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Is it ok to cheat sometimes?
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<blockquote data-quote="Beefeater" data-source="post: 1451692" data-attributes="member: 397543"><p>I agree with quite a few of the previous posts. How you can cheat with what is basically a lifelong, life threatening disease is beyond me. I have recently started (five weeks) the low carb program. My attitude is this: If I eat excessive carbs I could end up paying the ultimate price, sounds a bit dramatic....I don't think so.</p><p></p><p>I know of two ladies with type 2, a mother and daughter who's attitude all along has been "I'm going to do what I want to do and nobody is going to tell me otherwise". </p><p></p><p>The mother is currently at home without any care package and can just about move her head to eat and drink, so has to wait for her other youngest daughter to come home from work to feed her. She also has to go to toilet on a commode. The diabetic daughter cannot look after her mum because she has been in hospital for six weeks having her sugars stabilised. </p><p></p><p>So if you fall off the wagon beat yourself up about it. </p><p></p><p>I am personally fed up with feeling like rubbish, brain fog, tiredness, joint inflammation, neuropathy, early symptoms of diabetic cataracts. I want to be 'normal' again, so should you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Beefeater, post: 1451692, member: 397543"] I agree with quite a few of the previous posts. How you can cheat with what is basically a lifelong, life threatening disease is beyond me. I have recently started (five weeks) the low carb program. My attitude is this: If I eat excessive carbs I could end up paying the ultimate price, sounds a bit dramatic....I don't think so. I know of two ladies with type 2, a mother and daughter who's attitude all along has been "I'm going to do what I want to do and nobody is going to tell me otherwise". The mother is currently at home without any care package and can just about move her head to eat and drink, so has to wait for her other youngest daughter to come home from work to feed her. She also has to go to toilet on a commode. The diabetic daughter cannot look after her mum because she has been in hospital for six weeks having her sugars stabilised. So if you fall off the wagon beat yourself up about it. I am personally fed up with feeling like rubbish, brain fog, tiredness, joint inflammation, neuropathy, early symptoms of diabetic cataracts. I want to be 'normal' again, so should you. [/QUOTE]
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