Every few weeks I get somebody asking to get the whole course all at once.  And every time, it’s a request I refuse.  After 40 years of doing this, I have witnessed some aspects of human nature.  If you take the course and read it as a book, you will nod gravely in the end, and consider it an excellent guide.  Then you might take some concepts as you remember them, make up a few other things, and call it an eyesight improvement quest.  Once you fail, you get upset at me for leading you down the wrong path.  Which is why there is no course book, and probably never will be.  We need to do things one step at a time, graduating from basics, to more advanced subjects.

I’m fairly certain that most participants, in hindsight, will agree with me on this point.  A good example from Sara, highlighting the points of one of the advanced topics:

I went to a meeting in a large auditorium and sat about halfway back. On the screen there was a document, and it was blurry and faint. I couldn’t read it at first. But AS I LOOKED AT IT, it came into focus. Just cleared right up and I could read it!”
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Sounds great, right?

Using this as a parlor trick could sell a lot of books.  

But it would be misleading, as much as it would be pointless.  It’s only in context that it makes sense to not only have this experience, but understand a) what it means and b) how to leverage it for consistently improved eyesight.

The thread from which I took Sara’s comment, was actually started by Jake, saying this:

I’m down from -4.00 to -1.50, and astigmatism completely eliminated, after two years.

That’s all great. But this is my favorite:

Looking at my computer screen with no glasses, increasing the distance till things are a few centimeters into blur. And then just looking at the bigger bolder headlines, waiting for them to become clear.

AND THEY DO. IT’S FANTASTIC.

Looking back at how much I struggled in the beginning with active focus, and lowered prescriptions, this is a great place to be. The amount of focus improvement is still available to me, and how easy it is (no blinking, no effort, just looking at the screen for a few minutes, waiting for focus), is incredible.”

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There is a huge reserve, once you get better close-up habits, eliminate close-up strain, and take better care with prescription use for a few months.  You can leverage this reserve, for more stimulus.  

There is no going straight from A to Z with eyesight health.

The quick fix that a lot of people look for, are the glasses.  And the contact lenses.  And laser surgery.  There isn’t an alternative quick fix.  There is an alternative, real solution.  Which requires actual work.  I make it as easy as I can think of, and gladly support the questions in the forum.  Just no ebook, since that’d tempting fate (or just human nature).

Enjoy!