Logan80, it sounds like you are near sighted, and this isnt a big deal but many people who are near soghted see fine up close but cant see at distance without glasses or contacts. When we do laser vision correction we change the prescription in your eyes from near sighted to emmetropia (no prescription needed for distance) and that will take away your natural ability to see up close like you do now. However, most people have accommodation which allows them to focus their lens in their eye and shift the focus from distance to near (unfortunately we cant go the opposite way, its just the way God made us) but this ability diminishes over time and by mid to late 40’s most people need reading glasses or bifocals. That diminishing ability is called presbyopia and is very natural and everyone experiences it to some degree if they live long enough.
The reason this is important for you is your age. It is unlikely you will immediately need readers if you had lasik or prk, but within a decade for sure and possibly much sooner than that you would. The good news for you is near tasks you would need readers for are things like reading a book, seeing small print on your phone, and things within a bent elbow distance, NOT things at the extended elbow/arm and beyond such as your bow sight. So even if you lost the ability to see up close right away, again very unlikely, you would still be able to shoot bow/handgun just fine and that area of your vision would be dang good due to the laser vision correction. A rifle sight is focused for distance so that would not be affecred at all by losing near vision either.
i do laser vision correction for a living, so you are getting this from the horses mouth not someone who stayed the night at a HIe