Hi
@Emilybriggs.94, From my experience of diabetes but not as professional advice or opinion: First of all, it is great that you have joined this site.



If you are like most of us T1Ds (Type 1 Diabetics) we try to be as independent as possible, pulling oneself up by one's own shoelaces. To seek help, to admit that we cannot always cope, can be interpreted by us as a strike against your self-esteem. But as they say: Discretion is better than valour.
But please know that there are a number of us who have survived and thrived and are now in our 30th, 40th, 50th or 60th decade of being on insulin. I am not saying it is easy, but that it is possible.
Yes, I certainly have been through the doldrums of depression, self-doubt, feeling different from everyone else, is-life-worth-living?, and the frustration and anger of it all. What helped to get past this and survive? Please read this and re-read, think about and come back to whatever helps or interests you. Please keep posting +++++++ with questions, queries, what local knowledge is there etc
1)
seeking help and support - this site, ? a peer support group, close friends and family (not the 'well-meaning' ones who comment on one's weight etc), and fostering good relationships with healthcare professionals such as your DSN and doctor. Sometimes I found that the relationships with professionals are not good and I needed to find ones that suited me better).
2)
lifelines - people or organisations I could contact if I was feeling really down, a health professional or NHS crisis line, a good friend who really listens and I certainly have seen counsellors in the past who have really helped me.
3)
the bright side rather than the dark side: feeling negative makes it more difficult to accept the positives in life: my specialist says he welcomes all new T1Ds and his first question is: do they have or plan to have a good normal-age retirement plan? The outcome these days for T1D is that good. Muggins here, retired in 2014 at the 48 years on insulin mark and that journey started before fancy insulins, glucose meters, insulin pumps and all that malarky!! The 'good, old days' are not as good as today!!
4)
humour and self-humour: I am now on an insulin pump, best decision I have ever made, (but 10 to 20 years earlier would have been nice), but my eye specialist does not have glasses for hindsight Doing injections was 'javelin practice" done to the humming of an old, old pop tune "Needles and Pins", going to a restaurant became like the Forrest Gumpism: "life is a box of chocolates, depends on what you get" and menus are like that sometimes!, hypos - those embarrassing, beastly disasters - I took ages to overcome the ignominy of them - like the time I, an Aussie male, was hypo and was trying to put an imaginary token in the turnstile slot device which led to the women's change room at the local swimming pool. You can either laugh or cry! (And I was hypo - honest)!!!
A father and son make a bet on what BSL Mum, the diabetic, will have before dinner. The loser does the washing up.
A friend of mine gave me a 5 kg jar of Nutella for a birthday - I gave him a 50 g one in return and asked for a swop!!
Self humour is a shield to help shirk off the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune and help us overcome your own sensitivities to things like weight, appearance etc. A slim past colleague of mine used to say: "We cannot all look like Twiggy but I just tell them that I am Twiggy with bones of steel and the brain of a blue whale.
5)
extend or develop an interest or three: healthy people tend to have hobbies/interests etc. such things may develop from study or work interest or from a desire to meet others with a particular interest: examples are gardening, sports of various sorts, photography, craft making, um.. film conventions, cosplay, drama, dancing, indoor soccer etc. Things that give you a sense of purpose and achievement; that ideally involve some exercise and socialising; that get one up and about, not sitting down all day with a computer screen and physically-absent acquaintances (not the times spent on this site however just not 24/7!!); that can evolve as you become more interested; that are affordable and not overly risky (sky diving anyone?); that do not detract from other priorities like diet ( cake and sweets- making?), relationships (hypothetically I have yet to find others who would voluntarily join me to indulge in painting garden gnomes as a hobby, but maybe I am just not 'with it' enough). Something that adds meaning or involves taking opportunity e.g. walk to the shops, take pictures along the way, shop, have coffee with friends, home with the shopping and some pictures to edit) (My avatar hints at my hobby and the kite is the colours of a frog) and provide a measure of achievement, (see how much less petrol you have used and how many more cobwebs have formed on the motor car)
6)
We all make mistakes: A comic scene I am fond of quoting shows a man being interviewed for the job of Chief Manager at a training agency:
Interviewer: "Mr Jones, what makes you think you are the best candidate for this position"?
Mr Jones: " Well , I believe you learn from your own mistakes. And I make enough to train everybody here!"
So, on this site collectively we make made just about every mistake with our diabetes that is possible. If we learn from a mistake then we are wiser (and even moreso when we work out how to stop making the same mistake again)! Self humour helps to take the sting of embarrassment out - and all of us have times when we do all the right things and obtain a great result and other times when the exact same right things lead to a less good result. Frustration only raises the BSL. I blame the weather, the season, and others the 'good' or 'not so good' diabetes gremlins. They generally do not answer back!!
I leave the more intricate matters about diabetes to all those ladies on site who have the clearmindedness, experience and wisdom to know about how to manage diabetes as the better half of humankind. (yes I am perhaps sucking up but I do not wish to be on their wrong side). Best Wishes, fellow warrior!!!


