Impact on eyesight and other senses
Eyesight, hearing, and many other things improve as you do this biomechanical process
A few folks doing Reviv have told me that they feel like their vision improved and so I wanted to share a bit of my experience and view on this.
Because I do think eyesight can and often does improve with this biomechanical process.
But not just eyesight.
Rather I even think pretty much all of your senses can improve.
Which probably sounds whacky… but let me explain.
Let’s jump back to my collapse of 2014
I’ve told my story of 2014 in many past articles so I will not go in detail. But the short version is that a TMJ dentist in Vietnam told me he needed to ‘fix my contacts’ and then drilled a bunch of my back teeth, making them much flatter.
Then a couple months later I basically didn’t function. And my body and skull seemed to be ‘aging’ at a crazy rate.
But the other thing that happened was my vision got much worse very fast. I remember feeling like i was seeing the world darker.
But I didn’t truly notice that till i started recovering in early 2015 and it felt like someone had turned the lights back on on my vision.
As I recovered my vision very noticeably improved till it finally settled at around the point where I was before the dentist had drilled my teeth.
This happened to a lesser extent several times in the ensuing years
I noticed this correlation with the eyes several times in the years afterwards. Usually always as I was recovering.
As the worsening of your eyesight seems to happen pretty gradually and you don’t really notice it.
Also you have a lot of other stuff going wrong as you ‘collapse’, so it’s probably not top of mind.
Late last year was a good example of me noticing that it improved. I was driving in an area of Bangkok that i hadn’t been for a few years (since mid-2020) and it felt different.
At first I couldn’t tell what felt different as the buildings and things looked the same more or less. But then it hit me.
Everything felt sharper and brighter. I was in the same place i’d been, but it felt different because I was seeing it much more clearly now.
My view on what is happening
When you look at where the human eye sits you quickly see that it is at the intersection of lots of cranial bones.
And as your cranial bones derange when you collapse, it would be almost impossible for it to not impact your eyes.
And in my view that is most likely what truly causes astigmatisms.
According to ChatGPT…
Astigmatism is a common vision condition caused by an irregularly shaped cornea or lens, leading to blurry or distorted vision at all distances. Instead of being perfectly round like a basketball, the cornea or lens has an uneven curvature, more like a football.
In 2014 when my vision got blurry I had went to get an eye exam to change the prescription of my glasses. The eye doctor, after checking my vision, told me I had an astigmatism.
Now i’d worn glasses for nearsightedness since my early teens and had regularly gone to get my vision checked… but it was the first time in my life I had an astigmatism. At age 37.
Was it just a coincidence?
Or was it that the negative change in my cranial bones had changed the shape of my eyes in such a way that I had developed an astigmatism?
For me the answer is obviously ‘YES’!
Also it’s not just vision that improves, but other senses
This is the other thing I have felt over the years… it’s not just your vision that improves.
Rather it’s almost all of your senses.
I feel like my hearing and even my ability to taste and feel improve with these biomechanics.
It’s like you just become more alive.
So am I saying that the people out there who are complaining of losing their hearing are likely losing it because of this biomechanical collapse?
Absolutely!
My mother’s husband is a classic example. Everytime I see him he tells me how his hearing is getting worse because of the loud cannons he had to listen to when he was in the army 50+ years prior.
I typically have to bite my lip to hold a straight face as he does this. Because to me that logic is just ridiculously stupid.
And the fact that his body and legs are compensating in many other ways is a clear sign that the whole structure is in biomechanical collapse.
So i’ve tried to tell him about this stuff. But of course he laughs it off.
Oh well.
Closing thoughts
With this article I want to open you up to the idea that your vision and basically all of your senses improve with this process.
Which if you remember my analogy to aging… makes a ton of sense.
As humans age basically all of our senses, including vision, worsen.
And so if all aging is… is this biomechanical collapse, well then it would make sense that if you reverse the collapse all of your senses improve. ie. you ‘reverse age’.
And that is exactly what I’ve seen on my self the past decade and am hearing from others.
Crazy?
Or just logical?
You be the judge.







One of the first things I started noticing when I was going through orthodontic treatment was that my vision and spinal alignment/posture was changing rapidly. I instantly made the connection and mentioned it to my orthodontist, who denied it and then made me feel like I was crazy 🙄 It continues to blow my mind that these so-called “professionals” fail to see the correlation between moving teeth/jaws around and rapid, debilitating structural changes to the body as a whole. To me it’s so innately logical to make the connection.
Sounds totally feasible - what’s the cure? A mouth brace? my vision is blurry at all distances since my eyesight started declining - I’ve never maintained a sweet spot like other people I know