Please share your Ah-ah moment with the board. You know that "something" that you learned that was like really new to you. Some of the information shared may provide jewel to another member.
My moment came when I learned that over sized portions protein (like a steak) can contribute to higher glucose numbers on your next readings. I found myself cutting carbs and consuming too much protein to cover being hungry or maybe for an excuse to eat a bit more. I have found that smaller portions = smaller readings.
Mine was realizing that gaining weight in that last 10-15 years before diagnosis was not because I ate **** and was lazy.
All the whole grains and high intensity training where not going to help because I have severe insulin resistance due to PCOS.
LCHF has changed my life for the better.
I think I have a few.
One was at my DAFNE-type course (they called it Freedom4Life) where I met some other people who had had type 1 diabetes since childhood. My Ah Ha moment was discovering that the complications I read about are real when I met one young lad with retinopathy and a woman with bad neuropathy. Until then, complications were theoretical but meeting people in the flesh made them real.
Another was learning, not to accept "you're doing fine so everything can stay the same" which was what I got every year (from a different consultant each time) based just in my hB1AC. Through some pushing, so far, I have changed to a pump to make my exercise much much easier and less hypo-prone and I continue to press for a Libre or CGM.
And, finally, realising how lucky I am to have had a fantastic diabetes nurse who encouraged me to do what I want (especially exercise wise) without being afraid and explained the "mechanics" so well that I can, now make my own decisions on how to do something new. Reading, on this forum, about the trials, tribulations and down-right scare-mongering or just ignorance others received from their healthcare team, I realise "acceptance" from my team (my second point) was nothing compared to what I could have experienced.
On a similar note. Ah ha after getting a set of scales and comparing my bowl of porridge alongside a weighed out RDA portion of the same porridge. It seems my simple bowl of porridge was actually enough for Daddy bear, Mummy bear ,Baby bear and there was also some left for Goldilocks. RDA amounts are actually quite smallBig bowl of homemade mushroom soup had my numbers soaring. Next day used a smaller bowl. Barely a blip. Ah ha, portion control!
I think I have a few.
One was at my DAFNE-type course (they called it Freedom4Life) where I met some other people who had had type 1 diabetes since childhood. My Ah Ha moment was discovering that the complications I read about are real when I met one young lad with retinopathy and a woman with bad neuropathy. Until then, complications were theoretical but meeting people in the flesh made them real.
Another was learning, not to accept "you're doing fine so everything can stay the same" which was what I got every year (from a different consultant each time) based just in my hB1AC. Through some pushing, so far, I have changed to a pump to make my exercise much much easier and less hypo-prone and I continue to press for a Libre or CGM.
And, finally, realising how lucky I am to have had a fantastic diabetes nurse who encouraged me to do what I want (especially exercise wise) without being afraid and explained the "mechanics" so well that I can, now make my own decisions on how to do something new. Reading, on this forum, about the trials, tribulations and down-right scare-mongering or just ignorance others received from their healthcare team, I realise "acceptance" from my team (my second point) was nothing compared to what I could have experienced.
Must try that!going to bed at 5.3 waking up at 11.3 is getting me down!When I discovered I can just take a shot of quick acting whithout food to prevent that nasty feet on the floor effect. My nurse thinks I'm crazy for doing this but she can't argue with my meter/libre.
Do you wake up that high or is it after brushing your teeth, making breakfast and feeding the guinea-pigs or whatever it is you do after waking up? I wake up with fine(ish) numbers, but if I don't take insulin before getting out of bed it shoots up like a rocket within the next hour. If you're already high when waking up it could be a problem with your basal (timing or amount) or you could be having dawn phenomenon where your bg suddenly goes up during sleep.Must try that!going to bed at 5.3 waking up at 11.3 is getting me down!
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