Loss of Vision left
On this page, you will find all the information about the topic: Loss of vision on the left
Decrease in vision, predominantly of the left hemispheres of the retina.
Conflict:
Fear-in-the-neck conflict about a thing.
- Danger that threatens from behind, lurks and that you can’t shake off.
- Danger that you can’t face.
left halves of the retina look to the right
- for the right-handed person concerning partner
- for the left-handed person concerning mother or child
Idiom:
- Not being able to shake off a problem,
- The danger is still breathing down my neck,
- The thought of it still haunts me.
Hamer Focus:
HH in the left visual cortex occipital for left retinal halves
Aktive phase:
Loss of vision of a specific retinal area, different in both eyes. Usually both visual hemispheres are affected.
Healing:
The obligatory healing edema forms not only in the relay of the visual cortex, but also between the sclera and the retina, leading to retinal detachment. It has a particularly dramatic effect on the fovea centralis (macula).
Although the retinal detachment is a good healing symptom and is only of a passager nature, i.e. it later recedes on its own, a dramatic visual deterioration occurs. ATTENTION: strong possibility of complications with syndrome!
Myopia: Lateral retinal detachments with recurrences, leading to an optical elongation of the eyeball because the retinal detachment is later fixed by occlusion between the retina and sclera.
Farsightedness: Retinal detachments dorsal with recurrences, by also occlusion between retina and sclera. The eyeball becomes optically shorter. Vision can be preserved in both processes (with spectacle correction).
Crisis:
Centralization
Biological Sense:
Aktive phase
Making invisible. Fear in the neck of something made invisible temporarily partially shuts down retinal function (prey looking to both sides sees backward).
Notice:
Fear-in-the-neck-conflict or with a particular aspect, affecting the paramedian part of the visual cortex, means that the fear is felt behind the eye, as the orientation center of the consciousness.