'MURDER,' IT WROTE
|
The beauty was unsettling but unmistakable. |
(11/28/14) On the day when Mitch Vasile lost his outward vision, his "inner eye"
saw nothing but an infinite expanse of red. It seemed to be breathing or
undulating. After a few days, the vastness began to differentiate into
patterns: forceful sprays of red, glistening dribbles of red, smeared
arcs of red, Rorschach patterns of red that resembled uteruses, poppies,
crabs, galloping camels, emaciated refugees, a trellis of roses. He was
in a universe in which there was no center, no foothold, no respite. It
wasn't a silent universe, though. There were muffled sound effects:
nonstop explosions, moans and screams. He blinked and blinked to blink
it all away. He washed his eyes. He closed them, but the images seemed
to move in on him all the more. He trembled at the thought that this
might never end.
As I walked with the doctor through Bellevue,
to the psychiatric ward, he warned me to set aside my investigative
instincts and merely act as a friend to Mitch. "Don't ply him with
questions. Don't press him for details. We're taking care of that," he
said. "Just comfort him, if you can. He's devastated."
The tentative diagnosis,
he added, was "hysterical blindness," also known as conversion disorder.
Patients
experiencing some type of emotional or psychological trauma can lose some or
all of their sight. Hysterical blindness is thus "a neurological
abnormality with apparently psychogenic cause," he elaborated. Recovery
is often very slow and uncertain.