Posted in Follow up letters, The Medical Stuff

Infernotemporal defect – Temporal vision

Well, I’ve just had my follow up letter from my last appointment with the eye centre and comfimation of a infernotemporal defect.

The problems I’ve had in my right eye, I’ve discussed before in earlier posts.

I’m very sad today. Scared and sad to be completely honest.

It’s one thing knowing my peripheral vision in my right eye is failing but another to have it seen inside by my consultant.

They have said my peripheral vision shouldn’t be compromised with the condition I have so this is why I’m having all these tests.

There must be another condition or something else wrong in there.

I still have to wait to see the main man, in a few months for the results of all these tests.

Some ice cream and a beer is in order to make me feel a little better about something there’s nothing I can do about.

Or just one mahoosive bender.

I think my left eye is OK… Peripherally.

Small mercies and all that. But that’s what you have to do. Pick the good bits out and appreciate the small things.

Posted in No category yet

Newly diagnosed with Macular Dystrophy

Close up photograph of my green eye

So, you have just been told you have Macular Dystrophy.

At first you are puzzled and think you could never understand the information that you are googling… right?

Never heard of a macula? No neither had I.

The more you read, the more the panic, the more devastation and scared you feel.

How did this happen?
How long do I have my eyesight fails?
How will I cope?
How can I explain this to friends and family?
When will I experience difficulties so badly I will lose my independence?
Will I lose people I love?
I\’m scared, nobody will understand?
Is there a cure?
Will I go blind?
Do my family have it?

An overwhelming feeling that lasts a long time.

All I can say is…

I do know exactly how you feel. From experience.

It\’s devastating and I never thought I would calm down about the situation I found myself in.

You will be annoyed by comments like… ‘Glasses will help’ … ‘Surely you can do something\’ and the absolute pearler… ‘My eyes are getting bad too’

But, if you don’t understand this disease, how do you think anyone else will?

People don’t know what to say and don’t want to say the wrong thing.

Alot of groups I’m in on facebook have peoples family members joining to understand and help the person with the disease. This is probably a good idea as they won’t just take your word for it and can begin to understand the common thread through the progression of this condition. Join them too, they are very helpful.

Don’t worry about anyone who will leave you because of this, it just shows you they weren’t going to be much help or comfort to you or a much of a friend anyway.

That probably won’t happen.

The initial shock will wear off eventually.
Now, I’m not saying you won’t have your down days but you will come to terms with the condition… Mostly.

It won’t always be like this.

Throughout this blog, I have been honest.

There are amusing, and downright scary days.

Days where you cry because it’s frightening and you feel so alone in this because how can anyone know what you see or don’t see? Or the mounting difficulties and frustrations.

But amusing days where you have lip liner on your eyes and your sunglasses on in autumn feeling a pillock. Trying to pick up a spider in your room very carefully that happens to be a leaf, trying to work out if it’s the bus coming and whether to put your arm out, then realising it’s a van … But then you laugh, because, you have to.

I won’t be one of those people who will pop some wishy washy… Live, laugh, love crap up, because, this is very real, and I think it will help people more by being real.

If you have a friend or family member with this condition it must be confusing.

I can see a blurry bird in a tree, but I will stare at your eyes intently trying to focus in on them.

I don’t like the lights, but can\’t see in the dark very well either.

I’m confused too.

You cannot take this away or cure it. What you can do is educate yourself, and join groups, listen and give hugs… alot.

As the disease progresses, a good thing to do is maybe help with a bucket list, fundraising and then at least that\’s helping find a cure.

4+ years down the line, and I appreciate still being independent, the little things in life, days and nights out while I’m still seeing everything I can.

This does feel like a race against time, but at the moment I think its only because my condition has worsened, but it will hopefully level out now for a while.

The Macular Society and RNIB have support if you need it, groups online are good for connecting with people with the same or similar condition as sometimes it’s nice to realise that they have the same problems and work a way round them of you can together.

Posted in Hospital Appointments

My Hospital Appointment – Consultant

Photograph of trees with autumn leaves
Photograph of a Holly Bush with red berries
Photograph of trees in a park in autumn
Photograph of trees, by a path with autumn leaves on it
Well in an complete anticlimax and now like a cliffhanger episode, dallas style… I won’t get the results till after my ERG test and when I actually see the main man.
Today, I saw the lady who diagnosed me the first time I went to the eye centre.
Had the drops, had the visual acuity test, macular photography then went in to see her.
There is slightly more damage to my Macular which shows a hereditary Macular Dystrophy pattern. Which one that is unknown as yet. The most common is Stargardts Disease.
I haven’t had any results from the tests yet, so this was just a comparison with earlier macula photography.
There are some dystrophies that cause total blindness, I didn’t know this and today was an interim check up to keep an eye on things… Doctors words… not mine ☺ see what she did there.
So, I have to wait.
So the walk back was interesting. Emotionally.
She said there is nothing they can do with a genetic eye disease as yet.
If you ever win the lottery, then chuck some to the Macular Society. It’s the only way they can find a cure to stop this getting worse.
I was angry, and abit upset, and I’m frightened to be honest but at the moment ignorance is bliss.
But then after seeing a squirrel for a bit and meeting a lovely person I haven’t seen for a while and coming home without my gloves and hat, because I gave them to Dawn, who’s need is greater than mine, I loved my little old eyes again because they have lasted this long regardless, in quite an epic way really.