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In the health section of the New York Times, Richard Liebmann-Smith, vividly reveals his journey of deteriorating visual acuity secondary to cataracts and the astonishing transformation after cataract surgery. Schedule an appointment with Dr. Shepps at AO Eyecare if you are experiencing similar symptoms. 

With Cataracts, My Own Private Light Show

Written by: RICHARD LIEBMANN-SMITH

Tivoli Gardens amusement park in Copenhagen at night.
Credit: April O’Hare

Over the past three years I’ve been plagued by one of the common curses of aging: cataracts. During that time my vision gradually deteriorated, as the normally transparent natural lenses of my eyes became increasingly opaque, going from a gentle soft focus, to gauzy, then cloudy, and ultimately downright foggy. This was apparently the result of some unhappy combination of sun exposure, age, a number of potentially insidious environmental and dietary factors, and just plain genetic bad luck. (My mother and two of my brothers also suffered from this condition.)

Every patient experiences the development of cataracts a little differently. For me, the symptoms weren’t just the inevitable cloudiness and fogginess. They also included a problem with diminished depth perception, which I became aware of one evening when I went to pour my wife a glass of wine and ended up suavely splashing it across the adjacent tablecloth. Even more disturbing, for a period of half a year or so, I had occasional brief episodes of double vision. Naturally I feared these were serious neurological red flags, perhaps indicating small strokes — my father and one of my brothers had those — until my eye doctor reassured me that they were much more likely just another, if somewhat rarer and scarier, symptom of cataracts.

Along with these daylight deficits, I also experienced the phenomenon of night glare. On the road, the headlights of approaching vehicles struck me as painfully bright and disorienting, like some kind of blazing “Close Encounters” spacecraft streaking toward me out of the darkness. In addition, my night glare symptoms took the only slightly more benign form of halos appearing around light sources. If I looked up at, say, a full moon on a clear night I would see not just the old face of the man in the moon, but that familiar glowing visage wreathed by a ring of smaller spheres — half a dozen mini-moons sprouting around its circumference like the petals of a flower.

Likewise, if I directed my attention toward smaller light sources — say the windows of distant buildings across from my apartment — instead of registering as single bright points of light, each little window appeared as an arcade of stars, a shimmering necklace of gleaming beads. Thus my normally prosaic neighborhood cityscape of gray and beige high-rises became a jeweled fairyland, reminding me of the famous Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen. (Actually, I’ve never been to that storied old amusement park, but the travel-poster images I’ve seen invariably show a radiant nighttime lightscape of sparkling fountains, shimmering ponds, rainbow rows of colored lanterns and, on summer nights, dazzling displays of fireworks.)

Of course, that magical panorama outside my window was ultimately more the result of pathology than pixie dust. And unfortunately, there’s no little pill you can pop that will miraculously make things clear up. So as time went by and my cataracts gradually “ripened” — my ophthalmologist’s charming expression for getting worse — my only option became surgery.

Not surprisingly, the very thought of anyone wielding sharp, shiny objects anywhere near my eyes induced a case of the major willies.

Modern cataract-removal surgery, though, turned out to be hardly the nightmare assault I’d feared. The operation involves removing the diseased natural lens and replacing it with a synthetic one, much as hip replacement surgery consists of removing an arthritic or damaged hip and inserting a metal and plastic version in its place. Certainly it’s a delicate procedure, but not one that requires flashy recent advances like prosthetic robot arms that move in response to mere thought. In fact, cataract surgery is among the most commonly performed operations in the country. The procedure for each eye took less than an hour, during which I remained awake but comfortably sedated. I was aware of lights, sounds and occasional gentle pressure, but it was all virtually painless. And the results have been remarkable.

The new world that floated into focus on an ocean of post-surgical eyedrops over the next few days has been strikingly — sometimes even alarmingly — clear, crisp and bright. And for the first time in years I find myself able to effortlessly read a book (including footnotes), peruse restaurant menus in low light and make out the fine print on medicine bottles. I can decipher distant road signs and foreign film subtitles, recognize faces from afar, and even distinguish the expressions on those faces.

The only downside has been that when I now scan the neighborhood outside my window at night, my private Tivoli is nowhere in sight. The curtain has descended on that alluring light show. Not that I’m complaining.

The benefits far outweigh this small deprivation. In the world I navigate these days, the colors are richer, the outlines sharper. For a change I’m looking forward to really enjoying a vacation with the prospect of doing some sight-seeing and actually being able to see the sights. Right now, in fact, I’m thinking of Europe, perhaps, say, Denmark, maybe Copenhagen, which I’ve been told at this time of year can be … wonderful.

Richard Liebmann-Smith is a writer and editor based in New York who, thankfully, can now read again.

A version of this article appears in print on 07/05/2016, on page D4 of the New York edition with the headline: My Own Private Light Show.

Hyperlink to article: https://nyti.ms/2kDZqHb