A New World of Seeing: Practice and Perspectives of Natural Vision Improvement
Natural Vision Educatorsamazon.com
A New World of Seeing: Practice and Perspectives of Natural Vision Improvement
In the Ventral Vagal state, central and peripheral vision are in perfect, natural balance as vision was designed to be. This enables good vision, presence, adaptability and mobility in a relaxed manner.
The brain cannot process incoming visual images if it is busy with its internal noise.
If the mind is preoccupied, the open eyes have no orientation. There’s no one at the steering wheel! This disconnection of mind and eyes can happen many times during a day with no lasting effect if there is reconnection. However, if there is a habit of constantly day-dreaming, fantasizing, worrying or ruminating about problems, the eyes will become
... See moreUse your moments of clarity to get familiar with the feeling in the body and mind that is present when sight is better, so you can duplicate the experience consistently—at first in favorable conditions and later in unfavorable ones.
He used the word “demonstrate” quite a bit— and for good reason. You must show the mind what works. The mind must actually experience the results before it will change its habits. Related to this is the importance of working at the right distance, with the right lighting—favorable conditions—to be able to see results clearly, to demonstrate what wo
... See moreThe key to central fixation (focus) is the periphery. The detail takes care of itself when you get the periphery right.
Visually, you cannot see a detail clearly unless you see it where it is in space. When you relax all strain and just allow the visual image to come to you, you see the entire field of vision, and the detail directly in front of you is seen with greatest clarity.
Learn to develop your skill in the Truth that is easiest for you, and the other Truths will follow along. You don’t need to do seven things. You need to do one thing well—and the remaining six will be there too.
A person with normal sight unconsciously practices certain mental habits of seeing that a person with imperfect sight fails to practice. When these habits are re-established, normal sight returns.