Wednesday, March 05, 2008

March Visit to Dr. T

Joey had his routine eye check-up with Dr. T yesterday. Everything looks good! At his last appointment, his left eye was at 150/20. Yesterday, it was 125/20! That's a slight improvement! Everything inside his eye looks stable, and his cataract has not worsened. All good news!

During the exam, I had the pleasure of hearing my 7 year old son have a conversation with his doctor about Vincent Van Gogh! There was a small calendar on the desk with a picture, so Joey pointed to it and said "That's a famous artist."

Dr. T said, "Yes, it is! Do you recognize him?"

Joey said, "He cut off his ear!".

Dr. T said, "That's right! It's Vincent Van Gogh! Have you learned about him?"

Joey said "Yeah, we learned about him in school.".

Dr. T said, "He was also a poet. Did you know that? But he only became famous after his death. That happens a lot. A lot of artists only get famous after their death. ."

I enjoyed this little exchange, and Dr. T seemed to enjoy it, too! They also discussed motorcycle riding (Joey's favorite rider is Travis Pastrana, Dr. T's favorite rider is Ricky Carmichael). Joey also wanted to let Dr. T know that he had gotten an A+ in Language at school. (Later, he proudly told Daddy that Dr. T said he "loves it when his patients get A's"!) He even asked Dr. T how long he had been an eye doctor (10 years)! He is one of the best (if not the best) pediatric retinologists - I am so glad God led us to him!

Later that evening, Joey had Karate class. I gave him the option of skipping it cuz his eyes were still dilated, and the lights at the dojo are bright. But he wanted to go. (They've ordered his sparring gear and he wanted to see if it had come in. They ordered a week ago, and told us it would take 6-10 business days to arrive. It's been 7 days, and Joey - not knowing the concept of "business days" - thought it would be there!) During his class, I overheard him telling his Sensei that his eyes were dilated. Sensei kinda laughed and said, "Do you know what dilated means? It's when the black thing in your eye gets bigger or smaller to let light in or not". And I thought...Not only does he know what dilated means, but he knows that the black thing is called a pupil! From where I was sitting, I couldn't hear the whole thing, so I couldn't tell if Joey was telling him that the lights were too bright, or if he was just chatting about his day . But he didn't seem to be having a hard time, so I didn't interfere.

So Joey has had a great week! He got his midterm report and his grades have all improved; he's happily waiting to start sparring at Karate; and his eye exam went very well! And today his school is having its "Grandparents Day" (his class will be singing "Take Me Home, Country Road")!

Next eye exam is scheduled for July.
Until then...

3 comments:

WRITING MOMMY said...

Oh, this is such wonderful news!! It's so heartening to know that Joey is doing so much at school and outside. That conversation about Van Gogh made me smile.

This gives me a lot of hope. My son's check up is due in two weeks and my anxiety has been building up. So it was really reassuring to read your post.

This time, I plan to get a reading on my son's eyesight before he meets his doctor. I've been wondering whether he needs glasses (he doesn't appear to) and we'd visited the doctor who'd originally discovered his Coats. But there was so much confusion (wrote about it in my blog in January) that I just dropped the whole thing and decided to wait for his appointment with his retina specialist.

Also, do you make Joey wear protective sports glasses? I read on a few forums that people do that.

Cheers... :)

WRITING MOMMY said...

Thanks for dropping in and answering those questions. Btw, I didn't notice the set of Van Gogh paintings at the bottom of your post last time. Neat!

gabika1979 said...

Hi,
I so love reading all your blogs- tell us, what is the latest?How is your son doing?My older son has been diagnosed with stage 3 Coats disease just a few week ago, but we were not offered any treatment at the moment.Apparently we could make his eye worse than it is...Do you know what stage your son's eye was when he was diagnosed?We are in England btw.All your story sounds very so much as ours in many ways!The hospital visits- all you describe is just as ours, all the feelings etc.Keep on updating your blog please!