23rd September 2019
Foolishly, I forgot to make a note of the date I started trying to heal my myopia naturally. So I'm going to try to remember to put dates on my updates from now on.
My first weaker pair of glasses arrived in July. They were only a quarter of a diopter weaker than my original (over prescribed I feel) prescription at -4.25, so I quickly adjusted to them. I finally printed out an eye chart and on testing them again recently I can see 20/20 with them. My printer doesn't work very well, so I had been putting off printing out a chart, but decided I could just top up the lettering with a marker pen. Using this chart has put some of my concerns to rest, namely that even with glasses I always felt I could never see as well as I should. I guess that's what you get for living with people who are slightly long sighted.
About three weeks ago the new glasses arrived. I'd made bigger steps back on the prescription for these three pairs, because I can't really afford to be buying a pair for every quarter diopter and it's a bit wasteful really, because, if all goes well, I won't be wearing them for very long and with the astigma adjustment I have they'd be hard to pass on to someone else. I started out just wearing the -3.75 ones for the next couple of days around the house and garden, because I didn't need to drive anywhere. The difference was a bit more obvious than last time, but I saw an improvement in a few days.
The first time I drove in them, I noticed street signs were a bit harder to read, so I tried changing back to the -4.25 and got almost instant head pains behind the eyes. I was a bit concerned that my sight wouldn't be quite up to standard for driving with the lower prescription, but now I've got the chart, I can see that I'm actually seeing with them at 20/25 vision, or 20/30 if a little tired. Apart from the initial improvement, I feel like I haven't noticed any further improvement, so I've taken to wearing the -3.25 glasses indoors and in the garden and use the -3.75 ones just for driving. These have taken up residence in my car, so I don't forget to change them if I'm rushing out. Yes, I did forget and go to pick up my daughter from the local train station with my indoor glasses on once…or twice. The fact that I didn't realise until was halfway there probably means I wasn't driving too blind, though.
I’m now trying to form new habits to help get my eyes working more and to avoid doing things which will increase my myopia. One of the things I probably really need to work on is not doing so much close up work on my tablet (not doing very well at this at the moment). Jake Steiner's End Myopia website has a lot of blogs and reading to help with getting back to 20/20 vision, but that means close up work again. Fortunately, he also has a YouTube account, so I've been putting his videos on and listening while I do other things. I found it interesting that a theme which often comes up is being mindful.
Mindfulness comes in with training your brain to send the messages to the eye muscles to work on making the adjustments you need for the results you want. If the brain normalises the blur, then your eyes won't be trying to make the adjustments needed to clear it. So if I'm going to use my tablet I take my glasses off completely and position it just at the point where the writing starts to blur. It's easy to end up drifting closer, however, so trying to be aware that the blur has gone and readjusting regularly is important.
Developing habits is a good way to make sure you improve. Jake suggests implementing one or two at a time, to make it easier to remember and be consistent. One he suggested was actually one I already do in part; starting your morning routine without glasses. This I have always done. I get up, get dressed, go to the bathroom, and do my hair, before I go to my bedside table and pick up my glasses. However, he then suggests being mindful once you put them on. Observing the difference between how things look with your glasses on compared to with the naked eye. Briefly I have always noticed that difference, but not really thought about it much or taken the time to look at things and compare them more purposefully.
So far the habits I've implemented have been having indoor and distance, or driving, glasses. I'm working on being more thoughtful about screen use, cutting down unnecessary time on them and trying to remember to take my glasses off if using mobile devices. For the computer and TV I try to make sure my position puts me just on the edge of blur, so my eyes try to work to focus in the distance rather than adjusting closer up all the time.
I keep something Jake calls Auto Focus (AF) in my mind as much as possible. The principal behind this is looking to the edge of where your sight is clear and trying to clear up the blur a bit beyond it. So when I have a moment where I'm not occupied by something else, this will come to mind and I will look into the distance, observing how much clarity I can make out, or finding things with just that bit of blur to see if I can get it into better focus. I find I achieve this best with letters and numbers, because the brain needs to clear it specifically in order to comprehend what's written there, whereas with larger everyday objects you don't always have to have perfect clarity in order to identify them. Your brain almost fills in the gaps without you realising.
I try to be more aware of when my vision is dropping. This usually happens towards the end of the day. For example I might be talking to a friend and their face has started to go out of focus a bit. Once I realise what has happened my brain seems to see this as a signal to do something about it, then a minute or so later their face clears up again.
Warmer days are coming and with this I should probably try to work on a habit of getting outdoors a bit more often. It's becoming better known that outdoor light promotes good eyesight and helps to stave off myopia. In China they are increasing outdoor play for schools in a bid to try to improve the myopia epidemic. Recently someone shared a photo of a poster at their optometrist which prompted outdoor time to help stop myopia from increasing. Outdoor therapy is probably twofold in that it promts you to look into the distance more, as well as having better light.
I've had ups and downs and the other day when I was feeling tired and low my sight regressed a bit. However, today I tested myself on the eye chart with my indoor glasses, which are usually at 20/40, and I just about managed to read the 25/25 line. Nothing like seeing improvement to keep the motivation up.
Damn right! Loving it :)
Thanks for sharing your progress and also for these little reminders to keep pushing myself...
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Always good to do things with others for the motivation. Looking forward to your update.
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Lol, 'I realized i wasn't legal to drive,..', put down the doughnut, please!
I once had to drive home, 150 miles, at night, without glasses, luckily I lived in a rural area and only met one oncoming car.
I couldn't have seen the lane marker even if there had been one.
At the time I swore never again, but I had put my doughnut down a long time before that.
During the day I have a hard time with what color the stop lights are.
I hope this thing works for you, I will try when I get more permanance in my life.
Scientology says that myopia has roots in early life traumas, but I haven't yet found mine.
By finding it, and reducing its emotional charge, my vision should clear.
If I'd had the money, I would have likely spent it.
As it is, I read the books and stopped being such a jerk.
'Cause nothing that is difficult for another to experience.' is one of their rules of deportment, not that you can tell that with Miscavige in charge of the organization.
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Haha! Just stay on the road and it'll be right!
Do you think that's to do with colour blindness or is it the light with it?
If you ever get around to working on your sight is love to hear how you go. It will be interesting to see how different approaches go. @artemislives has been mentioning there could be dietary connections to it as well. I want to look into that.
With regards to childhood trauma, both my sister and I went through similar experiences, but I'm the one with myopia and she has 20/20. Could be a combination of things.
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I made it home safely, but that oncoming car had me finding religion.
I don't think it is color related, the lights are just too small to get into my focus.
When I went to mexico the first time I lost 60lbs and the prescription I had wasn't working like it had for the ten years I had had it.
Now I got a screwy discount lens place prescription.
Not happy at all.
I guess I'm gonna have to learn optometry by necessity.
Likely the trauma contained key phrases that could be anything.
According to the books, finding those keys, refiling them from subconscious to conscious, and viola!, clear mind, clear sight.
But, I think if that was truly the case we would have heard more about it for it's miracle cures over the years.
Not saying it can't, just that it hasn't for me.
I've never sought paid assistance from them.
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Interesting! I had no idea about Myopia, and especially about how to naturally over come it.
And very interesting to hear why the term ‘20/20 vision’ exists too, and it’s purpose.
I learn something new every day :)
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I'm pretty new to those terms too! 😆 It's only because I'm working on this that I've had cause to find out more about what 20/20 means. I didn't even know until recently what my prescription is. I never asked at the opticians and they never offered it. I had to ask them specifically for it. I always thought I was much more deteriorated than I am.
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Glad it's going well for you. So many conflicting voices on anything like this, really hard to know how to approach it, particularly as a parent. Fletch pointed to a purple flower and called it blue, yesterday, so now I'm thinking about getting him tested for colourblindness.
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I do think decisions like this as a parent are completely different to decisions for yourself. What you might risk for yourself you wouldn't for your children. Your never going to be as confident.
When it comes to colours it can be so subjective. So often our family has disagreements on colours that are close to one another given just a bit more of a primary colour. The line between dark purple and blue or green and turquoise/blue. It's not just me with my poor eyesight, either. Sometimes others will agree with me on a colour then other times they won't. Sometimes putting another colour next to something will make, for example, a purple look more blue or red. These things can really bake your noodle too, if you think about it too much! What if I see green as a different colour to you, but we both call it green, because that's it's name? You might see it the same way as I see red.
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I remember when I was young at school, the teacher asking me (Along with others in the class) if I had been to the optometrist.
When I asked why? I was told not to be stupid that everyone needs their eyes tested and that she would speak to my parents...??
So mum took me to get my eyes tested and I could read near to the bottom of the chart. They then stuck me on some huge machine thing (this was 20 years ago), basically spun around these different lens.
I remember asking what it was? and the guy was like its to work out what glasses you need.
When I said why? I just read everything on your chart. He said because I could still benefit as one of my eyes wasn't quite as strong (I struggled to read the bottom line fine print with my left eye).
I told my mum I didn't want glasses did a big turn and we left...basically threw a fit (which isn't something I did often).
30 years later and I think it's time for me to go again, as after a couple hours of reading it blurs a bit.
Not sure where my story is going...oh, only that, I think while our 'global medical systems' are good and based on good tested science, sometimes the capitalist world gets in the way of logic.
For instance why use a baidaid (glasses) to sew a cut; I think finding a natural way to help should be the first port of call. I hope it keeps working for you.
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You did the right thing! Wish my mum had never taken me into the optometrist. I had no issues up until that point.
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... that sux
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So it's going okay then? :D
I think I'm doomed, all my work is up close XD
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Do you have myopia? Some people don't develop it no matter how much close up work they do. I guess that's the genetics in play.
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Myopia? Yes it's short sightedness. Hyperopia is long sighted. Usually those who need glasses later in life are getting long sighted. Something to do with the hardening of the lens, I think. I reckon our parents' generation spent less time doing close up things than we did. Mine were both fine until they got older, too.
My sister's eyesight is fine, so I'm guessing I'm the one who got the dodgy eye genes. So yes, for us, too much close up work will always put us at risk of deteriorating. This active focus seems to be the key to improving. Just wearing weaker glasses or not wearing them at all won't help if you don't actually work to try and clear the blur. Also limiting close up work, which I'm not doing very well at. 😩
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Oh trust me I worked hard to clear the blur in childhood, absolutely did not want to wear glasses. Didn't help at all XD
I was also on screens a lot less in childhood than I am now. Back then I'd do my homework, maybe jump on for a bit to game or write while waiting for my parents to get home, then I was off riding my bike til it was time to come home and have a shower before dinner.
Now I just live here XD
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I didn't even need glasses until they told me to start wearing them. I also refused to wear them most of the time, but I realise, looking back, that when I did wear them, it was for seeing the blackboard, but then I'd look down at my book for writing in, at which point I shouldn't have been using glasses. That seems to be the fatal mistake, because you then end up readjusting even closer and your eyes deteriorate even more.
I think everyone is different, though. I didn't start having to wear my glasses permanently until I was in my late teens. At that point I was riding a motorcycle, so I had to have them on more. I never wore them for riding my pushbike all those years before though. 😆
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That’s short sightedness? My mum blames that on reading too much 🤣 I used to ride my bike with everything being blurry because I refused to wear my glasses except when I absolutely had to in school, didn’t make it better unfortunately 🤣
My eyes stabilised for a little while basically because I refused to upgrade script (too headachey). I think I’ve figured out how to fix them so slowly working on that which does mean they feel difficult and wonky sometimes.
The genetics thing is so weird then as me and my sister both needed glasses from when we were in primary school but our parents only started needing them as they hit senior years 🤔
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Oops, replied to myself instead of you! 🤣 See above.
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I am 48, with a -9. Mine started at 4 and increased. The doctor blamed genes. of late, I tried the exercise linked to pranic healing and I actually felt better both for eyes and body.
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I'd love to hear your progress if keep improving. @samstonehill helped give me the push to do something about mine.
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ah nice
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