More excerpts from the article.......
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“When I went to see Dutton, there were quite a few tests he wanted to do. One of them was: he placed chairs out in the corridor in the hospital. He asked me to walk through the chairs. He said: ‘Just walk through at your normal walking pace.’ I walked my normal pace, and I kept bumping into them. So I got to the other end of the corridor, and he said: ‘Right, now try and walk a bit faster now and go back through them.’
“So I walked faster, and I just went through them, one by one, and I didn’t hit them once. And it was just amazing.
“The way Dutton explained it was ‘Don’t think about it too much, just go and do it. Don’t think too much in your mind.’ It was my subconscious mind telling me how to do that task and to avoid hitting the chairs.
It’s the same if the family have left things lying in the middle of the living room floor. I say ‘you need to tidy up, so I don’t trip over these things’. If there is something lying there, like a handbag or shoes, I can see it and I miss it, or I go to pick it up.
“But I’ll try to look at you, and I know you’re sitting there, sitting close… but I just can’t see you.
“It’s strange the things I can see but I’m not meant to see because I’m blind.”
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