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Diabetes Discussion
Type 1 Diabetes
Agoraphobia
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<blockquote data-quote="SaskiaKC" data-source="post: 2226945" data-attributes="member: 487111"><p>This was one of my nightmares when I had a car. I used to love driving on country roads with a friend in the car, felt safer there than on some city streets, but when I tried to do it alone it was a nightmare. I don't have a car now so it's a non-issue, but I still don't like going out alone. It's not fear, it's agoraphobia.</p><p>Taking Prozac helps, but that drug, which allows me to go out and go places, has robbed me of other things. Or hopefully just "borrowed" them long-term.</p><p>Years before I was diagnosed T2, I learned that eating a protein-filled breakfast, without caffeine, made it slightly less difficult to drive out to the horse barn and ride than if I'd had just cereal or toast. But I still preferred the smaller indoor arena to the wide open outdoor one. And hacking the fields was sheer terror.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SaskiaKC, post: 2226945, member: 487111"] This was one of my nightmares when I had a car. I used to love driving on country roads with a friend in the car, felt safer there than on some city streets, but when I tried to do it alone it was a nightmare. I don't have a car now so it's a non-issue, but I still don't like going out alone. It's not fear, it's agoraphobia. Taking Prozac helps, but that drug, which allows me to go out and go places, has robbed me of other things. Or hopefully just "borrowed" them long-term. Years before I was diagnosed T2, I learned that eating a protein-filled breakfast, without caffeine, made it slightly less difficult to drive out to the horse barn and ride than if I'd had just cereal or toast. But I still preferred the smaller indoor arena to the wide open outdoor one. And hacking the fields was sheer terror. [/QUOTE]
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