Thursday, January 8, 2009

Techniques for Improving Your Eyesight

So let’s get to the actual techniques of natural vision improvement. By now if you read my previous post you understand that there is no “mechanical” technique or exercise that will help you to restore vision if you do it regularly. If there is one, we are not aware of it. What we can do though, is practice certain techniques that were reported to alleviate tension and thus improve vision. It follows that other techniques of vision improvement can be developed, some of them might work specifically for you and no one else.

Here are the basic principles of treatment presented by Dr. Bates:

Palming. Palming is covering your eyes with your palms in a way that excludes all the light. Palming is very tricky as it is useless if you don’t have the right mental approach to it. First it calms down the nerves but on the other hand you might start thinking unpleasant thought while palming. You might want to try a combination of palming and yogic breathing (pranayama).

Swinging. Swinging is very useful as it is close to a regular physical exercise, it is excellent for the flexibility of spine as well as your eyes. The idea is to “let your eyes go”, do not try to see anything, in fact, you should strive to achieve illusion that everything is completely blurred due to the movement. And your swing does not have to be fast, go with your intuition. I found out that the best speed is medium.

Sun treatment. Sunning, as it popularly became known, is exposing your closed eyelids to the direct rays of sun. It is very relaxing but again, try to relax your mind. The good thing about sunning that unlike palming it almost forces you to relax mentally as well as physically.

Shifting. Shifting is the closest thing that comes to physical exercises for the eyes. It is also the main habit of good vision. Shifting can be practiced on the eye chart or on any other object. You look at one side of the letter than to the other and notice that the letter moved to the direction opposite of you glance. So you shift your glance to the left of the letter than to the right and so forth, from top to bottom and so on. The quicker you can do it and the smaller the letter you can do it on, the better the vision. People with good vision shift all the time unconsciously.

Central fixation. That is when the part of the object regarded directly is seen best. It is so because the retina has macula lutea or the area of the highest sensitivity. By shifting the eye with high speed we get the perception of the whole object. In fact shifting is so fast that people with good vision think they regard the whole object all at once when in fact the eye shifts from one part of the object to the other and it does that quicker than the brain has time to record the impression and make a perception of the object as a whole.

People with bad vision, on the other hand, do try to see the whole object all at once. It is, of course, impossible, but their retina loses sensitivity and their shifting becomes slow. The thing to do, then, is practice the correct visual habits of shifting and central fixation.

1 comment:

Steve said...

Dear Alice,

I stumbled across your blog and it made interesting reading. As somebody that has been exploring Bates work also it was good to get other perspectives and insights.

The frequency of blogs has decreased - I hope this is because you had success with correcting your vision, how did you get on?

From my personal experience I am sure that this approach works, for example - I totally agree with relaxed far-distance vision practice for Myopia. If I relax (on balcony, beach etc..) my vision improves hugely with long clear flashes of normal sight - the problem is that it is temporary.

I just can't seem to ingrain correct vision habits into normal life, it feels so close yet the solution is elusive, but I still try (even to prevent further decline).

Also, I wanted to agree with your observation on central fixation (mentioned somewhere else). I believe this is positive feedback cycle, the better the vision, the more you naturally can focus on smaller and smaller levels of detail. By trying to centralise on small detail straight away, this just add more strain. The solution I believe is just to have some intent and more importantly "awareness" on what you are looking at, of course blinking and shifting from one object the next, this is seems to produce clear flashes, accompanied by less effort.

I hope to read some more insight soon.

Regards, Stephen