Although this book is devoted to the ways and means of having better sight the author slowly but surety brings us back to the universal truth that bodily conditioning plays the greatest part in keeping all bodily functions healthy. Both our (bet and our way of living have to be taken into consideration before we may even attempt to heal the injustices that we have done to ourbody. It is unfortunate that these natural methods have received only lukewarm response in medical circles and the common man is still faced with the bleak future of expensive and sometimes very unnecessary drugs. Obviously we have to admit that in cases of serious and damaging afflictions consultation with qualified and experienced opticians cannot be ignored, but it would be more comforting if a more natural approach were adopted at the outset rather than expensive courses of drugs and medicines, which could produce other more dam-aging effects later on.
The author introduces us to the subject of re-pairing our eyesight by first citing his own personal experiences as a child when it had been assured that he was doomed to total blindness. The spectacles that were changed every so often to accommodate his gradually failing sight finally encouraged him to look for a new way to cure his affliction. This led him to nature cure regimens, which put him on the path of gaining renewed and improved sight. His personal success led him to enquire more into the subject of eye disease. This subject thus forms the foundation of this book.