I wear glasses with progressive lens and really dont have trouble. My frames are only on the top part of my lens which reduces what I see in my peripheral vision and when I'm looking at a hard angle. I tried smaller lenses but found larger/wider ones worked better for looking at hard angles as when shooting. I shoot 3 under and anchor on my cheek bone.The middle knuckle of my pointer finger is below and lined up with the outside corner of my eye. Every now and then,my string will touch my glasses but its rare. It helps that I didn't shoot trad bows until after I had glasses, so I didn't have to adjust my form to make it work. When choosing glasses, I did figure out I had to make sure to get frames with a wide enough nose piece so I could make my glasses fit as close as possibe to my face so the part of the lens I'm looking through with my right eye (right handed shooter) while shooting is not sticking out further than my nose (hope that makes sense). I also pay extra for the higher quality lenses and for the increased width of the focal part of the lens. The first set I tried years ago had a very narrow width of focus, so that I had to have my head facing directly at what I was looking at for it to be in focus. The wider area of focus (I don't know the correct term for this) allows me to look at something to the side and it still be in focus.
I do have problems with fogging sometimes but so far it hasn't been too bad. I've tried several different contact lenses but I must have drier eyes than most folks because it never failed that the lenses would get dry and roll up. And thats in super humid Arkansas. I can't imagine being able to keep them moist in western states in September. I loved the contacts for lots of reasons but never could make them work out for me.
Good luck! Hunting and shooting with glasses can be done.