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Sutton Get His Eyesight Back — Did John

He froze. “Margaret,” he whispered. “The sky. I see the sky.”

For the next eighteen months, John lived in a world of shadows and echoes. His wife, Margaret, became his eyes. He learned to navigate their terraced house by counting steps. He memorized the angle of the morning sun on his face to tell time. He stopped working. He stopped driving. He stopped hoping. did john sutton get his eyesight back

He didn’t get back the superhuman vision of his youth. He needs reading glasses now. He has permanent blind spots in his peripheral vision, like small thumbprints on the edges of the world. But he can see his wife’s face. He can see traffic lights. He can see the wiring diagrams he once knew by heart. He froze

The final milestone came in December 2014. Sitting in a dim examination room, John read the fifth line of the Snellen chart: 20/40. Not perfect, but functional. His optic nerves showed residual scarring, but the inflammation was gone. The doctor said six words John will never forget: “You have regained functional sight, Mr. Sutton.” I see the sky

John Sutton’s story is one of medical mystery, staggering recovery, and the quiet strength of the human spirit. Here is the solidly constructed narrative of whether he got his eyesight back. In the autumn of 2012, John Sutton was a 58-year-old electrician from Sheffield, England—a man who had spent thirty years reading wiring diagrams by flashlight and spotting loose connections in dim ceilings. He had perfect 20/15 vision. Then, in a single, inexplicable week, everything went black.