If you ignore all the reasons this is completely impossible, and assume all the other space around the black hole is free of bright things, this is actually pretty interesting. Your eyes would have to be on the event horizon, and any light that orbits the black hole successfully would have to reflect at an angle nearly exactly tangent to the event horizon. Either way, you likely aren't going to stay there for long, so it would look like a flash of your head as you flew by. As light above the event horizon escapes the black hole the image you see stretches at the top, and as the light emitted underneath the event horizon falls toward the mass the bottom of the image stretches down. The stretching could be so significant you wouldn't recognize the back of your head, or it might not be noticeable.