Akajan has one solution, but there may be a less expensive one.
You do not tell us anything about your prior or current glasses.
By your profile, you are 59- and at an age where loss of elasticity in your lenses has been making it harder it harder to focus on nearby objects. I am guessing this is not new, has progressed, and your new glasses have progressive lenses. Progressive lenses are ground so that the focal distance varies continuously from the top of the lens to the bottom. To focus at a given distance, you adjust the portion of the lens you look through by tilting your head up or down. The advantage is that there will be a focal length for any common distance. The disadvantage is that the grind of the lenses puts that focal point straight ahead of you. In using a rifle scope you look through the side of the lens, and with a progressive ground lens the image is distorted. Conventional "lined" bifocals are ground with just two focal lengths- but ground such that you can shift your eyes from side to side and the focal point remains the same. These "may" work better for you.
Go back to where you got the glasses, explain the situation, and see what they say.
As a competitive shooter I took the route of making arrangements to bring by gun in, and having glasses made with the center of focus for the right eye for using the scope. I can shoot with my regular glasses, but the special glasses do help. If I forget to change back I will eventually have eyestrain in my right eye.