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THE
CURE OF IMPERFECT SIGHT BY
TREATMENT WITHOUT GLASSES
CHAPTER
12
PALMING
All
the methods used in the cure of errors of refraction are simply different
ways of obtaining relaxation, and most patients, though by no means all,
find it easiest to relax with their eyes shut. This usually lessens the
strain to see, and in such cases is followed by a temporary or more lasting
improvement in vision.
Most
patients are benefited merely by closing the eyes; and by alternately
resting them for a few minutes or longer in this way and then opening
them and looking at the Snellen test card for a second or less, flashes
of improved vision are, as a rule, very quickly obtained. Some temporarily
obtain almost normal vision by this means; and in rare cases a complete
cure has been effected, sometimes in less than an hour.
But
since some light comes through the closed eyelids, a still greater degree
of relaxation can be obtained, in all but a few exceptional cases, by
excluding it. This is done by covering the closed eyes with the palms
of the hands (the fingers being crossed upon the forehead) in such a way
as to avoid pressure on the eyeballs. So efficacious is this practice,
which I have called "palming," as a means of relieving strain,
that we all instinctively resort to it at times, and from it most patients
are able to get a considerable degree of relaxation.

Fig.
42. Palming.
This
is one of the most effective methods of obtaining relaxation of all the
sensory nerves.
But
even with the eyes closed and covered in such a way as to exclude all
the light, the visual centers of the brain may still be disturbed, the
eye may still strain to see; and instead of seeing a field so black
that it is impossible to remember, imagine, or see anything blacker,
as one ought normally to do when the optic nerve is not subject to the
stimulation of light, the patient will see illusions of lights and colors
ranging all the way from an imperfect black to kaleidoscopic appearances
so vivid that they seem to be actually seen with the eyes. The worse
the condition of the eyesight, as a rule, the more numerous, vivid and
persistent these appearances are. Yet some persons with very imperfect
sight are able to palm almost perfectly from the beginning, and are,
therefore, very quickly cured. Any disturbance of mind or body, such
as fatigue, hunger, anger, worry or depression, also makes it difficult
for patients to see black when they palm, persons who can see it perfectly
under ordinary conditions being often unable to do so without assistance
when they are ill or in pain.
It
is impossible to see a perfect black unless the eyesight is perfect,
because only when the eyesight is perfect is the mind at rest; but some
patients can without difficulty approximate such a black nearly enough
to improve their eyesight, and as the eyesight improves the deepness
of the black increases. Patients who fail to see even an approximate
black when they palm state that instead of black they see streaks or
floating clouds of gray, flashes of light, patches of red, blue, green,
yellow, etc. Sometimes instead of an immovable black, clouds of black
will be seen moving across the field. In other cases the black will
be seen for a few seconds and then some other color will take its place.
The different ways in which patients can fail to see black when their
eyes are closed and covered are, in fact, very numerous and often very
peculiar.
Some
patients have been so impressed with the vividness of the colors which
they imagined they saw that no amount of argument could, or did, convince
them that they did not actually see them with their eyes. If other people
saw bright lights or colors, with their eyes closed and covered, they
admitted that these things would be illusions; but what they themselves
saw under the same conditions was reality. They would not believe, until
they had themselves demonstrated the truth, that their illusions were
due to an imagination beyond their control.
Successful
palming in these more difficult cases usually involves the practice
of all the methods for improving the sight described in succeeding chapters.
For reasons which will be explained in the following chapter, the majority
of such patients may be greatly helped by the memory of a black object.
They are directed to look at such an object at the distance at which
the color can be seen best, close the eyes and remember the color, and
repeat until the memory appears to be equal to the sight. Then they
are instructed, while still holding the memory of the black, to cover
the closed eyes with the palms of the hands in the manner just described.
If the memory of the black is perfect, the whole background will be
black. If it is not, or if it does not become so in the course of a
few seconds, the eyes are opened and the black object regarded again.

Fig.
43.
Patient
with atrophy of the optic nerve gets flashes of improved vision after
palming.
Many
patients become able by this method to see black almost perfectly for
a short time; but most of them, even those whose eyes are not very bad,
have great difficulty in seeing it continuously. Being unable to remember
black for more than from three to five seconds, they cannot see black
for a longer time than this. Such patients are helped by central fixation.
When they have become able to see one part of a black object darker
than the whole, they are able to remember the smaller area for a longer
time than they could the larger one, and thus become able to see black
for a longer period when they palm. They are also benefited by mental
shifting (see Chapter XV) from one black object to another, or from
one part of a black object to another. It is impossible to see, remember,
or imagine anything, even for as much as a second, without shifting
from one part to another, or to some other object and back again; and
the attempt to do so always produces strain. Those who think they are
remembering a black object continuously are unconsciously comparing
it with something not so black, or else its color and its position are
constantly changing. It is impossible to remember even such a simple
thing as a period perfectly black and stationary for more than a fraction
of a second. When shifting is not done unconsciously patients must be
encouraged to do it consciously. They may be directed, for instance,
to remember successively a black hat, a black shoe, a black velvet dress,
a black plush curtain, or a fold in the black dress or the black curtain,
holding each one not more than a fraction of a second. Many persons
have been benefited by remembering all the letters of the alphabet in
turn perfectly black. Others prefer to shift from one small black object,
such as a period or a small letter, to another, or to swing such an
object in a manner to be described later (see Chapter XV).
In
some cases the following method has proved successful: When the patient
sees what he thinks is a perfect black, let him remember a piece of
starch on this background, and on the starch the letter F as black as
the background. Then let him let go of the starch and remember only
the F, one part best, on the black background. In a short time the whole
field may become as black as the blacker part of the F. The process
can be repeated many times with a constant increase of blackness in
the field.
In
one case a patient who saw grey so vividly when she palmed that she
was positive she saw it with her eyes, instead of merely imagining it,
was able to obliterate nearly all of it by first imagining a black C
on the grey field, then two black C's, and finally a multitude of overlapping
C's.
It
is impossible to remember black perfectly when it is not seen perfectly.
If one sees it imperfectly, the best one can do is to remember it imperfectly.
All persons, without exception, who can see or read diamond type at
the near-point, no matter how great their myopia may be, or how much
the interior of the eye may be diseased, become able, as a rule, to
see black with their eyes closed and covered more readily than patients
with hypermetropia or astigmatism; because, while myopes cannot see
anything perfectly, even at the near-point, they see better at that
point than persons with hypermetropia or astigmatism do at any distance.
Persons with high degrees of myopia, however, often find palming very
difficult, since they not only see black very imperfectly, but, because
of the effort they are making to see, cannot remember it more than one
or two seconds. Any other condition of the eye which prevents the patient
from seeing black perfectly also makes palming difficult. In some cases
black is never seen as black, appearing to be grey, yellow, brown, or
even bright red. In such cases it is usually best for the patient to
improve his sight by other methods before trying to palm. Blind persons
usually have more trouble in seeing black than those who can see, but
may be helped by the memory of a black object familiar to them before
they lost their sight. A blind painter who saw grey continually when
he first tried to palm became able at last to see black by the aid of
the memory of black paint. He had no perception of light whatever and
was in terrible pain; but when he succeeded in seeing black the pain
vanished, and when he opened his eyes he saw light.
Even
the imperfect memory of black is useful, for by its aid a still blacker
black can be both remembered and seen; and this brings still further
improvement. For instance, let the patient regard a letter on the Snellen
test card at the distance at which the color is seen best, then close
his eyes and remember it. If the palming produces relaxation, it will
be possible to imagine a deeper shade of black than was seen, and by
remembering this black when again regarding the letter it can be seen
blacker than it was at first. A still deeper black can then be imagined,
and this deeper black can, in turn, be transferred to the letter on
the test card. By continuing this process a perfect perception of black,
and hence perfect sight, are sometimes very quickly obtained. The deeper
the shade of black obtained with the eyes closed, the more easily it
can be remembered when regarding the letters on the test card.
The
longer some people palm the greater the relaxation they obtain and the
darker the shade of black they are able both to remember and see. Others
are able to palm successfully for short periods, but begin to strain
if they keep it up too long.
It
is impossible to succeed by effort, or by attempting to "concentrate"
on the black. As popularly understood, concentration means to do or
think one thing only; but this is impossible, and an attempt to do the
impossible is a strain which defeats its own end. The human mind is
not capable of thinking of one thing only. It can think of one thing
best, and is only at rest when it does so; but it cannot think of one
thing only. A patient who tried to see black only and to ignore the
kaleidoscopic colors which intruded themselves upon her field of vision,
becoming worse and worse the more they were ignored, actually went into
convulsions from the strain, and was attended every day for a month
by her family physician before she was able to resume the treatment.
This patient was advised to stop palming, and, with her eyes open, to
recall as many colors as possible, remembering each one as perfectly
as possible. By thus taking the bull by the horns and consciously making
the mind wander more that it did unconsciously, she became able, in
some way, to palm for short periods.
Fig.
44.
No.
1. - Owing to paralysis of the seventh nerve on the right side, resulting
from a mastoid operation on the right ear, the patient is unable to close
her lips.
No.
2. - After palming and remembering a perfectly black period she became
able not only to close the lips, but to whistle. The cure was permanent.
Some
particular kinds of black objects may be found to be more easily remembered
than others. Black plush of a high grade for instance, proved to be
an optimum (see Chapter XVIII) with many persons as compared with black
velvet, silk, broadcloth, ink and the letters on the Snellen test card,
although no blacker than these other blacks. A familiar black object
can often be remembered more easily by the patient than those that are
less so. A dressmaker, for instance, was able to remember a thread of
black silk when she could not remember any other black object.
When
a black letter is regarded before palming the patient will usually remember
not only the blackness of the letter, but the white background as well.
If the memory of the black is held for a few seconds, however, the background
usually fades away and the whole field becomes black.
Patients
often say that they remember black perfectly when they do not. One can
usually tell whether or not this is the case by noting the effect of
palming upon the vision. If there is no improvement in the sight when
the eyes are opened, it can be demonstrated, by bringing the black closer
to the patient, that it has not been remembered perfectly.
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.

Fig.
45.
Fig.
1. - Patient with absolute glaucoma of the right eye. He had suffered
agonizing pain for six months and had no perception of light. He was photographed
when testing the tension of his eyeball, which he found to be perfectly
hard.
Fig.
2. - The patient is palming and remembering a perfectly black period.
After half an hour the eyeball became soft the pain ceased, and the patient
became able to see the light. After three years there was no return of
the glaucoma.
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."
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.
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