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Central Fixation in the Bates Method

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Is the Eye a Camera?

In some ways the eye is like a camera in how a lens is responsible for focusing light rays onto a medium that receives the light data. But there are important differences that have practical ramifications for how we use our eyes.

A modern digital camera receives light data onto a surface that translates the light frequencies into digital data, while an old style camera had a photosensitive film that the light affects. Either way, the entire recording area has the same sensitivity. In the eye, however, it’s different, because only a point in the very center is packed with the photoreceptor cells. The structure of the eye, then, dictates that we can only see best where we are looking.

What Central Fixation Means to Us

Scientific studies on the maximum capabilities of the eye’s central vision seem to treat everyone the same and don’t follow Dr. Bates’s example of finding people with unusually good vision to see how they perform on the tests. The thing is, most vision problems are psycho-physical disorders, and a person’s quality of vision, including refractive error and other aspects, correlates with the way they use their eyes. Most scientists and eye doctors don’t see this functional aspect necessary for good vision. To them, a person wearing glasses to “correct” the condition has solved the issue. They also do not see much difference between a person with ordinary good vision and a person with extraordinary vision, or they see extraordinary vision as nothing but luck and genetics.

Dr. Bates recognized long ago that the smaller the point you pay attention to, the better your vision. He knew that the physiology of the eye dictated this, and that people with extraordinary vision take advantage of this fact with the way they have become so good at using their eyes. Conversely, he also knew that there were consequences if a person deviated too far from this fact.

“The text-books say that at twenty feet an area having a diameter of half an inch can be seen with maximum vision, but anyone who tries at this distance to see every part of even the smallest letters of the Snellen test card – the diameter of which may be less than a quarter of an inch – equally well at one time will immediately become myopic. The fact is that the nearer the point of maximum vision approaches a mathematical point, which has no area, the better the sight.”
– Bates, Perfect Sight Without Glasses, Ch 11 

This explains why we naturally move our eyes towards what we want to see. We see best where we are looking, and this becomes more true the smaller the point you look at.

But is that what you typically do yourself? How often do you actually move your eyes to point towards the details you’re paying attention to? How often do you even look for details?

Demonstrate Eccentric Fixation

If you have a refractive error such as myopia or hyperopia, try to demonstrate something right now. Look at a detailed object 20 feet away. How big is the area you see equally clearly?

If you have your glasses or contact lenses on, your area of maximum clarity may be a foot wide or even several feet wide. If you don’t have your glasses on, similarly, that same area may appear equally blurry.

But wait, the quote by Dr. Bates above says it should be smaller than a half inch. What gives?

Why did I say above that it’s easily verifiable that someone with normal vision sees this way, when you can demonstrate that you don’t see this way? What makes you different from someone with normal vision?

This is one effect of misuse of the eyes. When you learn to use your eyes in the way they were designed to be used, including correct application of central fixation, your area of maximum clarity will become smaller.

That doesn’t mean the rest of your vision will become worse. In fact, it will get better, and the center will get better still.

Peripheral Vision

I’m talking about central vision here. But at the same time, don’t try to block out your peripheral awareness. You don’t want to have tunnel vision, do you?

There’s a balance to be found in how you pay attention to your central and peripheral vision, between using your vision like a searchlight, with a narrow area of attention, and on the other hand relaxing your gaze by acknowledging your wider visual field. Central and peripheral vision blend into each other but are also different in the way they work. You can’t try to block out your peripheral vision and expect your vision to function and focus the way it’s supposed to.

Movement

The principles of good vision all tie together. You have to practice all of them or none will produce good results, or not the level of results you want, or not permanently. Every principle is part of the equation.

You can’t have central fixation without the right kind of movement.

The saccadic (tiny and quick) eye movements that some exercises help stimulate are fairly small movements. The eyes of a person with normal vision perform many quick, effortless saccades as a normal process of seeing. It’s so effortless that he doesn’t feel the movements. Microsaccades are even smaller movements that are done many times per second.

In contrast, a person with blurry vision tends to have severely reduced eye movements, and the movements he does do are larger, slower and full of tension.

Improving Your Vision

Better vision isn’t really about eye exercises. Better vision requires awareness as you perform exercises that demonstrate and help you practice the way your eyes work best. You’re exercising your brain more than anything, getting it to fully activate. With the use of the Bates method, the test card, and other procedures shared on this website, nearly anyone can improve his vision.

 

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