Vision health is all about awareness—awareness
of what you should do and what you should not do. Your conscious mind may want
to change the bad vision habits that continue to impair your vision, but it is
constantly held back by your subconscious mind. Develop good vision
habits to enhance your vision improvement.
Blinking: Blink constantly to relax
the eye. Blinking has to be soft and complete, not rapid. Blink as if using
your eyelashes to slowly open your eyes.
Shifting: Shift your eyes constantly (the
healthy eye sends more than 50 images per second to the brain) and rapidly by
changing your eye focus frequently. Your eyes move more rapidly when they are
relaxed. This avoids the bad habit of staring at a point.
Peripheral vision: Be aware of your total
field of vision whenever you focus your eyes. Use BOTH central vision and
peripheral vision at the same time.
Natural sunlight: Spend more time
outdoors instead of indoors to reap the health benefits of sunlight in nourishing
your visual system.
Palming: Relaxation of the eye cures all
vision problems. The eye rests completely only in total darkness. Rub your
palms together to generate some heat, and then cover your eyes but without
touching them, that is, resting your hands on your forehead but without
touching your eyes. Don't close your eyes completely; your eyes will see
blackness. Practice palming and visualize blackness even for as little as 1 to
2 minutes per session. Of course, the longer you palm, the more relaxed your
eyes become.
Vision without glasses: See without glasses to
bring back your eye’s natural “accommodation” for better vision. However,
remember not to strain to see without glasses. Reduce your time of wearing
glasses, and delay the time you put on glasses in the morning. Use
under-corrected prescription to slowly and gradually wean yourself from wearing
corrective lenses. Wearing eyeglasses or contacts (even worse: because you
cannot remove your contacts at anytime) conditions your eyes to see at a
certain range; healthy eyes should be able to shift easily from close-up to
distant object.
For more information on
vision health, read my most recently published book Vision
Self-Healing Self-Help
Stephen Lau
Copyright©
by Stephen Lau
Blinking: Blink constantly to relax the eye. Blinking has to be soft and complete, not rapid. Blink as if using your eyelashes to slowly open your eyes.
Shifting: Shift your eyes constantly (the healthy eye sends more than 50 images per second to the brain) and rapidly by changing your eye focus frequently. Your eyes move more rapidly when they are relaxed. This avoids the bad habit of staring at a point.
Peripheral vision: Be aware of your total field of vision whenever you focus your eyes. Use BOTH central vision and peripheral vision at the same time.
Natural sunlight: Spend more time outdoors instead of indoors to reap the health benefits of sunlight in nourishing your visual system.
Palming: Relaxation of the eye cures all vision problems. The eye rests completely only in total darkness. Rub your palms together to generate some heat, and then cover your eyes but without touching them, that is, resting your hands on your forehead but without touching your eyes. Don't close your eyes completely; your eyes will see blackness. Practice palming and visualize blackness even for as little as 1 to 2 minutes per session. Of course, the longer you palm, the more relaxed your eyes become.
Vision without glasses: See without glasses to bring back your eye’s natural “accommodation” for better vision. However, remember not to strain to see without glasses. Reduce your time of wearing glasses, and delay the time you put on glasses in the morning. Use under-corrected prescription to slowly and gradually wean yourself from wearing corrective lenses. Wearing eyeglasses or contacts (even worse: because you cannot remove your contacts at anytime) conditions your eyes to see at a certain range; healthy eyes should be able to shift easily from close-up to distant object.
For more information on vision health, read my most recently published book Vision Self-Healing Self-Help
Stephen Lau
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