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Do you 'see' wierdly? I mean is your vision peculiar like mine?

Started by Lesley_Roberta, February 16, 2013, 06:35:21 PM

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Lesley_Roberta

I am not asking about the colour of your eyes, I am talking about the manner of your vision.

I ask, because I often wonder, does my vision impact how I see life?

I can not see 'depth' the world is not 3d to me. Ok it's not 2 dimensional, but, I can't see depth.

My eyes are not correctly 'aligned' and as such, I have no stereo in my vision. My doctor told me I see distance artificially as a result of my brain re programming itself to meet the needs. I can also look in opposing directions (which is freaky I suppose to see).

If I were to lose an eye, it would not affect me the way it might most people. I am only looking through one at a time in most cases anyway. My right is more the dominant, but I see as well in both. I just tend to tune out one during the day.

I have remarkable capacity to see detail though and can likely see smaller than most. I can see quite well in distance, but I can't play most video games as the motion overwhelms me. Just can't track the motion for some reason.

I am unsure if it makes a damned bit of difference eh, but the mind tends to muse about all sorts of things.

Does anyone else here have odd qualities to their vision ?
Well being TG is no treat, but becoming separated has sure caused me more trouble that being TG ever will be. So if I post, consider it me trying to distract myself from being lonely, not my needing to discuss being TG. I don't want to be separated a lot more than not wanting to be male looking.
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Shantel

Yeah but not like you describe. I have macular degeneration in one eye and am in the onset phase of cataracts which everyone gets when they get older. I'll be seventy in August. Still it pisses me off and I jokingly tell my wife and her lady friends that I want to squeeze them so that I can recognize them later.  :laugh: Just trying to make lemonade out of life's lemons.
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Marcia

I think that I kinda see like you do. Although I can't see in two different directions. When I go to get my eyes checked for my contacts and the doctor will make one letter or image higher or to the right of the other my mind will work my eyes and keep them lined up.
-Mark & Marcia
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Emily Aster

I'm not really sure. I've failed every depth perception test I've ever had to take (military loves these), but I don't trip over things either. My vision's at 20/15 so I don't know if that's it. Maybe I really can't perceive depth with my eyes and I've just learned to figure it out based on the sizes of the objects or something.  In the tests, the objects all appear the same size, so I can't use that to judge depth. It would explain why I fail the tests, but still feel like I have depth perception. 
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Beth Andrea

I had cataracts in both eyes about 4 years ago...surgery fixed, now I need glasses for close up, but far away is 20/13 (used to be 20/30)...also, my eyes were a dark green/hazel, after the surgery one was "true blue" and the other was pale green, now both are more green than hazel.

I've always experienced temporary loss of depth perception, but my eyes were good. So when I went to therapy, I mentioned it to the person, and just said I was curious about it...turns out that what I have is "derealization", where the mind chooses to process inputs (like vision) as "unreal". It's very common in people with severe abuse histories.
...I think for most of us it is a futile effort to try and put this genie back in the bottle once she has tasted freedom...

--read in a Tessa James post 1/16/2017
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Lesley_Roberta

I've had the muscles operated on 3 times, twice in left eye I think.

It didn't work I suppose is the correct conclusion.

I tell people I see the world as a painting that updates constantly.

I am able to see incredible detail just so long as it isn't moving fast.

I can see details on a shelf at a distance amazingly well, but looking at a shelf as I walk along an aisle makes everything blur.

I tend to walk with my eyes closed an open for a blink to update. I walk so slow anyway that this isn't a problem :)
Well being TG is no treat, but becoming separated has sure caused me more trouble that being TG ever will be. So if I post, consider it me trying to distract myself from being lonely, not my needing to discuss being TG. I don't want to be separated a lot more than not wanting to be male looking.
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Beth Andrea

If I asked you to take a pencil and tap a steady rhythmic beat against a table top, about how fast would it be? (Serious question, I'll explain after you answer)
...I think for most of us it is a futile effort to try and put this genie back in the bottle once she has tasted freedom...

--read in a Tessa James post 1/16/2017
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Adelkhf

At most, my right is crappy. For most part I can see fine enough but small text can be hard to distinguish and I have noticed when alternating between eyes, colours seem noticeably duller when I look through my right eye only.
"Shows you the kind of world we live in. Love is illegal - but not hate. That you can do anywhere, anytime, to anybody. But if you want a little warmth, a little tenderness, a shoulder to cry on, a smile to cuddle up with, you have to hide in dark corners, like a criminal." - Lou Jacobi
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JessicaH

In the last few years, I seem to have visual disturbances like a "tracer effect". I always had 20/15 vision but now I just don't see as clear with movement. Seems like I noticed it after starting HRT....
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Jeatyn

This is interesting, I can totally relate to what you're saying about not being able to see depth, or track motion very well.

I can never tell what's going on in action movies and I'm terrible at fast paced action games, it's just a blur of colours.

Yet as far as I've been told while getting eye tests, there's nothing to explain why. Other than the fact I'm REALLY short sighted (and deteriorating  :() everything appears ok.

I'm pretty sure I have some form of colour blindness too, I'm not sure if they check for that while doing normal sight tests, if they do then nobody has told me that I suck at distinguishing colours during one of my many many eye tests :P I do design work and I've had so many instances of "can you change this to lilac?" -  "....uuuh, it's already lilac?" - "no it isn't....this is lilac" -  "they look the same to me ;__;"

I don't really rely on my eyes too much, I do better if I judge distances by touch or memory...but that's a bit tricky unless I'm somewhere I'm already familiar with :P It doesn't affect me all that much, just little things like completely missing the table when I try to put a glass down...or if I look at my feet while going up or down stairs it messes me up and I'm more likely to fall.
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Lesley_Roberta

Quote from: Beth Andrea on February 17, 2013, 01:57:48 PM
If I asked you to take a pencil and tap a steady rhythmic beat against a table top, about how fast would it be? (Serious question, I'll explain after you answer)

That depends :) how long am I tapping :) I have a bad habit of nervous fidgeting to begin with, but it would tire my arm in a minute.
Well being TG is no treat, but becoming separated has sure caused me more trouble that being TG ever will be. So if I post, consider it me trying to distract myself from being lonely, not my needing to discuss being TG. I don't want to be separated a lot more than not wanting to be male looking.
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Beth Andrea

Quote from: Lesley_Roberta on February 18, 2013, 10:49:58 AM
That depends :) how long am I tapping :) I have a bad habit of nervous fidgeting to begin with, but it would tire my arm in a minute.

I saw a story on tv once (discovery?) about how scientists noticed young people tap a faster rhythm than old people...they went on to say that it appears the brain has an internal "metronome" that prompts the mind to take a snapshot of what the eyes/ears/etc experiences...it's a way of not being flooded with information.

It would explain why, to a child, time seems to take forever and to an older person, time just whizzes by.

If you're familiar with the idea of "sample rate", this is it, but for humans. Something maybe to think about?
...I think for most of us it is a futile effort to try and put this genie back in the bottle once she has tasted freedom...

--read in a Tessa James post 1/16/2017
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MadelineB

I learned to oil paint from a semi-famous professional artist from New York, who would come down from the City once a week to teach us. Her work was just amazing; she painted abstract forms onto slate instead of canvas, and if you were someone to whom forms and color speak deeply, her work tended to speak. She confided in me her secret- she had no depth perception at all; she perceived the world like it was a stained glass window (or a tv screen). Her massive brain adaptations to still function by finding 2d ways of navigating etc had made her amazing at translating 3 dimensional images into 2 dimensional form, which is what painting is at its most fundamental.

Interestingly enough, my wife was born the same way, with a "lazy eye" that prevented normal stereo vision, but it was successfully corrected surgically when she was very young, and only emerged at all after that if she was extremely tired, or heavily medicated. She is great at perspective and at architectural rendering, but can't paint to save her life.

Me, I have no defects of eye or lens, rather I have very unusual vision for several reasons:
1. I have extremely high visual acuity. It has deteriorated with age, so I am down from 300-20 to around 200-20 vision now; but I can still read a paperback from across the room if the lighting is bright.
2. whether it was due to brain damage that repaired itself in the womb, or brain damage that occured and was adapted to later, or just freakish wiring from the get-go, my visual cortex does much of my conceptual (and ethical, and future planning) processing- when I think deeply I will be staring out in space like I don't see what is in front of me, because I don't- I am seeing concepts, ideas, etc. I can envision solutions to very complex problems; I literally squint and I see them in my visual field.
3. maybe because my vision is busy doing most of my productive thinking? I am a synesthete- all of my senses overlap, so if I don't keep the walls up through habitual mental discipline, I taste colors, hear movement and relative sizes, feel texture of shapes and of three dimensional forms, hear relationships between objects or ideas, and smell emotions. That's a simplification, but typical for me.

We are all different; learning to accept my gender differences has allowed me to finally start accepting, and celebrating, the uniqueness of how I perceive the world as well.
History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.
~Maya Angelou

Personal Blog: Madeline's B-Hive
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Liminal Stranger

Pretty sure my depth perception is fine. I've managed to mess with it a couple of times to confuse myself, but it works well. OTOH, I seem to have trouble distinguishing shades from one another. Usually I have the most problem between pink and purple, followed by red and orange. I learned when I was little how to make the blue "disappear" from the sky if I focused hard enough on a small space in the clouds; with a great deal of effort I can remove blue entirely from my vision until my concentration is broken a few moments later. Oh, the joys of ADD  :P

Lack of depth perception is a very interesting notion, however.




"And if you feel that you can't go on, in the light you will find the road"
- In the Light, Led Zeppelin
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Edge

I have a stigmatism and am very, very near sighted. Glasses correct it mostly. Without them, I get headaches in areas with lights, but do fine (as in everything is blurry, but I can navigate alright and don't get a headache) in the dark.
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Lesley_Roberta

Well being TG is no treat, but becoming separated has sure caused me more trouble that being TG ever will be. So if I post, consider it me trying to distract myself from being lonely, not my needing to discuss being TG. I don't want to be separated a lot more than not wanting to be male looking.
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