Vision
deteriorates with age, especially if you are wearing eyeglasses or contact
lenses.
How
well you see is dependent on the amount of light passing through the lens in
front of your eyeball that focuses the image on the retina at the back of the
eyeball, and thus instrumental in sending the visual information to your brain.
The human eyeball is held by ciliary muscles in the eye. When the ciliary
muscles are weak, the eyeball becomes slightly distorted or out of shape, and thus
affecting the focal image on the retina. This is how vision deteriorates, and
this is why wearing eyeglasses or contact lenses does not
improve vision because these vision aids precondition the focus of the eye.
To
improve vision, strengthen your eye muscles through constant eye relaxation. To
remember doing this regularly, you must be mindful of it. Eye relaxation begins
with the body, and not just the eyes. If your body does not relax, neither can
your eyes relax. So relax your body through mindfulness. Relaxing your eye
muscles means you do not “stare” or fixate” at an object, and you must
constantly shift your vision focus from close proximity to distance. In
addition, you must also constantly blink your eyes in order to relax them. To
remember doing all these requires mindfulness.
Mindfulness
is conscious awareness, which often begins with mindful breathing. Mindfulness
is total awareness of what is going on inside the mind. Mindfulness occurs only
when the mind is quiet and relaxed. Mindfulness is moment-to-moment awareness
that requires training; it does not happen naturally. Begin with your mindful
breath; that is, consciously aware of your breathing in and your breathing out.
Breathing has become so natural to us that we are totally unaware of it, and
mindful breath is deliberately bringing back awareness to your inhalation and
exhalation.
The
human breath is most important because without it we die in minutes. But most
of us take it for granted because we are not mindful of it. If we have mindful
breathing, we breathe right—that is, breathing with the diaphragm
(the muscle between the lungs and the tummy)—and we breathe completely—that
is, the air fills up the upper lungs, not just the lower lungs, and the
breathing out is slightly longer than the breathing in. Mindful breathing is
full awareness of how we breathe in and breathe out. You don’t have to have
mindful breathing throughout the day, but you need to cultivate mindfulness of
your breath every now and then in order to enhance your mindfulness. Mindful
breathing enables correct breathing that opens the many doors to relaxation,
clear thinking, and self-healing.
With
mindfulness, you will not forget to blink your eyes regularly to relax them;
you will remember to shift your focus (that is, blinking before you
shift your focus from a near object to a distant object), instead of staring;
you will be more aware of your vision health.
Read my
book Vision Self-Healing Self-Help to learn some eye exercises to improve your
vision.
Stephen
Lau
Copyright©
by Stephen Lau
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