1º
If age were the cause of vision loss, everyone would decline at the same pace.
And that simply doesn’t happen.
There are people in their 70s and 80s reading small print without glasses,
while others, in their early 40s, can barely see a road sign at a distance.
If it were genetic, the problem would start early.
If it were “natural wear and tear,” the decline would be slow and predictable.
But that’s not what we see.
What we see is something far stranger —
perfect vision for decades…
followed by a rapid, silent, and progressive decline.
2º
Modern medicine has been looking in the wrong place for decades.
Glasses don’t fix the problem.
Eye drops don’t address the cause.
Surgeries only try to work around the damage.
None of this explains why the cells responsible for vision suddenly stop repairing themselves.
And it was exactly this question that forced scientists to dig deeper —
even when everything “seemed normal.”