On Sight

I want to talk about the way I see. Imagine a world that is flat: undifferentiated, in your eyes, from a painting or a photograph, in which distance and depth are intuited rather than seen. ‘Far away’ is not far away, but up—higher in your field of vision than things that are close to you. You know that the coffee mug at your elbow is closer than the coffee mug on the kitchen shelf beyond it, because it looks bigger; you know the orange in the bowl before you is spherical rather than flat because of the way light and shadow bend around it. Superimposed over this flat world is another world, dimmer and flatter still: a fleeting double or doppelganger that hovers like a halo over the first, disappearing when you scrutinize it closely. When you look at a person you see two faces: one flat, one ghostly, clumsily meeting; this is your brain’s attempt to simulate the third dimension. The reality you cobble together from these disparate images is tinged with fiction—you don’t ‘see’, not really. You guess. You imagine. You have stared for hours at your hand with its painted-on shadows and its prismatic twin, and wondered how other people see.

I was diagnosed with strabismus when I was less than a year old, and have lived with it ever since. When I was young, science didn’t yet comprehend how many visual disorders are rooted in the brain, not the eye. Even though I could hold both eyes perfectly straight—though only one at a time—my malady was said to be muscular, and surgery was suggested. I had three; each failed. My brain only knew how to see one way, and that was by splitting up the images it received from my eyes. When science and I got older, doctors began to ask me how I thought, not how I saw, and discovered the intricate way my mind had worked to compensate for the lack of depth perception: like a blind person, I had some facial vision, and an overdeveloped sense of hearing. I would walk through an optometrist’s office blindfolded and identify, with 100% accuracy, which doors were open and which were closed. I could hear sounds that were just a note or two out of the typical human register, flinching at dog whistles. My first and second vision therapists were half-admiring, half-exasperated: the way I saw was so complex that disassembling it and reassembling it along the normal pattern was a daunting, perhaps impossible, task.

I didn’t see any reason to try, beyond the cosmetic. I worry more about the way people see me than about the way I see. On good days I’ve been told it seems as though I look past people, or through them; my husband calls my expression ‘ecstatic’. On bad days, or when I’m tired, it’s clear there’s something wrong. If I try very hard, I can appear as though I’m looking straight at things for a moment or two—but it makes the world go blurry and gives me a splitting headache. My first meetings with people are usually spent in a great deal of pain as I try to appear focused. The irony, of course, is that the more focused I seem, the less I see. After I’m comfortable with someone, I drop this pretense, and look sibyl-like into the middle distance. Sometimes I catch people staring at the same point I am, trying to figure out what is so interesting in the space that hangs just beyond their right shoulders, a space inhabited (though they don’t know it) by their halo-selves, their shimmering non-selves, beloved of my intractable eyes. What am I looking at? I can hear them thinking. Well, you, I’m looking at you. Where you probably use cues in facial expression to judge how a conversation is going, I use tiny changes in voice modulation, pauses you don’t know you make, word choices, breathing patterns. After one conversation, I will be able to identify your prose on paper—the words you use are, to me, as unique as your face, and they will be what I remember, handily stored in the hyperfunctional language center of my brain. I am looking at you, with steady affectionate attention.

Would I rather be normal? Of course I would. I would like to see in prose instead of poetry. I would like to pass a vision test at the DMV without having to move heaven and earth in my own visual cortex, telling half-truths (I tell them what I should see, not what I do see), and emerging exhausted. I’m not going to pretend this is a gift. But my strange sight is a constant reminder that the only things we truly own, the only things that are divinely and solely ours, are our obstacles. If I have to give up literal perspective for this perspective, well, it’s not a bad trade. It’s not a bad trade at all. When you turn away at the end of our meeting, saying “I’ll see you later,” you mean it; when you turn your head, I am gone. But for me, who never saw you properly at all, you persist. I can conjure you in the air, not as an image but as a collection of linked sensations, habits, a vibrant lingual pattern. I can feel a finely attenuated pressure on my face; the echo of the precise distance you like to put between your body and mine when we speak. In this way, I never stop seeing you. Not a gift—far from a gift. But, in its own way, perfect.

Posted by on 03/16 at 01:07 AM

fascinating, and beautifully expressed. makes me want to have a conversation with you face to face and ask you what you see in me, or rather, next to me.

Posted by Muse  on  03/16  at  07:12 AM

Thanks Muse. I am certain we will meet someday (I don’t know why, but I am; I have this daft idea of bringing all blogistan together in person at some point) and I’d be more than happy to describe how you look as a double image. wink Though I’m afraid it would be less enlightening than odd.

Posted by Willow  on  03/16  at  08:26 AM

But my strange sight is a constant reminder that the only things we truly own, the only things that are divinely and solely ours, are our obstacles.

Yes, yes, and yes!

A beautiful, lyrical rendering of your vision.

Posted by Baraka  on  03/17  at  11:33 PM

Salaam Alaikum,

Perspective is such an amazing thing. I have myopia and astigmatism and I never thought of it in such poetic terms.

Posted by Safiya Outlines  on  03/19  at  01:16 AM

From reading your essay, you obviously see better than most people I know. I’m reminded again of your command of nuance and authenticity. “After one conversation, I will be able to identify your prose on paper—the words you use are, to me, as unique as your face, and they will be what I remember...” Thanks for this.

Ibrahim

Posted by ibrahim  on  03/19  at  04:37 PM

Thank you, Safiya and Ibrahim. S, what does your myopia stem from, if I might ask? (You don’t have to say.)

Posted by Willow  on  03/19  at  05:11 PM

your opening lines ("The reality you cobble together from these disparate images is tinged with fiction—you don’t ‘see’, not really. You guess. You imagine.") reminded me of modern philosophy’s attempt to grasp what we can see and know about the world. you sound like kant in a poetic mood, actually.

your closing lines ("But for me, who never saw you properly at all, you persist") reminded me of the closing lines of this poem by wendy cope:

Flowers

Some men never think of it.
You did. You’d come along
And say you’d nearly brought me flowers
But something had gone wrong.

The shop was closed. Or you had doubts -
The sort that minds like ours
Dream up incessantly. You thought
I might not want your flowers.

It made me smile and hug you then.
Now I can only smile.
But, Look, the flowers you nearly bought
Have lasted all this while.

Posted by EDITOR  on  03/21  at  06:48 PM

I would almost be scared to meet you, just because I am so well at hiding, facially, what I am thinking and feeling. It almost always only comes out in my pauses, or breathing.

Posted by sophister  on  03/21  at  10:46 PM

Thanks for the poem, Ed, and I hope sophister wouldn’t *really* be scared…

Posted by Willow  on  03/24  at  07:13 AM

So beautiful.

Posted by Jojo Monson  on  03/24  at  10:53 PM

If i was *really* scared then id be a pansy. im not!

Posted by sophister  on  03/25  at  04:28 PM

You describe it so wonderfully that I am momentarily jealous!

Posted by Saha  on  03/26  at  03:23 AM

Salaam Alaikum,

Completely unrelated, but I’ve just ordered my copy of Cairo. I can’t wait to read it, insha Allah.

Mabrook on Air being published soon, too.

Posted by safiya outlines  on  03/27  at  04:51 AM

Ummm....also unrelated..but is ‘Cairo’ actually SOLD anywhere in Cairo by any chance?

Posted by Sever  on  03/27  at  06:09 PM

I believe it’s sold at Diwan, which is the biggest English-language bookstore in the city, and possibly at the American University bookstore as well. At least, these are the two places that were talking about ordering it before it came out.

Posted by Willow  on  03/27  at  06:32 PM

asalaamu aleikum dear sister...hey, funny but I noticed that your beautiful blue eyes had an unusual quality when we met...now I know why. Very fascinating. What a gift to have, in some ways, considering your verbal skills, receptive as well as productive.

Posted by luckyfatima  on  04/03  at  11:32 AM
Page 1 of 1 pages

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Next entry: Aaah

Previous entry: Hooray

<< Back to main