It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye
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It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye
Remember as a kid that choice you were asked by your friends: “would you rather be deaf & dumb or blind?” I always picked deaf & dumb, and if you were to go blind, it better be a good story, like “in the war” or “free-climbing the Eiffel Tower.” The bad news is I lost the sight in my right eye; the good news is that it was at the border between Tajikistan & Kyrgyzstan, at the highest crossing in the world at over 14000 feet, below freezing temperatures, sleeping in the back of a truck because there were “dangerous snakes.” It doesn't get any better than that.
My wife, Gwynne, and I were spending 8 months traveling the old Silk Road from SE Asia through Europe, with a lot of it in the former U.S.S.R., the 'Stans (Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, etc.) Not something I would recommend but it did drive our Traveler's Century Club count over the minimum 100 countries visited so we could get the certificate. After Iran, the 'Stans were rather a letdown and they were dangerous. The Pamir Highway which we drove on for over a week was windy, unpaved, cut out of the mountainside, and littered with wrecked vehicles. There was a dirty, rapid river down in the valley with Afghanistan & Pakistan just on the other side. We could see people riding mules on narrow paths maybe half a mile away. The only thing at the border were squat concrete buildings staffed with armed soldiers who obviously were at the bottom of their careers. They seemed pleased to see us, and some spoke English. All went as well as could be; exposed in a snowstorm waiting in line for our passports to be stamped, when one of our favorite traveling companions, Roberto from Brazil, was denied entry. Even though the website said differently, due to some private squabble between the two countries, he now needed a visa. That was going to be a challenge considering the circumstances that we were the only vehicle we had seen in days. As luck may have it, these things work themselves out: for $250, one of the guards offered to drive Roberto 5 hours to Bishkek, call the Kyrgyzstan ambassador to meet him at the embassy at 3 o'clock in the morning for a Transit pass, which was another $100, U.S., cash-money. Also, Roberto had buy the guard's son a Birthday present because it was his birthday, which is why he was willing to do it in the first place.
As compelling & interesting as that story is, the crux is I had to sleep sitting up in a freezing truck at high altitude without using eye drops. See, I had taken Diamox for Altitude sickness, which increases blood volume, but I have high blood pressure, and 25 years of RK then Lasix. My BP plus the lens scarring blew the entire retina off my Right eye. When a victorious Roberto showed up the next morning at 5 am, the top half of my right eye was dark, which extended to the whole thing by the end of the day. We were 5 days from the nearest airport but retinal surgery is suggested within 24 hours of detachment, and because there was no way I was going to give up, I travelled like that for another 5 months, insuring the retina would never reattach correctly again.
During that 5 months, I watched two movies requiring 3D glasses but watching none would have been enough. When we finally got home, I got an appointment within 24 hours, and was in the operating theater within the week. (My ophthalmologist had an Engineering Undergraduate, and he was around 40, the PERFECT surgeon.) I had to wear an eyepatch but I didn't look nearly as debonair with it as the guy on the box. A month later my vision was much improved, like looking through a distorted shower door. I can't read with that eye but I could drive. There is hope that by the end of the year my depth perception will return so I can again don 3D glasses. 9/28/16
My wife, Gwynne, and I were spending 8 months traveling the old Silk Road from SE Asia through Europe, with a lot of it in the former U.S.S.R., the 'Stans (Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, etc.) Not something I would recommend but it did drive our Traveler's Century Club count over the minimum 100 countries visited so we could get the certificate. After Iran, the 'Stans were rather a letdown and they were dangerous. The Pamir Highway which we drove on for over a week was windy, unpaved, cut out of the mountainside, and littered with wrecked vehicles. There was a dirty, rapid river down in the valley with Afghanistan & Pakistan just on the other side. We could see people riding mules on narrow paths maybe half a mile away. The only thing at the border were squat concrete buildings staffed with armed soldiers who obviously were at the bottom of their careers. They seemed pleased to see us, and some spoke English. All went as well as could be; exposed in a snowstorm waiting in line for our passports to be stamped, when one of our favorite traveling companions, Roberto from Brazil, was denied entry. Even though the website said differently, due to some private squabble between the two countries, he now needed a visa. That was going to be a challenge considering the circumstances that we were the only vehicle we had seen in days. As luck may have it, these things work themselves out: for $250, one of the guards offered to drive Roberto 5 hours to Bishkek, call the Kyrgyzstan ambassador to meet him at the embassy at 3 o'clock in the morning for a Transit pass, which was another $100, U.S., cash-money. Also, Roberto had buy the guard's son a Birthday present because it was his birthday, which is why he was willing to do it in the first place.
As compelling & interesting as that story is, the crux is I had to sleep sitting up in a freezing truck at high altitude without using eye drops. See, I had taken Diamox for Altitude sickness, which increases blood volume, but I have high blood pressure, and 25 years of RK then Lasix. My BP plus the lens scarring blew the entire retina off my Right eye. When a victorious Roberto showed up the next morning at 5 am, the top half of my right eye was dark, which extended to the whole thing by the end of the day. We were 5 days from the nearest airport but retinal surgery is suggested within 24 hours of detachment, and because there was no way I was going to give up, I travelled like that for another 5 months, insuring the retina would never reattach correctly again.
During that 5 months, I watched two movies requiring 3D glasses but watching none would have been enough. When we finally got home, I got an appointment within 24 hours, and was in the operating theater within the week. (My ophthalmologist had an Engineering Undergraduate, and he was around 40, the PERFECT surgeon.) I had to wear an eyepatch but I didn't look nearly as debonair with it as the guy on the box. A month later my vision was much improved, like looking through a distorted shower door. I can't read with that eye but I could drive. There is hope that by the end of the year my depth perception will return so I can again don 3D glasses. 9/28/16
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses Any Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
I am glad your sight is returning. That was pretty crazy, man.
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses Any Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
That's really crazy.
My eye doctor was telling me about a treatment where you take a supplement and wear an eyepatch over your good eye to try and restore strength to your bad eye (my right is like 20/40 and my left is like 20/100. You just have to commit to that treatment for pretty much your whole day when you're not at work so I haven't tried it
I'm glad your vision is returning, you should wear the patch in public
My eye doctor was telling me about a treatment where you take a supplement and wear an eyepatch over your good eye to try and restore strength to your bad eye (my right is like 20/40 and my left is like 20/100. You just have to commit to that treatment for pretty much your whole day when you're not at work so I haven't tried it
I'm glad your vision is returning, you should wear the patch in public
No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
I would have gone with the Captain Ron look myself.
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
I hope your sight recovers.
I got my skull busted in a car crash several years ago, and it screwed up my vision. One of my eyes is set back further in my skull than the other now, and it gave me double vision for about a year, but it corrected itself over time. Now it only comes back when I'm drinking. My wife knows I'm tanked when I close one eye so I can see straight.
Qualifying on the range while seeing two of everything was a hoot.
I got my skull busted in a car crash several years ago, and it screwed up my vision. One of my eyes is set back further in my skull than the other now, and it gave me double vision for about a year, but it corrected itself over time. Now it only comes back when I'm drinking. My wife knows I'm tanked when I close one eye so I can see straight.
Qualifying on the range while seeing two of everything was a hoot.
GrumpyCatFace wrote:Dumb slut partied too hard and woke up in a weird house. Ran out the door, weeping for her failed life choices, concerned townsfolk notes her appearance and alerted the fuzz.
viewtopic.php?p=60751#p60751
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
Sorry to hear about your misfortune. Given my profession, I live in fear of losing my eyesight; I've never worn contact lens for that reason. I hope you recover at least some functional vision in your damaged eye.
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
Okeefenokee wrote:Now it only comes back when I'm drinking. My wife knows I'm tanked when I close one eye so I can see straight.
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
Holy shit dude! I hope you and your family recovered from that. You should have grown your hair and beard out, donned a bandana and put a parrot on your shoulder.Martin Hash wrote:Remember as a kid that choice you were asked by your friends: “would you rather be deaf & dumb or blind?” I always picked deaf & dumb, and if you were to go blind, it better be a good story, like “in the war” or “free-climbing the Eiffel Tower.” The bad news is I lost the sight in my right eye; the good news is that it was at the border between Tajikistan & Kyrgyzstan, at the highest crossing in the world at over 14000 feet, below freezing temperatures, sleeping in the back of a truck because there were “dangerous snakes.” It doesn't get any better than that.
My wife, Gwynne, and I were spending 8 months traveling the old Silk Road from SE Asia through Europe, with a lot of it in the former U.S.S.R., the 'Stans (Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, etc.) Not something I would recommend but it did drive our Traveler's Century Club count over the minimum 100 countries visited so we could get the certificate. After Iran, the 'Stans were rather a letdown and they were dangerous. The Pamir Highway which we drove on for over a week was windy, unpaved, cut out of the mountainside, and littered with wrecked vehicles. There was a dirty, rapid river down in the valley with Afghanistan & Pakistan just on the other side. We could see people riding mules on narrow paths maybe half a mile away.
Overturned Truck.jpg
The only thing at the border were squat concrete buildings staffed with armed soldiers who obviously were at the bottom of their careers. They seemed pleased to see us, and some spoke English. All went as well as could be; exposed in a snowstorm waiting in line for our passports to be stamped, when one of our favorite traveling companions, Roberto from Brazil, was denied entry. Even though the website said differently, due to some private squabble between the two countries, he now needed a visa. That was going to be a challenge considering the circumstances that we were the only vehicle we had seen in days. As luck may have it, these things work themselves out: for $250, one of the guards offered to drive Roberto 5 hours to Bishkek, call the Kyrgyzstan ambassador to meet him at the embassy at 3 o'clock in the morning for a Transit pass, which was another $100, U.S., cash-money. Also, Roberto had buy the guard's son a Birthday present because it was his birthday, which is why he was willing to do it in the first place.
As compelling & interesting as that story is, the crux is I had to sleep sitting up in a freezing truck at high altitude without using eye drops. See, I had taken Diamox for Altitude sickness, which increases blood volume, but I have high blood pressure, and 25 years of RK then Lasix. My BP plus the lens scarring blew the entire retina off my Right eye. When a victorious Roberto showed up the next morning at 5 am, the top half of my right eye was dark, which extended to the whole thing by the end of the day. We were 5 days from the nearest airport but retinal surgery is suggested within 24 hours of detachment, and because there was no way I was going to give up, I travelled like that for another 5 months, insuring the retina would never reattach correctly again.
During that 5 months, I watched two movies requiring 3D glasses but watching none would have been enough. When we finally got home, I got an appointment within 24 hours, and was in the operating theater within the week. (My ophthalmologist had an Engineering Undergraduate, and he was around 40, the PERFECT surgeon.)
Eye 3 resized.jpg
I had to wear an eyepatch but I didn't look nearly as debonair with it as the guy on the box. A month later my vision was much improved, like looking through a distorted shower door. I can't read with that eye but I could drive. There is hope that by the end of the year my depth perception will return so I can again don 3D glasses.
Eye 1.JPGEye 2.JPG
Shikata ga nai
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
You have the best stories, Martin!
I'm glad you are recovering. That sounds way too scary for me.
I'm glad you are recovering. That sounds way too scary for me.
Account abandoned.
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Re: It's All Fun & Games Until Someone Loses An Eye (Sept 28, 2016)
One of my favorite Weird/Horror authors has one eye.
Optic nerve cancer as a child, moving towards the brain.
"Hey varmints, don't mess with a guy that's riding a buffalo"