Endmyopia has been around forever at this point.
In ant time. In human ant time.
Behind the scenes I’ve been working on version 2 of endmyopia. Because pretty much as soon as we started the paid course a decade ago, and I had a structured approach that a group of people followed equally, I started to find flaws in the approach. Did lots of exploratory trials here and there, checking out tweaks and additional details. Lots of it didn’t work.
Some things did.
The v2 changes are significant though and hugely improve progress and remove guesswork and troubleshooting. For example, some results from v2 method, tracking:
A select group of people have access to the full v2.
It’s a game changer. All there is online today is “active focus”. The basics, close-up active focus to reduce strain, distance active focus to add stimulus.
It works. But it’s very “sophomoric effort”. It was a step in the right direction.
It’s MISSING tracking and contrast. All the people going well, how much active focus and when and where and what makes it work, and how do I quantify if I’m on the right track?
Answered in v2. A piece of the puzzle is tracking. You need an activity that involves tracking moving objects, at varying distances, with sufficient contrast, and spaced repetition is key to tie it all together. Doing it once is just strain. Doing it twice a week doesn’t overcome the inertia of what your brain perceives as the status quo.
Picking up a new tennis hobby? Yup, that’ll get you pretty much there.
You need to put the timing together with the activity to get the results. Active focus will get you there with some luck and creativity. The recipe of timing, tracking, contrast, active focus, is the significant ‘upgrade’ in this area.
v2 release via BackTo20/20 membership coming … sometime.
Cheers,
-Jake