A new study of astronauts shows that radiation and bone loss aren't the only health risks for long-duration stays in space; about one-third of the U.S. space station crew members return with impaired vision.
The Cabala (Kabbalah) relates vision with the right hemisphere of the brain, connecting directly with the soul; the ability of sight goes back to before creation, when the soul was embedded in the light of God – Yira/Fear are the same letters making Riya/Sight.
The fear of being close to God translated into the ability to see. The eyeball, the vessel of sight, is extremely delicate requiring a well-oiled irrigation system through which emotions can be emitted through tears, caused by the the contracting of the brain.
The brain, which is saturated with water, contracts when unable to comprehend, either good or bad; through the contractions the severity of salt is added to the purity of the tears. The eye was created for terrestrial use, seeing a very small spectrum of light.
In Psalms, Dovid HaMelech/The King sings, The earth belongs to man but the heavens belong to God. Now, astronomers theorize: a three year long trip to Mars could render the astronauts blind and unable to see their surroundings – an ironic result, for sure.
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