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Tori Nixon: Gift of 8 Campaign
My eyes were blue when I was born. Or so the doctors thought. In reality, they're dark brown. For the first few months of my life, my eyes were covered with a milky film caused by posterior polymorphous corneal dystrophy, a genetic eye disease that had not manifested in any other family member in any way other than requiring glasses.
My parents were told when I was two months old that I was functionally blind, living in a world of faint shadow and light, and because of the way that infants' brains learn to see, I would be vision impaired for the rest of my life if I did not receive a double corneal transplant before six months. Thankfully, I received the gift of sight within that short window and because of the care of a team of talented ophthalmologists - and because of the generosity of two families in the most difficult moments of their lives. I'm lucky: while many organs can only be donated under certain circumstances of death, corneas are donable no matter the cause of death.