I'm blind to the left (relative to my focus, not the position of my head. Also not related to eyes, those are fine.
have a wiki!) so I'd have to play by looking at the left edge of the screen and just using my peripheral. I suppose it's doable, but right now when it's still new it's just too frustrating.
I would take it easy on whatever I was into if I was into anything that could cause it! Right now the docs are at a loss since I have pretty low cholesterol and am in relatively good shape, have low blood pressure, and the various tests and scans don't come up with anything.
Sounds like the result of a clot. Sitting too much.
I'm in my early 30's and I quit gaming hardcore in 2009. August of that year was the last time (for the most part) I have touched a multiplayer game. I had a feeling that if I had let myself go on like I was, it would have ended up like what you experienced sooner or later.
I had bad adrenaline rushes when I gamed, peaking around 2006. After this I had a health scare of my own but somehow I managed to recover after years of wondering if I'd ever feel 100% "normal" again.
I think if you start getting a bit active - and I don't mean hardcore gym or running or anything... just walk every day and try to keep your diet mostly healthy stuff... and most importantly get over the gaming thing and find some new interests, positive mood is number one to this working... you can recover.
Too many of my interests still revolve around a computer, but I am much more balanced today and phasing it out or at least making what computer activity I have partially standing up or not putting pressure on my legs to block the blood flow.
You can:
1. get chairs that don't restrict circulation as much
2. get adjustable desks that let you stand (some have motors)
3. get a tablet with like 8 hrs battery and not need to sit in an office at all!
Food wise a few habits are quite important to me now:
1. Green tea, increases my endurance and releases some of the same stuff that is actually in alcohol which makes you more sociable. I can now even drink coffee, 5 years ago I was a jittery mess after barely half a cup!
2. Lots of cayenne pepper. I put it on potatoes, toast, pretty much anything that could do with some spice, anything with some fat (not an excuse to eat more)... helps circulation a lot. I've gone through a few whole containers of it in a couple of years.
3. Much less fat, much less salt, E621/MSG cut out... E250 cut out... no soda cept for the occasional coke or dr. pepper, much much less sugar. Very little white bread.
If these sound like hard rules to follow, keep in mind I made these changes over a course of like 5 years. Of course, the quicker the better but what's important is making changes that you can actually make into permanent habits. This is why diets fail, too many changes too quickly.
Anyway, so what's the deal, how are you posting here? Tilting your head to read the text? Text to speech? Dictation?
If you look directly at the text, is it legible?