Abstract: <br /> <br />Neurological transitions occur when the patient’s style of vision does not match the changes they are making through vision therapy/training programs. As patients realign vision coordinates with postural coordinates in VT, the stage is set for a transition. In the realignment of vision with postural coordinates, unresolved emotional conflicts may come to consciousness. <br /> <br />This was first described in the literature by Larry MacDonald, OD. During transitions, patients undergo three passages, which often involve physical, physiological, and cognitive/emotional changes. The changes common to transitions include headaches, brain fog, fatigue, and body tension. Bruce Wolff, OD, a pioneer behavioral optometrist, created visual training procedures that intentionally provided the patient opportunities to develop a matching or re-alignment of the visual and kinesthetic through the use of <br />dissociating or doubling glasses. The personal experience of children and adults going through a transition is described. <br /> <br />Keywords: brain fog, critical empathy, cybernetic principles, hanging onto space, performance lenses, transition