The Olympic Games are always a showcase of what the human body can achieve. The diversity in the size, strengths, and shapes of athletes across the sports is mind boggling. Watching events like gymnastics, diving, and skateboarding make you wonder how these athletes can make twisting in the air and defying gravity look so easy.
It is especially noteworthy when athletes overcome a medical issue that directly impacts their sense of balance. This year, Stephen Nedoroscik has won the hearts of Americans, as well as the bronze medal for the U.S. men’s gymnastics team, and he did it with a significant vision problem.
In an interview on the Today Show, Nedoroscik talked about living with strabismus and coloboma, and how both conditions effect his vision. Strabismus is when the eyes are not aligned properly due to problems in the extra ocular muscles, also known as cross-eyed. This condition can affect people’s depth perception and cause blurry or double vision, not something you want as a competitive gymnast. Coloboma is a genetic condition where some of the eye tissue is missing causing photophobia, light sensitivity. However, Nedoroscik never let that get in his way. Much like Clark Kent, when it is his time save the day, he sheds his glasses and relies on his proprioceptive and vestibular system to keep him rotating and inverting on the pommel horse.
Reference
Pawlowski, A. (2024) What to know about Stephen Nedoroscik’s eyesight: Gymnast reveals eye conditions. Today (accessed July 31, 2024).
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