Take Care of Your Eyes - Review of Marva V. Oganyan's Method
We begin to appreciate our health only when we lose it. And it slips away from us because, not only in childhood but also as adults, we often treat it carelessly, even neglectfully. As a result, throughout our lives, we accumulate a whole "bouquet" of diseases: we lose our teeth, hearing, vision, and so much more!
Are we treating our eyesight correctly? Unfortunately, almost all the time, it seems like we do everything to lose it as quickly as possible.
Take glaucoma, for example. This is a terrible disease that threatens complete blindness. What causes this condition? Specialists say it's due to increased intraocular pressure. But what causes it? The origin remains unclear. However, one of the main reasons may be diseases that accompany a person from early childhood: runny nose, sinusitis, the appearance of polyps, and eventually eye diseases like blepharitis, conjunctivitis, and others. All of these disrupt blood flow and fluid drainage from the posterior chamber of the eye, where the optic nerves are located.
Increased intraocular pressure builds up over decades without any significant symptoms. But by old age, it becomes quite evident, and by then, it's often too late to relieve the pain or cure the eyes. At this stage, medicine can only use available treatments to slow the progression of intraocular pressure. In addition to these treatments, basic eye hygiene and strict adherence to a routine should be followed. This means, in addition to using prescribed eye drops, the patient must strictly monitor their already weakened vision.
It is known that reading, writing, sewing, and embroidery require significant visual strain. Therefore, these activities should be done in moderation, with adequate lighting. These tasks should be performed with frequent breaks to rest the eyes. Never read or write in dim light, as this activates the "twilight vision," which involves the retina's specialized cells, leading to further vision impairment.
All inflammatory eye conditions should be treated promptly, preventing them from becoming chronic, as this can affect deeper tissues such as the cornea and lens, increase intraocular pressure, and lead to significant vision loss, even total blindness, requiring surgical intervention.
Now, let's take cataracts (clouding of the lens). Is it really inevitable for older people to develop them? Can't this condition be prevented? It turns out, it can be, if the nourishment of the eye tissue is properly managed, hygiene is maintained, and any decrease in vision sharpness is addressed promptly by an ophthalmologist. Above all, treat any inflammatory conditions in the nasopharynx, and continue to diligently treat the eyes until they recover.
And what should we treat it with? Eye drops or antibiotics? Certainly not. These medications can drive the disease deeper into the body—into the liver, kidneys, and lungs. For example, sinusitis cannot be cured with any medication; it requires surgical intervention (punctures and the removal of purulent contents that will form again).
Therefore, other means of treatment are necessary. What are they? It’s cleansing the entire body from toxins, primarily the large intestine, meaning flushing it out with cleansing enemas. During this period, one should refrain from eating and apply so-called therapeutic fasting, which helps cleanse all the cells of the body from accumulated toxins that disrupt blood circulation and tissue nourishment.
It is well known that the eyes are very closely connected with the entire body. Even the slightest changes in internal organs are reflected on the iris (in iridology). But there is also a feedback mechanism. Since the eyes suffer from various discomforts, the overall health of the body deteriorates due to visual defects. By improving vision through eye hygiene techniques, positive changes can occur in the body. This is why it is important to treat not only the eyes but also the entire body. Otherwise, toxins and poisons, leaving one organ, enter others through the bloodstream. This process can continue throughout life.
However, with proper nutrition and cleansing of the body from toxins, the disease can be completely cured, and the body significantly rejuvenated. But it is important to remember that medicinal herbs with general cleansing properties will also contribute to this process. Here is a sample list: peppermint, lemon balm, plantain, bog rosemary, yarrow, sage, knotweed, and bearberry. After such treatment, it is necessary to transition to natural nutrition. But again, it should begin with freshly squeezed juices, followed by pureed fruit and vegetable mixtures. This hygienic diet restores the functions of the affected organs and heals them.
To consolidate the treatment, it is essential to add as many fresh fruits, vegetables, and pureed salads to the daily diet, and consume them for at least two months.
A person is a part of nature, and their treatment and recovery is the process of rejoining the lost link in the cosmic chain of nature.