Monday, April 22, 2024

Cataract and cataracts

John Berger begins his short essay on cataracts with a definition: “Cataract from Greek kataraktes, meaning waterfall or portcullis, an obstruction that descends from above.” And later:

When you open a dictionary and consult it, you refind, or discover for the first time, the precision of a word. Not only the precision of what it denotes, but also the word’s precise place in the diversity of the language.

With both cataracts removed, what I see with my eyes is now like a dictionary which I can consult about the precision of things. The thing in itself, and also its place amongst other things.

John Berger, Cataract. With drawings by Selçuk Demirel (London: Notting Hill Editions, 2011).
I had cataracts removed a week apart earlier this month, and for the first time since elementary school I am looking at the everyday world without glasses. Waiting for the second surgery, I checked my vision one eye at a time to see the difference a cataract can make. The world my right eye showed me looked like someone’s dingy laundry — stains and blurs everywhere. Walking on a sunny morning a couple of weeks ago, with both eyes cataract-free, I began to tear up because everything looked so brilliantly beautiful: the sky, some trees, the pavement. Yes, the pavement.

But it’s hard work: the eyes and brain are intense collaborators, and by the end of the day, my eyes (now 20/20 in tandem) are fried. In the morning everything is sharp and vivid again. And with new eyes and a new Mac, fewer typos!

[My opthalmologist is an ace. As he was doing the surgery, he told me, “I’m being really finicky getting your astigmatism.” Finicky is exactly what you want in a surgeon, isn’t it? Or in any kind of work.]

comments: 7

J D Lowe said...

I'm glad to hear it worked out. I'm scheduled to get mine done around 3 months from now.

Michael Leddy said...

Best wishes!

Daughter Number Three said...

Whoa! That's good news.

Tororo said...

Congratulations on the acquisition of this new world!

Michael Leddy said...

Every says that having cataracts removed is, for lack of a less obvious word, life-changing. It’s true.

Now I know what Princess Jasmine means when she sings “A whole new world, a dazzling place I never knew.”

Stefan said...

Michael, you might enjoy Annie Dillard's widely anthologized essay "Seeing" in which she discusses Marius Von Senden's Space and Sight, especially the part about early cataract surgeries. Here's a link to a PDF where she begins to discuss Von Senden around page seven. I'm not sure I get the allusion to Princess Jasmine, but that's what made me think of it.

https://writ101molly.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/adillard1.pdf

Michael Leddy said...

Thank you, Stefan. I look forward to reading it later today.

Jasmine is what they now call a Disney princess, from Aladdin.