For example the same way we see another person, they may see a distorted caricature filled with different colors and shapes. For patients with CBS, especially in James’ case, they see hallucinations the same way we see anything else, meaning when they close their eyes the image disappears. While CBS is extremely common in individuals who have endured some type of visual pathway deficit (glaucoma, cataracts, macular degradation), Thurber had a very proactive version of the disease. Ramachandran diagnosed James with an extraordinary form of a neurological condition labeled as Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS). “ The daydreamer must visualize the dream so vividly and insistently that it becomes, in effect, an actuality” – James Thruber While he could not physically see like us, he found himself a sort of never-ending daydream. However, there was a silver lining for James Thurber’s tragic dilemma, accompanying his gradual loss of vision in his left eye, he would discover a new type of vision, one that was filled with hallucinations beyond your wildest imagination. Later on in his lifetime he would eventually lose vision in his left eye, and by age 35 his vision would have been completely deteriorated leaving him as blind as a bat. James Thurber was a man, who at the age of six was impaled in his right eye by a toy arrow, and was never able to see through it again.
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