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Post by David on Apr 6, 2007 21:44:31 GMT -5
I have noticed that if I stare straight ahead for ten seconds or so, my collection of floaters appears to disappear. My brain fills in the floater image with non-floater stuff from the other eye. As soon as I move my eyes, the floaters reappear. I'm wondering if anyone has found a sequence of eye exercises that can help the brain better adapt to screening out the floaters. The fact that I can do this at all means maybe I can do more of it, with practice, and I'd like to try. I'd appreciate comments from anyone with leads or experience with this coping method.
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Post by Mark S on Apr 26, 2007 10:06:21 GMT -5
There's a whole book on this subject written by a guy called Mark Lorne. It deals with brain training techniques and psychological exercises to help the brain 'block out' seeing floaters.
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Post by David Bookbinder on May 10, 2007 21:35:07 GMT -5
Have you tried Lorne's book? His description doesn't sound very convincing.
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Post by MarkS on Oct 3, 2007 9:09:15 GMT -5
No, because i am managing to train my brain without the book. Either way, the training does work over time.
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