Re: He Palmed, 20 Hours Continuously!
Dear Zits,
By now your vision must be damn near perfect.
i.e., 20/10 or better.
Would you care to read this Snellen -- and tell us what it is
currently?
Just click here:
http :// www .smbs.buffalo.edu/oph/ped/IVAC/IVAC.html
Reading 1/2 the letters passes the line. Click on
"Display" for a new set of random letters.
Hope you are reading 20/10 at this time.
Bates -- second-opinion best,
Otis
On Apr 3, 6:32 pm, Zetsu <absolutelyinvinci...@hotmail,com > wrote:
> [...WHEN PALMING IS SUCCESSFUL
>
> Although black is, as a rule, the easiest color to remember, for
> reasons explained in the next chapter, the following method sometimes
> succeeds when the memory of black fails: Remember a variety of colors
> - bright red, yellow, green, blue, purple, white especially - all in
> the most intense shade possible. Do not attempt to hold any of them
> more than a second. Keep this up for five or ten minutes. Then
> remember a piece of starch about half an inch in diameter as white as
> possible. Note the color of the background. Usually it will be a shade
> of black. If it is, note whether it is possible to remember anything
> blacker, or to see anything blacker with the eyes open. In all cases
> when the white starch is remembered perfectly the background will be
> so black that it will be impossible to remember anything blacker with
> the eyes closed, or to see anything blacker with them open.
>
> When palming is successful it is one of the best methods I know of for
> securing relaxation of all the sensory nerves, including those of
> sight. When perfect relaxation is gained in this way, as indicated by
> the ability to see a perfect black, it is completely retained when the
> eyes are opened, and the patient is permanently cured. At the same
> time pain in the eyes and head, and even in other parts of the body,
> is permanently relieved. Such cases are very rare, but they do occur.
> With a lesser degree of relaxation much of it is lost when the eyes
> are opened, and what is retained is not held permanently. In other
> words, the greater the degree of the relaxation produced by palming
> the more of it is retained when the eyes are opened and the longer it
> lasts. If you palm perfectly, you retain, when you open your eyes, all
> of the relaxation that you gain, and you do not lose it again. If you
> palm imperfectly, you retain only part of what you gain and retain it
> only temporarily - it may be only for a few moments. Even the smallest
> degree of relaxation is useful, however, for by means of it a still
> greater degree may be obtained.
>
> Patients who succeed with palming from the beginning are to be
> congratulated, for they are always cured very quickly. A very
> remarkable case of this kind was that of a man nearly seventy years of
> age with compound hypermetropic astigmatism and presbyopia,
> complicated by incipient cataract. For more than forty years he had
> worn glasses to improve his distant vision, and for twenty years he
> had worn them for reading and desk work. Because of the cloudiness of
> the lens, he had now become unable to see well enough to do his work,
> even with glasses; and the other physicians whom he had consulted had
> given him no hope of relief except by operation when the cataract was
> ripe. When he found palming helped him, he asked:
>
> "Can I do that too much?"
>
> "No," he was told. "Palming is simply a means of resting your eyes,
> and you cannot rest them too much."
>
> A few days later he returned and said:
>
> "Doctor, it was tedious, very tedious; but I did it."
>
> "What was tedious?" I asked.
>
> "Palming," he replied. "I did it continuously for twenty hours."
>
> "But you couldn't have kept it up for twenty hours continuously," I
> said incredulously. "You must have stopped to eat."
>
> TEDIOUS BUT WORTH WHILE
>
> And then he related that from four o'clock in the morning until twelve
> at night he had eaten nothing only drinking large quantities of water,
> and had devoted practically all of the time to palming. It must have
> been tedious, as he said, but it was also worth while. When he looked
> at the test card, without glasses, he read the bottom line at twenty
> feet. He also read fine print at six inches and at twenty. The
> cloudiness of the lens had become much less, and in the center had
> entirely disappeared. Two years later there had been no relapse.
>
> Although the majority of patients are helped by palming, a minority
> are unable to see black, and only increase their strain by trying to
> get relaxation in this way. In most cases it is possible, by using
> some or all of the various methods outlined in this chapter, to enable
> the patient to palm successfully; but if much difficulty is
> experienced, it is usually better and more expeditious to drop the
> method until the sight has been improved by other means. The patient
> may then become able to see black when he palms, but some never
> succeed in doing it until they are cured...]
>
> - W.H. Bates, "Palming"