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don't see why you would need to shoot left handed through a scoped rifleany way, even if you are left eye dominant. You would be closing your left eye so it wouldn't matter which one is dominant.
[/align][/align]Sorry i dont understand- how could someone( and why?)close the eye they where shooting with -in this case the left eye & still shoot?im not undestanding that( could be my brain delusexia?)[/align][/align]
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Maybe I'm just an oddball.... [&o]
Edit: What I mean is that I am left eye dominant and shoot left handed, even though my firearms are righty. To me, it doesn't matter...

nahh- but me myself i never claimed to be tonormal or not odd

( Ya can only wink with one eye ?)[/align][/align][/align]I am right handed, but shoot left handed ( i shoot right handed rifles -left handed because theres a lot more of them( right handed rifles)out there & thats what i ended up with in bolt actions& thats how i been doing it for awhile now,- i shoot pistols etc right handed with my left eye)because of eye problems- im my case anyways i dont think its much of a a choice i dont think maybe.[/align][/align]Ii (cant see tomuch with theone eye in some ways -to even try shooting with it- the other eye has to be "it" the one.[/align][/align][/align](i think i may have this( below)- plus havesome other problems from injurys, in/to my right eye)( and getting older isnot helping things- my eyesmuch either)[/align][/align][/align]
Amblyopia
Classification and external resources
ICD-
10
ICD-
9
DiseasesDB
MedlinePlus
eMedicine
MeSH
Amblyopia, otherwise known as lazy eye,
[1] is a
disorder of the
visual system that is characterized by poor or indistinct
vision in an eye that is otherwise physically normal, or out of proportion to associated structural abnormalities. It has been estimated to affect 1–5% of the population.
[2]
The problem is caused by either no transmission or poor transmission of the visual image to the
brain for a sustained period of dysfunction or during early
childhood. Amblyopia normally only affects one eye, but it is possible to be amblyopic in both eyes if both are similarly deprived of a good, clear visual image. Detecting the condition in early childhood increases the chance of successful treatment.
While the colloquialism "lazy eye" is frequently used to refer to amblyopia, the term is inaccurate because there is no "laziness" of either the eye or the amblyope involved in the condition.
//
Physiology
Amblyopia is a developmental problem in the brain, not an organic problem in the eye
Symptoms
Many people with amblyopia, especially those who are only mildly so, are not even aware they have the condition until tested at older ages, since the vision in their stronger eye is normal. However, people who have
severe amblyopia may experience associated visual disorders, most notably poor
depth perception. Amblyopes may suffer from poor spatial
acuity, low sensitivity to
contrast and some "higher-level" deficits to vision such as reduced sensitivity to
motion.
[5] These deficits are usually specific to the amblyopic eye, not the unaffected "fellow" eye. Amblyopes also suffer from problems of binocular vision such as limited stereoscopic depth perception and usually have difficulty seeing the three-dimensional images in hidden stereoscopic displays such as
autostereograms.
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