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Betsy's avatar

Dr. Andrew Moulden was certain that a drooping or skewed eye in a recently vaxxed baby was a sign of vaccine injury to one of the cranial nerves. Justin had a more extensive facial paralysis after he got the Covid jab. It's hard to imagine this is not part of that injury.

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Posturepro's avatar

Betsy, you are absolutely right to bring up cranial nerves. What many miss is that the eyelid is controlled by the oculomotor nerve, which is directly linked to the brainstem. Whether the trigger is viral, inflammatory, or sensory in nature, the nervous system is always the common denominator. When one side loses tone, it is your brainstem showing signs of imbalance, not just facial weakness. This goes far beyond cosmetics it is a signal your brain cannot afford to ignore.

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The Truth Fears Nothing's avatar

Wow I just thought it was normal asymmetry. My right eye is VERY droopy and looks much smaller, especially when I’m tired it can barely stay open. The same eye also spasms and twitches wildly a lot and gets blurred. All of this is happening and I’m very young so it has no correlation to age either.

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Posturepro's avatar

That is exactly the kind of pattern people brush off as “normal asymmetry,” and that is the danger. When one eye droops, spasms, or twitches, it is not just a mechanical issue. It reflects poor firing from the brainstem and cranial nerve pathways. And when this happens in someone young, it is even more important to take it seriously. Your body is giving you a warning signal early do not wait until it gets louder.

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Dangerous_Freedom's avatar

My right eye definitely droops more. It’s also genetic in that my fathers is the same and it gets moreso over time. Will try the exercises.

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Posturepro's avatar

Genetics may load the gun, but environment pulls the trigger. Even if your father had the same eye droop, that does not mean you are stuck with it. It often means both of you shared the same postural inputs, the same head positioning, the same compensation patterns. Good news is, exercises that stimulate the cranial nerves and balance the brainstem can shift that trajectory. Your nervous system is plastic. It can change if you feed it the right input.

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Mike's avatar

Also, how many times per day should we be performing each of the 3 exercises?

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Mike's avatar

Is the flashlight supposed to be pointed towards or away from your face?

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Cheryl Clifford's avatar

Oh my GOD something else to worry about ….

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Posturepro's avatar

I get it. It can feel overwhelming. But here is the reframe: the more you understand how the nervous system works, the more power you have to do something about it. These signs are not scary once you know they are reversible. You do not have to chase symptoms anymore. You can start rebalancing the system at the source. It is not something else to worry about it is something you can finally fix. ;)

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Namenlos's avatar

Quite to the contrary of the other sentiment, believe me the injuries I have sustained throughout my body and the amount of pain and demoralization I have suffered because of it had me wondering why on earth no one had looked into the underlying neuromechanics involved in a structured, interrelated context.

Better late than never.

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Joe Not Joey's avatar

Fascinating stuff!

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Posturepro's avatar

;)

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Nicholas James's avatar

Does this help with eye twitching as well? My right eye lid has been twitching on and off for a few months now.

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Posturepro's avatar

Yes, twitching is a clue. It means your brainstem and facial nerve are misfiring. That constant on and off flicker is a sign that one side is not getting clear, consistent input. Exercises that target visual convergence and improve cranial nerve tone are not just helpful they are essential. Start there and watch how the entire face, posture, and even alertness begins to shift. The eye tells the whole story.

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