HarryBeau
Well-Known Member
Interesting point DJC my strips are sitting on the radiator cover...those ones are going in the bin opening a fresh box now.I had to chuck those strips away in the end.
Interesting point DJC my strips are sitting on the radiator cover...those ones are going in the bin opening a fresh box now.I had to chuck those strips away in the end.
Great blood sugars. Lamb seems to be working well. You ask if it could be addictive. Maybe - but not as addictive for me as coffee and Montezuma 100%.
Dum Tempus Habemus. Best use it well.Oh dear. Tempus fugit and all that. Anyone else notice modern tea leaves are so much smaller? Don't even mention policemen and doctors who look like the last cohort of year 12 I taught.
Thanks for asking. My strips are kept in the medicine cupboard which is in a cool corner of the kitchen. I will see what happens with the new meter. Also I might start a trial of setting the clock a couple of times between 0200 and 0400 to test. In fact I woke up at 0200 today and wish I had tested but I didnt.
Interesting point DJC my strips are sitting on the radiator cover...those ones are going in the bin opening a fresh box now.
I usually keep my testing kit on the table but the last couple of weeks since the arrival of C @ L moved them off the table...just to stop them getting them down onto the floor...kit going back to it's original place...new pot opened so we'll see how it goes.It was a sort of lightbulb moment. All the strips were the same batch number but as I worked my way through them, the ones that’d been in the drawer longest gave the most erratic readings. I only started to notice this effect in the winter - when the radiator was on - in the summer, with no radiator heat, the strips were more constant.
Yes the same for me tooin the summer, with no radiator heat, the strips were more constant.
Thank you @DJC3Glad you had a peaceful night.
I think most people’s clocks are digital now. I used to wear a watch but had to stop in the end as I have some sort of aura that stops them! Quite bizarre, it I take it off and put in a drawer it starts going again but as soon as I put it on they grind to a halt within a couple of days. Spent loads of money on new batteries and new watches. Very frustrating and I miss a wrist watch.
Morning all and a 4.8 for me. Very happy with that.
Hope you had a quiet intruder free night @gennepher
@Saskia glad your health check went well. My middle daughter who is training to be a mental health nurse told me about the clock drawing as a test for dementia. I had to do it too so she could practice doing the test with people without constantly looking at her notes. It was really interesting the different things they could tell by the different way the clock was drawn. Some people bunch all the numbers up in one section, some put the numbers outside the circle, some miss out numbers completely and are totally unaware. Such a simple test but so useful. Sounds like you passed with flying colours though. I do wonder what they’ll use in 30y time when nobody knows how to tell the time on a proper clock anyway!
The mysteries of time. I have a 150 year old clockwork wall clock, great grandads and passed down through family. I can remember it at my grandads and my moms always running 30mins slow. When I inherited it, yes I have to wind it once a week, I set the time right, within a day it was 30 mins slow again. After a week of this I decided to set the time 30 mins forward so that the the 30 minutes loss would set it at the correct time. Over 2 days it lost a hour and still ran 30 mins slow. I have now given up it runs happily 30 mins slow. My great grandad trained it well.Thank you @DJC3
I can't wear a watch either...and in close proximity to a clock with hands, the hands stop...one of my daughters could be the same too...
Did that information produce any improvements in bg control or would you ascribe those to the DD meals or just your genetics?. There often seems to be an element similar to Ben Stokes, Patrick Mahomes (insert outrageously gifted sportsperson of choice) assuming everyone can achieve at their level by merely doing the same as them. I don't understand how wearing a Libre will lower bg anymore than wearing a fbit makes me an athlete. Not aimed at you just a general observation born of frustration. IMHO 4.5 years of effort has not worked for me yet I continually read how foolproof this all is.The other thing which might be useful is a Freestyle Libre. The readings are lower than for a finger prick but run parallel in my experience. It monitors every 15 min so you can see exactly where the peaks and troughs are ( without setting your alarm to wake up and test). They are expensive but good for a couple of weeks of information gathering I found.
Glad you had a peaceful night.
I think most people’s clocks are digital now. I used to wear a watch but had to stop in the end as I have some sort of aura that stops them! Quite bizarre, it I take it off and put in a drawer it starts going again but as soon as I put it on they grind to a halt within a couple of days. Spent loads of money on new batteries and new watches. Very frustrating and I miss a wrist watch.
The mysteries of time. I have a 150 year old clockwork wall clock, great grandads and passed down through family. I can remember it at my grandads and my moms always running 30mins slow. When I inherited it, yes I have to wind it once a week, I set the time right, within a day it was 30 mins slow again. After a week of this I decided to set the time 30 mins forward so that the the 30 minutes loss would set it at the correct time. Over 2 days it lost a hour and still ran 30 mins slow. I have now given up it runs happily 30 mins slow. My great grandad trained it well.
PS I have to add, I find the winding of this clock with the same old key is very satisfactory and I never do it without feeling a connection to the past. Can't do that with battery powered time pieces.
Thank you @DJC3
I can't wear a watch either...and in close proximity to a clock with hands, the hands stop...one of my daughters could be the same too...