
Woman left BLIND after performing 13 cartwheels in a row
Deborah Cobb, now 42, was just 19 when she decided to see how many cartwheels she could perform in a row while having fun with her friends on a summer day in 2002.
But after completing 13 consecutive cartwheels, the young woman fell over feeling 'super dizzy' and quickly realized something was terribly wrong with her eyesight.
'I decided to see how many cartwheels I could do in a row just for fun,' Cobb told Newsweek in a recent interview. 'So I started doing them and got to 13 and fell over super dizzy. My eyes were kind of spinning so it took a moment to realize that my eyes weren't focusing.'
At first, she thought she was just dizzy but panic quickly ensued when she realized she could no longer see anything clearly.
'Looking at her [friend's] face, it was a giant orange blur. My eyes wouldn't fully focus,' she said.
'There was no pain, and my peripheral vision was fine, but everything I looked directly at was blocked by an orange blur.'
Cobb first tried to play it cool and didn't immediately tell her friends how scared she was.
'I was panicking inside, but not outwardly so my friends didn't think anything of it,' she said.
But her vision has not improved by morning. That's when she went to the hospital.
'My central vision was completely gone... I couldn't drive, I couldn't read, I couldn't see myself in the mirror... which meant I couldn't put on makeup... I couldn't even watch TV,' she said.
At the hospital, doctors initially thought she had simply 'sunburned' her retinas.
But when she saw a retinal specialist, she got a far more serious and rare diagnosis.
'I had hemorrhaged in both of my maculas and it was going to take three to six months to fully heal,' she said.
Experts say the condition is extremely unusual in someone so young.
'In healthy individuals, especially young people, this occurrence is quite rare,' Dr. Rajesh C. Rao, an ophthalmologist who specializes in surgery of the retina, told the outlet.
'The head being upside down abruptly or repeatedly can also increase pressure in veins in the retina, and some at-risk individuals can be prone to macular hemorrhage.'
Cobb said it took a while for reality to truly hit her.
'I started sobbing,' she told the outlet. It was the first time it fully hit me how limited I was and how dependent I was on other people for simple things like reading—which I had completely taken for granted.'
While her vision did return after about three months, the bizarre injury still causes issues.
Even decades later, Cobb still suffers flashes of light and dark floaters caused by retinal jelly detachment.
'The only option is surgery,' she said, 'but surgery almost always causes cataracts, which would only mean another surgery. So I'm okay to just live with it.'
Despite the traumatic ordeal, Cobb remains grateful for all the joys in her life.
'We so often focus on what's going wrong in our lives, that we miss all of the things that are going right.
'There are so many simple gifts that could be bringing us joy every day, if we just learned to appreciate them. That's what this experience taught me: never stop being grateful.'
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