For sheer utter torment that teaches a lesson, a speck of grit under a contact lens can really be an eye-opener.
I have extreme congenital myopia, near-sightedness so bad that without
glasses and contact lenses life’s one big blur. If you sat three feet
away from me and grinned your widest, I wouldn’t be able to gauge your
facial expression with my naked eyes. It amazes me that people can wake
up in the morning and actually see the world around them clearly from
the get-go.
Back in the days when my condition wasn’t correctable, history
suffered—the emperor Nero, whose well-documented affliction made him
paranoid to the point of insanity, is a notable example. Even when
remedies came along, rulers didn’t use them since use implied weakness,
and thus Louis XVI, though expert at the meticulous craft of
locksmithing (he could focus to a couple of inches, as I can), had no
way of judging the expressions on the faces of his courtiers or the citoyens,
with disastrous results; it didn’t help that his wife Marie Antoinette
was blind to all save her flatterers. Robert B. Edgerton, writing about
the Crimean War in his book Death or Glory, notes that
“Eyeglasses were worn by a few officers at this time, but many
hopelessly near-sighted officers were so vain that they chose to do
without them”—certainly an enhancement to calamity. In the present day
it’s by no means unusual, so I hear, for near-sighted members of the
Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA) to forego their wonted eyewear
during re-enactments no matter what; I can only imagine how many
tent-ropes get tripped over.
I’d probably have been a very different, no doubt happier person had I
been born with perfect vision, but time has made me a counter of
blessings. Bad sight beats none at all, and a childhood as Four Eyes
made me fulfill the stereotype to the hilt, giving me the infinite world
of books in return. As the old song has it, wouldn’t take nothing for
my journey now.
CK