paulfish4570
Veteran
I am blessed to have come to a bittersweet conclusion: because of my neurological condition I am going to let go of my Bessa R. The rig simply is too light in weight for me to shoot well because of hand tremors.
I have been on new medication for a month that has hugely improved my overall physiological health. Fatigue is much lessened and vigor is much increased over the course. I have few or no legs seizures at night. Pain that accompanied fatigue is gone.
But, my hands are no better, and perhaps a bit degraded. I think that is where the chronic inflammatory demyelating polyneuropathy caused the most damage. CIDP causes the body's immune system to attack and "eat" nerve coverings, thus shortcircuiting signals from brain to body.
The short circuits also are largely related to posture of the body and position of extremities. In my case, when my hands reach 90 degrees in relation to my upper arms, elbows bent, tremors increase all the way to eye level. In my right hand, tremors increase down into the base of my thumb.
You can see, I think, the effect on shooting my 35s. The Bessa and FED are too light to dampen the tremors. My SLRs and Minolta A5 rangefinder (It is a tank) are sufficiently heavy to dampen the tremors enough to get measurably sharper photos. I spent a couple of hours this morning verifying this by closely studying my photos on-screen.
I think some of you will appreciate my citing a different gospel: "A man's gotta know his limitations" - Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry. :lol:
I have been on new medication for a month that has hugely improved my overall physiological health. Fatigue is much lessened and vigor is much increased over the course. I have few or no legs seizures at night. Pain that accompanied fatigue is gone.
But, my hands are no better, and perhaps a bit degraded. I think that is where the chronic inflammatory demyelating polyneuropathy caused the most damage. CIDP causes the body's immune system to attack and "eat" nerve coverings, thus shortcircuiting signals from brain to body.
The short circuits also are largely related to posture of the body and position of extremities. In my case, when my hands reach 90 degrees in relation to my upper arms, elbows bent, tremors increase all the way to eye level. In my right hand, tremors increase down into the base of my thumb.
You can see, I think, the effect on shooting my 35s. The Bessa and FED are too light to dampen the tremors. My SLRs and Minolta A5 rangefinder (It is a tank) are sufficiently heavy to dampen the tremors enough to get measurably sharper photos. I spent a couple of hours this morning verifying this by closely studying my photos on-screen.
I think some of you will appreciate my citing a different gospel: "A man's gotta know his limitations" - Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry. :lol: