By Yvonne Aoll | Featured Contributor
Last June, I went blind in my left eye from a laser eye surgery gone wrong.
It would take a speedy instinctive quest for a second opinion, three more months, an older more experienced surgeon and another agonizing correction surgery, for my left eyeโs vision to be restored. Thanks to the top-notch, wildly skilled, second ophthalmology surgeon I visited, I can see much clearly now with both eyes, with no need for spectacles or contacts. However, the months during which my left eye remained blind, while filled with unspeakable worries, also served as a crash course in mindfulness.
Learning to Open My Eyes

In the initial weeks of dealing with the acute trauma of losing my sight, I would often be terrified of opening my left eye upon waking up, but eventually, I would. Iโd open my eye and see nothing. Just an opaque, cloudy, film-like, extensive corneal haze that caused my blindness, and that I often wished I could just lift, slide down, or wipe off. On many occasions, Iโd feel myself getting very close to having panic attacks.
Box breathing is one of the mindfulness tools that I learnt when I lost my sight; itโs probably what made the biggest difference for me during this distressing time. Endorsed by the US Navy SEALs, this five-minute, grounding, stress-reducing technique, also called four-square breathing, is what pulled me from going over the edge on several occasions.
Loving kindness meditation additionally helped me to foster compassion for myself and other beings when I was blind. By reciting specific mantras, this mindfulness technique was useful in helping me to focus on others as I made well-wishes for them, therefore preventing me from wallowing in potential loss and pain.
Cultivating Gratitude

Most importantly, cultivating gratitude is something that would prove invaluable in helping to balance things out in my period of blindness. Every night before turning in, Iโd list down five things I was grateful for that day. No matter how minute or inconsequential the items would seem, I would list them down. Medicine. Mangoes. Heat. Pen. Right eye. It would appear to be such a simple, perhaps pointless activity, but it carries a lot of depth. When such a devastating event happens to you, it can seem like the ground beneath your feet is giving way, and thereโs nothing good left in the world anymore. But there is, there always is, even if for that day, the greatest thing you could be grateful for, is a pen. Thatโs something.
Everything Could Change in a Day

Losing vision in my left eye felt as though there was a partial blackout, like the lights in that eye were unceremoniously turned off and would later be turned back on in three months. I desperately wanted the lights back. When the lights were out, I bargained a lot with myself, with the universe, with God, as one naturally does in the most helpless of circumstances. I told myself if I could just see again with both eyes, I would write more, read more, travel more, but mostly, the biggest bargain I made with myself was, if I was to get better, if the science and miracle of getting my sight back would come through for me, I would be mindful of what I consumed. Now that I realized just how much of my body Iโd taken for granted, I would try to always eat clean and honor my body. I havenโt touched a soda since.
It is also through mindfulness, that Iโm reminded daily, that everything could change in a day. On the drive home on the day I went blind, I remember thinking and telling a friend, โYesterday was just another Wednesday, last Thursday was just another weekday, nothing exciting or significant or world-changing happened. There was no graduation, or promotion, or big launch, or lottery win, or relocation.โ And yet at the time, I would do anything, pay anything, to go back to those ordinary, dull, nothing days, because at least then, I could still see with both eyes.
Now I remind myself that on the days when nothing seems to be happening, I should cherish those days. Because maybe the โnothing daysโ are the golden days.
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It’s scary how life can change at any minute and the fact that we are not in control of the changes that may come our way. The hardest thing is to adapt to the changes.
So very scary, isn’t it? And adapting, as you said very well, is truly something else. Thanks for reading!
Most welcome
You are a very strong person to have overcome such a difficult time, may God always be with you and wishing you great health and more courage to face any circumstances in life โฃ
Thanks Daphny! God bless you lots too.
you are so powerful! May Allah brings the best for you in this world, stay strong. Genuinely impressed by how you coped up with this situation. When we are in the pits, this is the time to shift our perspective and align with a higher goal. Kudos and love!!!!!!
Thanks so much Wajeeha! Stay strong too! ๐
Such powerful lessons from what sounds like a really challenging time. The section on gratitude especially spoke to me, that activity of listing the things you are grateful for on that day. Sometimes negative thoughts can have a lot of strength, and this activity would be a good treatment for that. Gratitude for big things like family and small things like a pen. But maybe not so small when they give you enjoyment.
Thanks Dave! The gratitude list, ah, isn’t it something. I love it too!
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