For those of you who do or do not know me personally, here is the latest update on my left eye. This may well be the most boring of my posts yet! 😉 I basically only have one eye that I use to quilt with. Right now I almost cannot see at all out of my left eye. It’s like looking through a cloud. But, I just had a tube shunt put into my left eye on Monday to help control the pressure in that eye (my bad eye). I think good eye pressure numbers are between 15 and 20. Mine has been as high as 46.
But, I’ve had several surgeries on that eye, so it’s been a little pissed off and rightfully so. Hopefully, as my eye heals from this latest surgery, the “cloud” will clear up to wax paper vision, so I’ve got better peripheral vision in that left eye when I drive. Yes, I can drive. I am legally blind in that left eye, but so far my right eye is playing nice so that I can continue to drive. I don’t yet feel comfortable being the driver with passengers (other than my dogs).
Cataracts tend to develop over several years before the eye doctors will do surgery… something about not being able to correct your vision with 20/50 lenses or better. So, by the time you get your cataracts removed and a new lens put in, you have difficulty reading huge letters and numbers (like the price of gas on those big signs at gas stations – that huge). I had cataract surgery on my left eye February, 2011 and on my right eye in April, 2011. By the end of September, 2011 I started having serious problems with my left eye. Apparently, the retina had detached several months before with no symptoms in my vision. Because it had been detached for so long, there were now rips and tears, holes, and LOTS of scar tissue building up in there.
My first retinal surgery was the end of September, 2011. They removed what scar tissue they could and repaired what damage they could. They also put oil in my eye instead of a gas bubble. That meant that I’d have to get the oil removed later with another surgery. I think the decision for the oil instead of the gas bubble was to help hold things in place longer and with less restrictions. By the time they were ready to do my next surgery to remove the oil and put a gas bubble in its place, my eye pressure was up to 46. Drops helped the pressure, but it liked to hover in the 30s.
So, my second retinal surgery was the mid/late January, 2012 when they put a gas bubble in my eye which was dissipating quickly. My retina detached a little over a week later. My third retina surgery was February 6, 2012. This time they put a scleral buckle around my eyeball, hopefully to hold the retina in place better. That surgery was very painful with painful lingering effects.
My spirits were soooo down during this time. After retina surgery, you have to lay flat in some way. I had to lay face-down for 24 hours after my first surgery and then on my sides for the next week or more. After each retinal surgery, the restrictions increased with the surgeries in 2012 resulting in me not being allowed to do anything at all other than lay on my left side – it made for a painful cauliflower ear. I wasn’t allowed to read or use the computer for weeks and not allowed to sew either. Nor was I allowed to get up and move around or do any chores.
With nothing but time on your hand, the thoughts that go through your mind are very depressing and “trying” to your spirits. I really did want to die, especially if I would have to have another retinal surgery. I can’t tell you how difficult it is for me to just sit or lay and do nothing. It was quite a mental struggle for me – I had reached rock bottom. During this time I tried to figure out “why.” Why had this happened to me and why was I required to lay there in solitude and emptiness and do nothing? I believe things happen for a reason, so I figured the lesson I was supposed to learn was to stop over-doing and always doing stuff. Slow down and smell the coffee. Life is short – we shouldn’t be in such a rush as to take it and the people in our lives for granted. Through this I learned that people’s feelings play such a bigger role in their being than I’d ever imagined. We tend to get so crazy busy with our lives that we forget how our actions and words will affect others.
So, for now, my goal is to bring beauty to the world of others through my quilting, through providing knowledge for others about the different aspects of quilting, and through acceptance of the differing personalities in the world, but also through trying to make all feel accepted, vital and special in their part and gifts to our world.
Yes, with each eye surgery I will lose a bit more physical vision and I risk another retinal detachment each time they poke or dig around in my eye. Also, I am dealing with lattice degeneration in my “good” right eye, which means that the retina will most likely detach in my right eye in time. But, as I deal with the loss of physical vision, I think I’ve learned to see things more clearly in the emotional and sensual realm. In time I may become legally blind in both eyes, but I will continue to “see” in different ways. And, I will surely quilt until the day I die regardless of whether or not I can “see” what I’m doing. Otherwise, my spirit truly will die – my quilting is my lifeline. I hope that sharing it with you will provide a lifeline for you as well.
Here is a quilt I made with one eye.
And, here is the detail stitching that I put in it of a fairy smelling the flower (using one eyeball).
By the way, this quilt was juried and made it into the American Quilter’s Society show in Grand Rapids, Michigan August 22-25, 2012.
The point is… things happen to us, but it’s how we choose to react that makes us who we are.
I remember you telling me you’d rather die than have another surgery, and wondering why this was happening. I think you are incredibly brave and inspiring for not giving up.
Love you whole bunches, Mama.
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Thank you, Sweetie! I love you, too!
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So, Ida, is this the result of cataract surgery, or did it just happen in addition to…..?
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Sharon, it just happened in addition to the cataract surgery. Cataracts, Retinal Detachments,and Glaucoma run in my family. My mom lost her eyesight completely in her right eye after one of her surgeries. Any kind of “tampering” with our eyes, though, triggers stress in the eye, which can cause a Retinal Detachment. My brother and sister have had Retinal Detachments, but with no issues. My mom lost her eyesight about 40 some years ago. I figure it was because medicine wasn’t as developed as it is now, so I figured I’d be okay. Little did I know how bad the damage was.
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Ida, we could all learn from your insight! And you have beautiful quilts and quilting, even with one eye.
Congrats on the quilt show. That is such an awesome quilt!
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Thank you, Tina!
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[…] In other news, remember this quilt? It was in another one of my blog posts a long time ago. You can read that post here. […]
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* Post Script: That quilt won first place in the Scrappy Quilts Division at National Quilting Association’s (NQA) 2013 show. I couldn’t believe it!
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[…] me, you also know that I am legally blind in my left eye – I’ve posted about it before here. I get to go to different eye doctors on a regular basis; my regular eye doctor who prescribes my […]
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