number of my shooting buddies.
Alan is double-distinguished (rifle and pistol). So when you talk about "sight picture," you won't be explaining it to somebody who is hearing the expression for the first time.
Alan will loan you a lens-kit that you can take the range, and which allows you to test various lenses in actual conditions. Then you report back to him what works for you. I'm pretty sure he will even mail it out to you if you live at some distant locale.
It is super-important to test lenses in actual field conditions. The lens that works on a bright day might be pure shit on an overcast day. So realize that you may need multiple pairs of glasses for varying conditions and for different shooting games.