Vision Quest
Natural healing methods offer sight for sore eyes
July/August 2000
Karta Purkh Singh Khalsa Herb Quarterly (www.herbquarterly.com)
I was born with very poor eyesight and at the age of 3, I put on my
first pair of glasses. Throughout my childhood I assumed, as did my
doctors, that my eyesight was untreatable. The glasses simply
became a part of my body--first thing on in the morning, last thing
off at night.
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My perspective changed when I was diagnosed in my teens with a
chronic degenerative bone disorder. Since conventional medicine had
nothing to offer at the time, I sought out other methods of
healing: yoga, vitamins and minerals, herbs, massage, Rolfing,
shiatsu, and chiropractic adjustments. I also tried therapeutic
diets and experimented with natural healing methods. As I began to
rebuild my body, I noticed that my vision improved as well--all
with no targeted effort. By restoring my overall health and
reducing toxicity, I gave my body more resources to heal eye
tissue.
By the time I reached my early 20s, my vision had improved
enough for me to function without glasses. Though my sight was not
perfect, it was adequate to recognize faces, read, and drive. My
eyesight has continued to improve, and I've now been free of
glasses for more than 20 years.
Approaching vision problems without technological assistance is
not common. Medical treatments are, frankly, effective and easy.
When you can just wear glasses, why go through laborious dietary
changes and herb regimens? If outpatient surgery can remove your
cataracts in a day, why wait longer?
Most people readily seek a doctor's intervention, but others
have found that restoring the eyes from within is worth the effort.
In addition to being windows of souls, eyes are the mirrors of our
bodies' health. The challenge is to stick with the program. The eye
is complicated, and eye healing, particularly vision improvement,
requires extra patience--compared with, say, how quickly an ulcer
responds to cabbage juice, or joint inflammation to turmeric.
You can't just treat eyes; you also must address the skin and
liver. These organs not only share nutritional requirements, they
also degenerate consistently in order. Eye function is the first to
go, then the skin, and finally the liver. When health deteriorates,
the body is more willing to 'part with' functions or structures not
critical to survival. Eyesight is a luxury compared to the
detoxification functions of the skin and liver. To be successful in
treating the eyes, we therefore must backtrack, first treating the
liver, then the skin.
My clinical experience shows that eyebright (Euphrasia
stricta) is a plant whose folkloric reputation outstrips its
actual usefulness. Despite its name and history of use for the
eyes, it's not effective, and there are certainly substances that
produce more significant and consistent results. Eyebright is
better as an upper respiratory tea than it is as an eye tonic.
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