Yes I know, I'm studying electronics not English. What I meant by atrocious was that a lot of the lines in the schematic were crooked or diagonal, I'm just one of those people with OCD where things like that need to be straight or it's not perfect.
True, there are a lot of LEDs, but if you limit the voltage that they are allowed to draw (to say around 3V) then you don't need any current limiting resistors as long as you have 2 of them in series. That would also reduce the overall current that they can draw. The circuit only needs to run for about 10 seconds at most, that would be plenty of time to impair someones vision.
But that brings up the next topic, what color LED to use...
A red LED would have little effect since it has such a long wavelength. A high intensity green would probably work better but a high intensity blue would have the shortest wavelength with the highest efficiency. Obviously a white LED would work best but I couldn't find an LED that was a high intensity white that was relatively efficient. You could use a single LED and use several small mirrors to reflect light into a verity of general directions which would greatly improve efficiency regardless of color.