Wet macular degeneration is a leading cause of severe vision loss in adults over 60, characterized by abnormal blood vessel growth beneath the retina that leaks blood or fluid, potentially forming scar tissue that causes rapid and irreversible central vision loss; while it rarely causes complete blindness, it significantly impairs daily activities like reading, driving, and recognizing faces, and is typically treated with monthly eye injections administered by specialists.
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Deep Dive
Failing Eyesight After 70 Wet Macular DegenerationAdded:
You know, your your eyesight is a strange thing.
Most of us never really appreciate it.
At least until it starts slipping away.
I never really gave it a lot of thought.
At least until I had to.
In fact, I honestly didn't even know my eyes weren't perfect until I turned about 16 years old and went to take that eye test for my driver's license.
Up until then, I thought everybody saw road signs a little blurry at a distance.
I figured that was just normal.
Then the lady at the DMV pointed at the eye chart and asked me to read the letters.
Buddy, I had trouble seeing the chart.
She pointed to the lines of the letter of the letters and I I couldn't read half of them.
That's how I got my first pair of glasses.
And I'll tell you right now, I hated those damn things.
Back then, glasses didn't exactly fit the image I had of myself.
I was young, thought I was tough, cool, kind of thought of myself as a young John Wayne.
And somehow those thick glasses, they just didn't go with the cowboy image I had of myself.
So, like a lot of folks back then, few years later, I was able to get some contact lenses. And over the years, I think I wore just about every kind that they ever made.
Those old hard lenses that felt like two potato chips stuck to your eyeballs, the soft ones, the disposable ones, even those contacts that you could sleep in.
I probably wore contacts for, I don't know, 50, 40, 50 years.
And then one day the doctor told me I had cataracts in both eyes.
I'd never heard of a cataract.
Sounded kind of scary when I first heard him talk about them.
But honestly, I mean it really was no big deal.
They scheduled me for surgery and and I had the surgery and pretty amazing.
More amazing than anything else was the first time in my entire life I had 20/20 vision.
I think I was 65 years old.
I didn't I didn't need glasses to drive or contacts.
There was no blurry highway signs. I couldn't believe the difference.
I could see clearly without glasses or contacts for the first time in my entire life.
Well, at least I thought I could.
Cuz not long after that I was diagnosed with dry macular degeneration in both eyes.
Now again, I'll be honest, I'd never heard of dry macular degeneration.
And at the time I didn't fully understand what it meant.
The doctor took some time to explain it, used diagrams, some big medical words.
But like most people, I didn't pay a whole lot of attention.
I figured well, it probably won't affect me anyway.
And it wasn't long after that while I was fishing, I noticed something really strange.
I couldn't focus on my fishing line properly.
I'd stare at the line and all I could see was a big dark fuzzy spot.
And then I'd stare at the water and I'd hold my hand up over my right eye and my vision was so blurry.
And there was this this dark area that was surrounded by light.
Sometimes there'd be multiple black spots right where I was looking.
And if you're a fisherman, you know how terrifying that can be.
Because fishing is visual.
You watch your line.
You watch for movement.
You watch for that tiny little twitch, that jump that tells you a bass just inhaled the bait.
And suddenly, >> [clears throat] >> I couldn't trust what I was seeing anymore.
That's when I made another trip back to see the doctor.
Apparently, the dry macular degeneration in my left eye was now wet macular degeneration.
They referred to it as age-related macular degeneration.
Somehow or another, it seems like everything that's wrong with me is age-related.
Let me tell you something.
Those words hit me harder than I expected because I started doing a little research and what I what I discovered scared the hell out of me.
Wet macular degeneration is one of the leading causes of severe vision loss in adults over 60.
What happens is abnormal blood vessels begin growing underneath your retina.
Then they leak blood or some other type of fluid.
And if it's left untreated, scar tissue forms.
And that damage can happen really fast.
And once your central vision is lost, you don't get it back.
Now, thankfully, it rarely causes complete blindness.
But that almost makes it harder to explain to people.
Because technically, you can still see.
But reading becomes very difficult.
Driving can become very difficult.
Recognizing faces can become very difficult.
People Even simple things can become frustrating. And fishing?
Well, fishing becomes a challenge all its own.
I was sent to a a WMD specialist and started treatment almost immediately.
First thing they did was a complete exam of both eyes.
Followed by monthly eye injections.
Now, I don't know if any of you have ever had a needle stuck directly into your eyeball.
But buddy, that'll get your attention real quick.
There's something deeply unsettling about laying there, watching a needle slowly coming straight toward your eye.
Every instinct in your body says, "Nope."
But you hold still anyway.
Then you feel that tiny little pressure.
That slight penetration.
And you realize just how fragile these old bodies really are.
Now, I've been getting these injections every month for the last year.
And thankfully, I don't think it's getting worse, at least not yet.
But I worry constantly about the other eye.
Cuz once you realize your eyesight can disappear, you never stop thinking about it.
And I'll tell you something, honestly.
I've had a heart attack. I got eight or nine stents.
I've had an abdominal aortic aneurysm, total knee replacement.
I've had hand surgery, wrist surgery, arm surgery, multiple skin cancers, arthritis, severe COPD.
I've been through enough hospitals to probably qualify for my own parking space.
But none of that scares me like the thought of losing my sight.
Nothing.
Because eyesight isn't just convenience.
It's independence.
It's freedom.
It's your whole identity.
Especially for somebody who's spent a lifetime outdoors.
You start imagining all the little things you might never see again.
Like watching a sunrise over the lake.
Seeing your grandchildren smile.
Driving your truck down a country road.
Watching your fishing line jump beside a fallen tree.
And that's when old age becomes real.
Not when your knees hurt.
Not when your back aches or your shoulder hurts.
But when the when the world's itself starts fading in front of you.
You know, there's an old saying, "Old age isn't for sissies." And buddy, whoever said that wasn't kidding.
Cuz getting older means slowly learning that your body has expiration dates on parts that you never even thought about.
Hands, shoulders, lungs, heart, and eyes.
Especially eyes.
But here's what I've learned through all this.
Fear can either make you quit living or make you appreciate living more deeply.
Now when I'm on the water, I notice things differently.
The reflection of sunlight on the lake, color of the trees, the flight of a heron crossing the shoreline.
Little things I used to rush right past.
Because when you realize sight isn't guaranteed, you start treating every clear sunrise like a gift.
Now I don't know how many more years I'll be able to fish.
And honestly, I don't know how much more my eyes will allow me to see.
But I do know this.
As long as I can still watch that line, even a little, I'm going to keep casting.
Because the day may come when I can't.
And until then, I intend to enjoy every single sunrise the good Lord still lets me see.
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