This is a case study presented through the view of the mother.
I am Jeanette, proud mother to Brianna, age 12, and happy to share how vision therapy has helped my daughter see better and gain back her confidence in learning.
First Signs
When our daughter Brianna was 1, we noticed her eyes would turn out.
We used to tell her to blink, and the eye turn would correct itself. We went to several doctors and specialists for advice, and at age 7, Bree underwent surgery to straighten her eyes. Two years later her eye turn returned. Her eye turn was hardly noticeable after the surgery, so we didn’t think it would cause Bree so many issues, but it did.
Being Called Names, Teased
Brianna knew from an early age that her eyes were not like most kids’ because we used to tell her to blink to fix her eye, though she seems perfectly fine with it, just annoyed that it kept turning out and she didn’t know.
Bree did start to become self-conscious when her eye turn came to photos. For a small period of time she didn’t want to look at people because they would often comment.
For years Bree found learning to be really hard for her. She would reread things over and over again, try and get them to make sense, but she couldn’t. Homework was just as hard, maybe even worse. She would come home and try her best, then she just didn’t want to do it. She’d tell us her eyes would hurt and she couldn’t look at the words on the page anymore.
Bree had confided, “I felt like there was something wrong with me. Why can’t I just be able to do my work like everyone else? Everyone would tell me, ‘Try harder. Look at the words and stop being lazy.’ I went to doctors, support classes, had tutors, and still I couldn’t get it. I felt like teachers were always mad at me and would tell me to hurry up.”
Bree also told me other kids would laugh at her and tease her for being dumb. She had felt so bad and didn’t want to go to school anymore. Of course as her Mum, I was crushed.





