|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
|
||||||||
![]() |
If "cancer and other degenerative diseases" can be reversed, I wonder if farsightedness can be reversed as well. I'm a 40-year-old lady and am currently experiencing this problem. Please advise. Also, I would very much appreciate it if you could provide me with some information and suggested diets to follow in order to reverse the situation. I can tell you of my own experience with eyesight. I have been nearsighted (myopic) since before the third grade. That's about thirty years of poor eyesight. Every year, I would need a stronger prescription. Even when I changed to contacts for a few years, I still needed a stronger prescription every year. Since I adopted a vegetarian diet six years ago, I have not needed to change to a stronger prescription. In fact, my eyesight has slightly improved. That's saying a lot for someone who sits at a computer twelve hours a day and has a mother with three times worse myopia. I have heard stories of people who drink lots of organic, unpasteurized carrot juice and have seen gradual improvement in their eyesight. If you also combine celery, spinach, or cucumber juice with the carrot juice, you will receive even more helpful betacarotene. I believe poor eyesight can be reversed, but it will take time in proportion to the degree of degeneration. Since you are just now experiencing farsightedness, you may experience faster results. I am interested in overall health. If my eyesight improves as a side effect, I feel blessed. Follow the guidelines from my website and try to drink at least 8 oz. of organic, unpasteurized carrot juice per day. Avoid prescription drugs and antibiotics if possible. Learn to relax and strive for a stress-free environment. Take a break from book reading, computer work, or television watching and focus on images at a distance. Take turns focusing on a near and far object until you see both clearly each time you shift focus. Find a whole-food, organic supplement that contains zinc, selenium, vitamins A, C, and E, riboflavin, and antioxidants. Other therapies that do not use prescription glasses, drugs, or surgery include syntonic optometry, biofeedback training, the Bates method, Chinese medicine, and Ayurvedic medicine. Due to the New-Age influences of these therapies, I tend to avoid them. They may be some good treatments, but they all treat the symptoms rather than the cause. Behavioral Optometry seems to be the most viable as it teaches the patient to unlearn poor habits--the cause. It involves retraining the eyes to focus properly. Dr. Skeffington is the pioneer in this field. The following URLs may help:
Kenneth E. Loy, Jr., CN |
![]() |
||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
Home
Page | Physical Health | Spiritual
Health | About MBHT | What's
New?
Ask the Nutritionist | Article
of the Month | Past Articles | Subscribe
to Ezine | Recipes | Search
Copyright ©
1999-2003 AROH Publishing Company. All Rights Reserved.
Madison, AL 35758
FAX: (208) 439-6752