• To VT or Not to VT? – Falling On The Sword – Part 1

    To VT or Not to VT? – Falling On The Sword – Part 1

    Operating an office which accepts third party assignment (medical insurance) can be a bit challenging. On the one hand, there’s the patients who find us simply because we accept their insurance, and on the other, there’s the folks who leave because their insurance didn’t participate in the manner they would have liked. In the middle… Read more

  • To VT or not to VT? – That Is The Question

    To VT or not to VT? – That Is The Question

    There has been a lot of discussion lately, in the public forums I follow, regarding whether Vision Therapy is best for the many families to whom it’s been recommended.  My sense is there are some common misconceptions, or perhaps misnomers, floating around and I’d like to offer an “insider’s perspective” on the subject. Before I do,… Read more

  • Click and Spin

    Click and Spin

    My son announced this morning he wants to “get spun” before school next week. I was instantly concerned. More on that in a minute. A while back two brothers named Matthew and Mark McLaughlan started a Kickstarter campaign hoping to raise a mere $15,000 to solve a case of the fidgets.  Apparently, their hope hit people right… Read more

  • Primitive Reflex Weekend!

    Of all the things to forget to do… My doctor and I are hosting a seminar late next month. I meant to post it on here a few weeks ago and it just slipped my mind.  Here’s the information for anyone interested! Read more

  • A Full Circle Experience

    Sometimes it’s funny how life comes full circle, isn’t it? I received an email this morning from a therapist I met in Jacksonville during last month’s Annual Meeting. It’s an email I, myself, have written hundreds of times to people I admire and trust; an email asking for help, guidance, and maybe even a little… Read more

  • 22 Reasons – My VT 201 Experience

    22 Reasons – My VT 201 Experience

    Having the opportunity to teach an AC Course at COVD’s Annual Meeting is a pretty special experience. This was the third year in a row I’ve had such an honor, and somehow every experience has found a way to top it’s predecessor. In both 2016 and 2017 the AC Course “VT 201” has been on… Read more

  • A Great Kickoff!!

    When names like Dr. Len Press, Dr. Byne, and Dr. Noah Tannen begin talking about Developmental Optometry, it’s a good idea to sit up and pay attention. That’s what I do. But when they sit in the same room, and on the same stage no less, one should consider themselves privileged to be in the… Read more

  • Visual Acuity and the Race Car Driver

    Visual Acuity and the Race Car Driver

    The following article was written by my friend and former patient, Michael Johnson, a professional race car driver, and is shared here with permission. You can find the original article here. How do you do it? How do I do what? See things coming at you so quickly, and respond appropriately. Well, I don’t always respond… Read more

  • Holding Steady In Houston

    Holding Steady In Houston

    Houston is not a town I often refer to as near and dear. Quite the opposite, actually. I moved to Houston as a husband and father in April of 2007, and within three years, life had unraveled. My wife and I had split up and we were headed towards divorce, both attorneys (and eventually the judge) were… Read more

  • Confirmation Bias

    Confirmation Bias

    Confirmation bias is the notion of human beings’ tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms one’s preexisting beliefs or hypotheses, while giving disproportionately less consideration to alternative possibilities. This according to the guru’s of Wikipedia. One of my current patients is a commercial airline pilot with several years experience, who… Read more

  • Balaster on the Brain

    Originally posted on The VisionHelp Blog: Cavin Balaster is a brain injury survivor and thriver, about whom we’ve blogged before.  To his list of credits we can now add mover and shaker, as Cavin is actively organizing the first functional neurology, developmental optometry, and nootropics summit with expert interviews sharing safe and effective methods for… Read more

  • Managing the Red Flag

    Managing the Red Flag

    As Vision Therapists, we receive training in a vast array of topics from oculomotor activities, the relationship between accommodation and vergence, and most visual perceptual areas.  In fact, therapists who complete a certification (COVT) are tested in these very areas and plus several more.  The benefits to more training are fairly obvious, although one understated… Read more

  • I want to SWING!

    I want to SWING!

      All of our patients are special. Your patients, my patients, and that doctor in Florida whose name I can never seem to remember has special patients, too. They come from all different backgrounds and different walks of life, all seeking help with their particular challenges, and one working just as hard as the next.… Read more

  • 20 Days

    Hello All – just a quick update on my book project and campaign. My Kickstarter campaign is in full swing and continues to do well. I’ve got about $9500 to go with just under three weeks remaining. Thank you to everyone who has jumped on board either by wishing me well, sharing my campaign, and of… Read more

  • Off The Schneid

    For anyone unfamiliar with the phrase “getting off the schneid” (pronounced shnod), it’s a phrase common in sports to mark the end of a losing streak, or to signify a player or team’s first points. In certain golf formats, the term is common when a player scores their first points under head-to-head competition. In other sports,… Read more

  • The Salty Side of ICD-10’s

    The Salty Side of ICD-10’s

    Note: Given the current political climate, allow me to state off the top this is not a political post, so please do not respond as if it were. The challenges discussed below exist regardless of political affiliation, healthcare plan and coverage, or policies of the current or previous administrations. If the world were a perfect place, our… Read more

  • Realistic Engagement

    Realistic Engagement

    Have you heard the news? I am embarking on a book-writing journey and I am inviting all of you to join me in this adventure! My plan for this book is to attempt some realistic engagement with parents and patients who are investigating treatment options, or perhaps, have already found Vision Therapy and need help navigating… Read more

  • My Next Step!

    For a little more than four years now, I have been writing in this blog. My goal, initially, was fairly moderate; I needed an outlet for my ideas and had hoped a few people would read them.  In fact, a month after starting, less than 10 people were actually following, and that was fine with me.… Read more

  • Happy Hump Day

    A close friend, and Vision Therapy graduate, asked me recently what I like most about my job.  My answer was simple: The people. When that same friend asked me to identify one of the greatest difficulties and/or frustrations in my job, my answer was again: The people. If you work with people long enough, there will… Read more

  • Special and Equal

    It can be tough to find good in the world, especially of late.  If we allow it, we can be bombarded by negative on top of negative on top of negative, all before our first sip of morning coffee.  The lucky ones among us are able to filter out some or most of it an go about… Read more

  • Auto-Correcting Humanity

    Auto-Correcting Humanity

    I love my iPhone 6S. Not as much as I love freshly baked apple pie and remembering to put my pants on before leaving the house, but the 6S is probably a close third.  It’s an interesting device in that it’s light, durable, dependable, and has one of the most solid operating systems of any phone I’ve… Read more

  • The Tectonics of Learning – Regression and Progression

    The Tectonics of Learning – Regression and Progression

    If you’ve never experienced an earthquake, take my word for it, they’re attention grabbers. One moment everything is calm, and the next moment usually without warning, the ground is shaking with a rumble like no other.  Coming from California, I’ve experienced three major earthquakes in my lifetime, and countless aftershocks.  Sometimes the damage is minor,… Read more

  • Visual Processing – Part 4 – Do Something

    Visual Processing – Part 4 – Do Something

    These last several days I’ve been on a treasure hunt of sorts. My bounty, which I’m still not fully convinced I’ve discovered, is the best way to lay out this post. I’ve been looking for a way to write it without writing it, to detail an undetailed method,  to demonstrate my thoughts absent the actual demonstration, to present a… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Patrick McDowell

    A Sit Down – with Patrick McDowell

      For the benefit of our readers, can you explain how you are involved in Developmental Optometry? My final diagnosis was a Traumatic Brain Injury and damaged Left Optic Nerve. Vertigo, Marty Feldman eyes, nausea, Migraines, depression, and mood swings.  I was in Vision Therapy for over 6 months.    Can you help us understand… Read more

  • Visual Processing – Part 3 – The Road Not Taken

    Visual Processing – Part 3 – The Road Not Taken

    The Road Not Taken Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,  And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood,  And looked down one as far as I could,  To where it bent in the undergrowth;   Then took the other, as just as fair,  And having perhaps the better… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Daniel Wilson COVT

    A Sit Down – with Daniel Wilson COVT

    For the benefit of our readers, can detail how you are involved in Developmental Optometry?  I am the Head Therapist and Director of Sports Vision Training at Austin Eye Gym in Austin, TX.  I have been a vision therapist for 9 years now. How did you first discover Vision Therapy?   I was going to college… Read more

  • Visual Processing – Part Two – The Mechanism Without

    Visual Processing – Part Two – The Mechanism Without

    In Part One, we looked at the visual processing mechanism and hopefully began to understand the importance of treating this area in our VT rooms. Our eyes gather the information, our brains processes the information, and with any luck, an appropriate response is created. This applies to reading a book, opening a door, catching a… Read more

  • Visual Processing – Part One – The Mechanism Within

    Visual Processing – Part One – The Mechanism Within

    A question often posed in the Vision Therapy room involves an understanding of how a particular activity applies, or perhaps more directly stated, “what does this have to do with my eyes?”. Although genuine, the question identifies a chasm in understanding between eyeballs and brain – or to be a bit more cliche – between… Read more

  • Remeasuring Success

    Remeasuring Success

    Growing up along side a sibling with developmental delays certainly left a lasting impression in my life, and I’ve written of my younger brother’s struggles in previous posts.  Although he was never diagnosed with more than a gross developmental delay, my hunch is by today’s standards, he would fall under a high functioning spectrum disorder.… Read more

  • The Mighty Reinvention – Part One

    There comes a time in everyone’s life when the bells of reinvention tend to ring. Call it midlife crisis, call it boredom, call it burn out; however you describe it, my thought is we all experience it at some point. Lately, this moment has been knocking on my door, and suddenly almost without warning, it… Read more

  • The Great Shoplifter

    It’s one thing to not have a good rapport with a patient, and it’s another thing entirely to have a patient openly admit they do not enjoy your company.  Sadly, there are times when both occur simultaneously. It happens sometimes, and when it does, I usually laugh it off.  In fact, some therapists may shy away… Read more

  • The End of an Era – The Passing of Dr. Harry Wachs

    The End of an Era – The Passing of Dr. Harry Wachs

    Prologue: This is a post I wrote in March 2015. With the news of Dr. Wachs’ passing earlier this morning, I share it again in his honor. The first time I encountered Dr. Harry Wachs was not long before his 81st birthday.  He, and his now late wife Ruth, had traveled to San Diego for Dr.… Read more

  • Managing Your VT Room – Part 5 – Veni Vidi Vici

    I didn’t want to write this segment, which is why it’s been a fair stretch between the last post and this one. Basically, I’ve just been putting it off. And just so we’re clear, my aversion to writing it really had nothing to do with what I was going to say, and everything to do with… Read more

  • Managing Your VT Room – Part 4 – Failure Has To Be An Option

    If there’s one area where most Vision Therapists fall short, me included, it’s probably in the “give yourself a break” arena. We all want to do well, we all want our patients to do well, we all want our sessions to go well, and all want our patients to feel good about VT when all… Read more

  • Managing Your VT Room – Part 3 – Dump The Square Peg Mentality

    When you stop to think about why some kids struggle, ultimately it’s because they cannot maintain an arbitrary level of proficiency which has been created based on several hundreds of students who came before. For example, third grade curriculums are often written based upon the success or failures of previous third graders. When you have… Read more

  • Managing Your VT Room – Part 2 – Can You Hear Me Now?

    A few years back, I enrolled in a Dale Carnegie class for leadership and public speaking. The class taught many important lessons, perhaps the most important of which was understanding how your own language sounds to others. I think so many of us get caught up in our routine questions, we sometimes don’t recognize it as part… Read more

  • Managing Your VT Room – Part 1 – An Ounce Of Prevention

    One question which seems to surface from time to time in my world revolves around managing VT sessions; or perhaps put a better way, strategizing a session from start to finish. Ideas, such as which activity to start with, which to end with, and how to transition from one to the next. Questions, like how… Read more

  • Not My Circus, Not My Monkeys

    Not My Circus, Not My Monkeys

    It doesn’t take very long, and one certainly does not have to look very far, before coming across someone who has something negative to say about Vision Therapy. If you ever need proof, simply Google the words “Vision Therapy and (insert your favorite negative descriptor here)” and you’ll see for yourself.   Or, if that doesn’t… Read more

  • Compassion – With a Side of Steak and Salad

    Compassion – With a Side of Steak and Salad

    A common question thrown my way involves identifying doctors and therapists who practice Vision Therapy. I have my usual “pad answer”, which sounds something like referring folks to COVD’s Find a Doctor or OEPF’s Find an Optometrist. And most importantly, find an office that works best for you. Right, but where would you take your kid? Finding… Read more

  • Poster Board 2016

    For those Vision Therapists attending COVD’s Annual Meeting in St. Louis, here’s a fun idea! Read more

  • Eyeball Tattoos

    When I was young, my favorite uncle had a tattoo on his arm of a girl, who in her era, was probably considered scantily clad. By today’s standards, that very same girl in that very same outfit could probably join a convent. Times have changed. Being an “old navy guy”, the tattoo on his arm was all… Read more

  • Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 5: End of the Road

    Vision Therapy is capable of rebuilding many relationships, none quite as important as the relationship between a child and the love of learning. No matter which path we choose, or which model of treatment we subscribe to, our ultimate goal in Developmental Optometry remains universal: We want to help. Building degrees of freedom between vergence and… Read more

  • Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 4: The Role of Vergence

    Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 4: The Role of Vergence

    If Degrees of Freedom are the proverbial plane ticket to visual paradise, then binocularity can easily be considered the pilot for our journey – without whom our flight would become nothing more than a heap of metal on the tarmac.  Similar to the plane and pilot relationship, solid binocularity is needed to ensure degrees of… Read more

  • Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 3: The Role of Accommodation

    Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 3: The Role of Accommodation

    Treating the beast that is the Accommodation/Vergence relationship can be daunting, but by breaking down the moving parts and gaining a finer understanding of how each area can be addressed, the beast shrinks significantly.  Understanding the progression that leads into the BOP/BIM work from the accommodative side is  half the battle, and is today’s focus,… Read more

  • Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 2

    Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 2

    In Part One, we saw illustrations of what occurs when Base In targets are mixed with minus lenses, also known as BIM. Our goal in this process is to teach our patients how to stimulate accommodation, while relaxing vergence – which is one half the process of building Degrees of Freedom between the two systems.… Read more

  • Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 1

    Revisiting BOP and BIM – Part 1

    In my experiences training and mentoring newer Vision Therapists, one of the more difficult areas to grasp and fully understand is the relationship between Vergence and Accommodation.  Not only the symbiosis and synchronicity between the two systems, but also the level at which we should strive to strengthen the systems both individually, and collectively, to… Read more

  • a dark place…

    It was fairly obvious that I’d made a mistake. My question had struck a nerve and there was no undoing it. In the fall of 2012, I moved from Houston to Austin to be closer to my children. Eighteen months post divorce, it finally donned on me that all of my residual anger needed to… Read more

  • the power of one…

    the power of one…

    People will sometimes ask me how topics are chosen for my blog; or more specifically, why I choose to write about the interactions with patients and connections with families rather than more of the technical jargon of how activities are done.  The truth is that my interests seem to ebb and flow, and at times… Read more

  • penny wise and dollar foolish…

    If anyone ever tells you there’s nothing to be gained by heeding the advice of those who have come before us, please remember this heartfelt suggestion: Turn around and walk away. At some point during my time working with Dr. Sanet, he had shared that we should always be careful who we speak to and… Read more

  • a life changed…

    Close to two years ago, I wrote a post entitled the little battlefields which told the story of my patient at the time, “T”.  She had just finished first grade and during an initial session, told me her teacher essentially told her that her intelligence was inadequate for the first grade. Here’s an excerpt from that… Read more

  • A New Appreciation – Part Two

    A New Appreciation – Part Two

    When Dr. Len Press bestows his wisdom, it’s a pretty good idea to sit up and pay attention. That’s what I do. “Give me any clinical challenge, and it pales in comparison with practice management” ~ Dr. Leonard Press Presumably, he’s been there a few times, and knows my pain. As shared in Part One, I’ve spent… Read more

  • A New Appreciation – Part One

    A New Appreciation – Part One

    There was a time not too long ago when it occurred to me that after 16+ years in Vision Therapy that my sense of “the business” of Developmental Optometry was pretty strong. Patients call. We offer them help. Vision Therapy programs begin and end. Everyone is happy. Brace yourself. It’s completely untrue. That is to… Read more

  • Being Different Can Be Cool!

    Many of us work with kids who feel different, or even worse, kids who know they are different. Growing up in a household with a special needs sibling, I witnessed first hand the emotional stress of someone who understood he was different, and through no fault of his own, was ostracized and bullied for his… Read more

  • this one is personal…

    When you decide to put your thoughts out on the internet, there’s certain realities you must face. Some people will agree and some won’t. Some will judge, some won’t. Some will genuinely appreciate the effort and some will genuinely not understand why you waste your time.  In the end though, finding the courage to share my… Read more

  • Motor vs. Perception – Part Two

    I seek to provide Vision Therapy at the highest level; to offer my patients the best, most impactful, quality of life-changing, “I can’t believe how much this helped” care available. That’s how serious I take it. There are small moments in VT, usually during the most unexpected times, when I feel like I catch glimpses of that… Read more

  • Motor vs. Perception – Part One

    Here is an excerpt from an email I recently received from a friend who does a lot of advocacy work with children: I have explained to parents for nearly 3 years that visual deficits fall into two categories: visual motor encompasses strab, amblyopia, vergence, oculomotor, accommodation and teaming, while visual perception is what our brains do… Read more

  • Dreaming Big!

    I’m going out on a limb here. Recess is important. At some point in the last 20 years, someone, somewhere, decided that kids didn’t need as much time outside to run, jump, and scream as my generation.  In the 1980’s we called it recess. Nowadays, it’s just called a waste of time. Instead of being allowed… Read more

  • Playing In The Mud…

    If you were to call ten of my closest friends and ask them to name one of my finest qualities, my guess is more than half of them would say my sense of humor. Then again, if you were to ask those same people about my most disturbing quality, my guess is their answer wouldn’t change. I’m proud of that.… Read more

  • Blowing Off A Little Silly Steam

    Growing up in San Francisco, the big fear was always that some big earthquake would tear us from the mainland and we’d float off into the sunset. It never happened, much to the chagrin of those Nevadans, who were probably drooling over their property value if they could just include the words “ocean view”.  In fact, the folks… Read more

  • In The Presence of Greatness

    In The Presence of Greatness

    There are very few times in life where we realize, in the moment, that we are standing in the presence greatness.  We may reflect back on a time or place and recall with a definitive fondness how amazing a person or situation was, but those thoughts seem to occur more in a moment of reflection. To have that… Read more

  • Concussions: Is It Worth It?

    Concussions: Is It Worth It?

    Originally posted on Mindsight: Over the course of his career in the National Football League, Antwaan Randle El was a force to be reckoned with both as explosive wide receiver and dangerous punt returner. Spending time with both the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Washington Redskins, he played in two Super Bowls (on the winning team… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Dr. Mary Beck

    A Sit Down – with Dr. Mary Beck

    A Sit Down – with Dr. Mary Beck For the benefit of our readers, can you detail your background, history, and explain how you are involved in Developmental Optometry? Hi!  I am Dr. Mary Beck.  I recently had a name change a year ago, so many people still know me as Dr. McMains. I am… Read more

  • A Sit Down – In Memoriam

    A Sit Down – In Memoriam

    The Sit Down’s are intended as a celebration; an opportunity to honor and recognize each week’s guest. Sadly, this week’s celebration is overshadowed by some awful news out of Nebraska, so I’ve decided to bump the next interview a week.  Last Monday, a 4th year optometry student from the Southern College Optometry went missing in Nebraska on… Read more

  • June 20, 2013

    That was the day this all started. At the beginning of her Vision Therapy program, our VT staff was 1/4 of its current size and our entire staff numbered four, two of our three person admin staff had not yet applied in our office, and our database conversion of January 2014 was still in the early… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Dr. Bob Sanet

    A Sit Down – with Dr. Bob Sanet

    This post appears as part of my Sit Down series. Candid conversations with real people detailing their journeys and experiences with Vision Therapy. A Sit Down – with Dr. Bob Sanet For the benefit of our readers, can you describe how you are involved in Developmental Optometry? For 25 years, I maintained a private practice… Read more

  • Beyond the Shibboleth…

    There are certain facets of life which I’ve accepted to be beyond my abilities for understanding. For instance, why do people in Texas buy full-sized diesel pickup trucks and drive them as if they’re racing in the Daytona 500? How is it that dogs feel the need to mark there territory one minute, and then work… Read more

  • A Different Sort of Bravery – The Finale

    Developmental Optometry, and by extension Vision Therapy, largely revolves around one simple concept – refining perception. Think about it, even a new pair of glasses change our perception of the world.  In therapy, whether we are working with blocks, lenses, prisms, real space, simulated space, and spatial awareness, we are always working on the patient’s perception.  The interesting… Read more

  • A Different Sort of Bravery – Part Two

    This has long been an affliction of mine.  Little did I know that sometimes saying anything was going to be a problem. Time to talk myself off the ledge… To recap Part One, I ran into a patient in the grocery store who not only has a brain injury but has memory challenges. We start a… Read more

  • A Different Sort of Bravery – Part One

    My co-workers will sometimes have a laugh at my expense because I seem to have a knack for encountering people I know in the grocery store. Kids of my son’s Boy Scout Pack or daughter’s Girl Scout Troop, parents of patients both past and present, my friends, friends of friends, and even the occassional unpleasant encounter with someone… Read more

  • living rent free…

    When it comes to the game of throwing daggers at other professions after discovering they’ve bad-mouthed Developmental Optometry, I have one basic rule: I don’t want to play. Before you ask why, I’ll explain. And it’s not because I fear the confrontation or care a little less every year about the integrity of my profession.… Read more

  • Check out VDR’s latest edition!

    This morning, I’ve been enjoying the latest issue of Vision Development and Rehabilitation.  It includes interesting information about NORA (don’t forget that NORA has a mid-year educational opportunity coming in January), an article on the CITT-ART study, and some GREAT information on concussions and their effects on reading. The latest VDR also has a breakdown of the scheduled education for the COVD’s… Read more

  • rainbows and poop…

    The conversation must come up in every VT room, and with every parent, around the world.  And if it doesn’t, it needs to.  We can’t help it.  We are, after all, working with children.  The conversation goes something like this… “My child gets in trouble in class because they’d rather look silly than stupid…” The… Read more

  • Sweet and Sour Sixteen

    Sweet and Sour Sixteen

    It’s a moment that most parents seem to dread equally; their teenage child’s first time behind the wheel.  I recall my first time behind the wheel, not for what it was, but for what it wasn’t. The car I was to drive wouldn’t start, and the hours and hours of anticipation leading up to the… Read more

  • my kind of crazy…

    As the old adage suggests, we should all stop to smell the roses.  Even Mac Davis said so in his 1974 hit entitled (wait for it…) “Stop and Smell the Roses”.  If this comes as any bit of a surprise to you, (and I really hope it does because, you know, it’s Mac Davis) be… Read more

  • Who Moved My Cheese?

    Who Moved My Cheese?

    As a nice end to my week-long visit and training in Chattanooga, Tennessee this past seven days, my friend and colleague, Dr. Heather McBryar, engaged me in a very interesting discussion on the concept of flexibility.  The gist of the conversation was basically this: Are we as open to change as we think we are?… Read more

  • An Evening with Oliver Sacks

    An Evening with Oliver Sacks

    With the news of Dr. Sacks’ passing earlier this week, I felt compelled to track down my copy of the 1990 movie, Awakenings, and watch it as my own little farewell to Dr. Sacks. Directed by Penny Marshall, the movie brings to life Dr. Sacks’ extraordinary work from the summer of 1969 when he treated a group of catatonic… Read more

  • Hanging In…

    It seems like I circle back to this topic about once every year, and with good reason. It’s just that important. Last Friday marked the second deadline for this year’s round of Open Book Questions for aspiring COVT’s. “It has been a little stressful”, mentioned one of my co-workers who’s currently going through the process.… Read more

  • When VT Ends and Life Begins

    When VT Ends and Life Begins

    It’s got to be among every parent’s worst nightmare, and for a mother of one of our Vision Therapy patients, the stress of it all can be seen all over her face. She’s living it day by day, hour by hour, and minute by minute. My young friend Cody has been attending Vision Therapy for some… Read more

  • Diagnose and Adios…

    Diagnose and Adios…

    This weekend our staff is attending the first of a three part seminar on concussion health and treatment. The class, which is taught by Mary McMains-Beck O.D. FCOVD and Brigette Wallace PT, DPT, is entitled Visual Vestibular Functional Integration Training and is Part One of the V2 FIT Certification. As most seminars go, our class was opened… Read more

  • Vision Development & Rehabilitation 1.2 Is Here!

    Originally posted on The VisionHelp Blog: Very proud that the second issue of the journal Vision Development & Rehabilitation is now live online.  As with anything worthwhile, alot of work goes on behind the scenes to make the final product look seamless.  Many thanks to Katie Kirschner, our managing editor; to the authors for diligent… Read more

  • 4th and long…

    For the last 15 plus years, my life has been Vision Therapy. It’s been, in one capacity or another, a means for helping others through this wonderful craft.  From third graders to third generation patients, the wonders of VT never cease to amaze me.  For much of that time, I’ve also been a parent.  My… Read more

  • Building Awareness – Part 4

    A Two Way Street If there was ever any doubt that some patients will give us more than we can ever give them, the doubt has left me. I’m convinced.  We can read all the books we want, study, study and then study some more, and in the end the first-hand accounts of how vision is… Read more

  • Building Awareness – Part 3

    The Good. The Bad. The Turn. Candy has been in our Vision Therapy program for 8 months. A well establish professional now in her early 50’s, she had strabismus surgery to correct an esotropia (inward eye-turn) during her teenage years which ended in a misadventure, to say the least. Within a year of her surgery… Read more

  • Building Awareness – Part 2

    Flawless vs. Accurate In Part One, we discovered the influence of awareness, both in life and the VT room.  With that in mind, let’s continue! Given a choice, would you rather be flawless or accurate? Some may view the terms as interchangeable, and some may not. Although I will agree, at times, this is a question… Read more

  • Building Awareness – Part 1

    Asking The Question Have you ever worked with someone who just rubs you the wrong way?  No matter what they do, or say, or even try, you just can’t help but be annoyed?  Have you been so continually frustrated with someone on a daily basis that after a while it seems that they can’t even… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Dr. Josiah Young

    A Sit Down – with Dr. Josiah Young

    This post appears as part of my Sit Down series. Candid conversations with real people detailing their journeys and experiences with Vision Therapy. A Sit Down – with Dr. Josiah Young   For the benefit of our readers, can you tell us a little about your educational background, and how you are currently involved in… Read more

  • A Lesson From Chameleons – Adapt Adapt Adapt

    A Lesson From Chameleons – Adapt Adapt Adapt

    And when you’re done, adapt some more. When it comes to working in Vision Therapy, there are lots of different angles of approach.  None of them necessarily better than another, they’re just different.  Some of us sit on the floor, some of us laugh and giggle, some of us are quiet observers, and some are… Read more

  • Sunday Morning Silliness…

    Forgive me.  Not every post can be serious. We all have weird and irrational concerns. So if you’re sitting at home, staring at the TV, wallowing in the fear that no one will ever poke fun at those silly “when you see it” pictures, well, then this post is for you.  You’re welcome. If you asked me… Read more

  • 36 seconds…

    36 seconds…

    Whether or not you fully grasp the importance of the event, it’s difficult to hold back a smile when watching the now world-famous baby Piper look through her glasses for the first time.  Piper, in a mere 36 seconds, conveys a message both loud and clear that her first optometric endeavor was a success.  She sees… Read more

  • Hitting The Big Time!!

    Hitting The Big Time!!

    By now, we’ve surely all seen this video! But did you know that this baby is receiving national news coverage?  Please watch this short clip which aired yesterday on CNN and offers a nice plug to optometry and InfantSee alike! Proof positive that vision is powerful! Read more

  • a decade strong…

    a decade strong…

    It gave me great pleasure to learn this week that the InfantSee program is celebrating its 10th birthday! A little background information on InfantSee from their website: Optometry Cares – The AOA Foundation and The Vision Care Institute, LLC a Johnson & Johnson company partnered to create InfantSEE, a no-cost public health program developed to… Read more

  • get your car washed!!

    get your car washed!!

    Growing up with a younger brother who has special needs, I am always encouraged by these types of stories. Please, if you’re ever in the Lakeland, FL area with a really dirty car and a little extra time, be sure to stop by and have your car washed at this wonderful place! A great thanks to my… Read more

  • The VisionHelp Concussion Initiative is Live!

    Originally posted on The VisionHelp Blog: In March I blogged about the upcoming  VisionHelp Concussion Initiative.  I am happy to tell you that as of this morning it is live (VisionHelp Concussion Project). To review, VisionHelp is a group of developmental and rehabilitation optometrists who meet regularly to discuss the latest developments and best practices as well as… Read more

  • The Dreams Will Come To You

    The Dreams Will Come To You

    Every once in a while, someone will ask me what it takes to become a great Vision Therapist.  The question always makes me a bit uncomfortable, because in many ways, I’m still searching for the recipe myself.  Beyond the common superlatives like friendly, kind, and caring, there is a deeper understanding of what others need,… Read more

  • a migraine, a seizure, and an apology…

    One aspect of my job that has always been enjoyable is the diversity. Although in our office we see many of the same patients week after week, rarely are two visits the same. Activities change, patients progress, and life goes on.  The energy created in our VT room is pretty special, and my co-workers  are… Read more

  • a process of learning…

    If there was somehow a way to assign value to disequilibrium in the VT room, it may be not be visible until long after it occurs.   Through retrospection, we can sometimes more easily identify the value a particular challenge provided, but while in the moment, it may seem far less obvious. We’ve learned, however, that disequilibrium… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with James Smith COVT

    A Sit Down – with James Smith COVT

    This post appears as part of my Sit Down series. Candid conversations with real people detailing their journeys and experiences with Vision Therapy. A Sit Down – with James Smith COVT For the benefit of our readers, can you explain your background and how you are involved in Developmental Optometry?   My formal education has been… Read more

  • the sun is out…finally!!

    To say that this has been an interesting week would probably be something close to a monumental understatement.  Much of my ‘business as usual’ has taken a backseat to maneuvering around the incredibly wicked weather pattern Texas has endured these last 10 days. Rivers overflowing, lighting striking people’s homes, houses actually being swept off their foundations… Read more

  • A Sit Down – with Michael Dudley COVT

    A Sit Down – with Michael Dudley COVT

    This post appears as part of my Sit Down series. Candid conversations with real people detailing their journeys and experiences with Vision Therapy. A Sit Down – with Michael Dudley COVT Interviewed by: Melody Lay COVT For the benefit of our readers, can you tell us how you are involved in developmental optometry?  My primary… Read more

  • poking the bear…

    poking the bear…

    One challenge that many of us face in the Vision Therapy room can be frustrated and emotional parents. While it’s rare that these feelings are directed at us, we often are left to manage them simply because we ask questions that evoke such responses.  Lots of times, helping parents through the understanding process can be as… Read more