C.S.
Here is a link to my older daughter's eye doctor, http://visionsofhealth.org/index.html. I realize you are in Florida, but her sight will give you an idea of the possibilities.
I found my daughter's eye to be lazy in a photo taken after a long photo shoot with the strobes being triggered numerous times. I had never seen this in her eye before, but it was completely turned in. I was very aggressive with it and Dr. Carroll was the second doctor that I took her to see. We did 24 weeks of eye therapy and let me tell you that kid had great eye control after that. I no longer see the eye turn in.
My second daughter would show signs of her eye turning in from time to time, more of a flutter. I had already placed a call do Dr. Carroll but wanted to get her asthma and breathing issues more under control before we started the very demanding eye therapy. In the meantime, school started and they tested her eyes with another eye doctor. So she came home with a paper that said she was both far and near sited. I made an eye appointment and took her in explaining to the doctor I intended to take her to Dr. Carroll for therapy. She agreed that she did have a bit of the [insert technical term] lazy eye. She explained that her eye was still developing and shaping and part of her sight problem was due to the shape of her eye. My daughter is part Native American and part Spanish. Both parents have a bit of a stretched eye, so my daughter has been asked by the kids in school if she is Chinese. So the doctor said I could take her, but I really should wait because things could change due to her physical development.
I chose to wait. The breathing and asthma is under control, but the therapy doctor is a good 20 miles away, which could mean a 30 - 35 minute drive. She is in glasses and I have not seen any fluttering activity in her eye for quite awhile. She has been wearing her glasses for 1 year now.
Best wishes.