I'm not a doctor. I am a T2 diabetic and I've accepted, after a while, that I'll always be one. (The term remission is still under debate here and there, and I won't use it). That said, my HbA1c is well into the non-diabetic range on diet only, I don't have the regular pus-filled toes and random fungal outbreaks anymore, my cholesterol is lower and the fatty liver is, I think, getting better. The PCOS too. I follow a rather strickt diet of 20 grams of carbs or less per day (keto combined with intermittent fasting), but I used to do pretty good on 75 to 85 grams a day; that got me into the non-diabetic range to begin with. Just found I did/felt better on less. So considering the rheumatism, hypothyroidism, chronic migraines, mental issues and what have you, diabetes is the only thing I don't worry about anymore, but not because it's gone. It's well controlled and I've "won". It's the only affliction I'm stuck with, in which I have a say in how it goes. So in those terms, you might say the worry can abate. Coming from someone who'd wake up in the morning to find she'd been crying in her sleep over diabetes... I'd say that's not bad.I have been recently diagnosed as a T2 diabetic. 8 years prior I had gestational diabetes and was never given any post partum follow up. fast forward to last October, I was feeling I'll thought I'd pass out and amended up in the ER. my random glucose was 24. I was went to a diabetes clinic.
my first A1C was 12.0% and my doctor wanted to tackle the diabetes aggressively, she suggested insulun-based on the A1C and i asked her to give me some time to manage it on my own.
Janumet 2X day and some serious retraining of my eating habits and my A1C was down to 6.7 in 3 months! she was elated and said " keep doing what you're doing "
anyways, the 2nd A1C was 6.4, so it's now been 6 months and I'm managing my numbers well but I keep thinking this numbers should be getting lower.
I was disappointed my A1C wasn't any lower than 6.4, I am constantly watching what I eat, I think deep down I'm still in denial and hoping the diabetes will go away if I lose some weight, If I dont eat bread, maybe one day I wont have to worry about diabetes ....
am I setting myself up for future failure? are my preconceived notions of diabetes getting in the way of me accepting this? am I being unrealistic?....
Some people find liver dumping as their biggest obstacle to a lower hba1c.I have been recently diagnosed as a T2 diabetic. 8 years prior I had gestational diabetes and was never given any post partum follow up. fast forward to last October, I was feeling I'll thought I'd pass out and amended up in the ER. my random glucose was 24. I was went to a diabetes clinic.
my first A1C was 12.0% and my doctor wanted to tackle the diabetes aggressively, she suggested insulun-based on the A1C and i asked her to give me some time to manage it on my own.
Janumet 2X day and some serious retraining of my eating habits and my A1C was down to 6.7 in 3 months! she was elated and said " keep doing what you're doing "
anyways, the 2nd A1C was 6.4, so it's now been 6 months and I'm managing my numbers well but I keep thinking this numbers should be getting lower.
I was disappointed my A1C wasn't any lower than 6.4, I am constantly watching what I eat, I think deep down I'm still in denial and hoping the diabetes will go away if I lose some weight, If I dont eat bread, maybe one day I wont have to worry about diabetes ....
am I setting myself up for future failure? are my preconceived notions of diabetes getting in the way of me accepting this? am I being unrealistic?....
Some people find liver dumping as their biggest obstacle to a lower hba1c.
Have you ever tested through the night? Mine shoots up then down on insulin. Without a fatty protein for supper (just a nibble) it woke on 10s or more.
Blocking my through the night liver dump I can awake 2-3mmol/l less.
Think of how many hours that is.? ... Sleeping and unaware of glucose being filtered into your blood stream, even thou you don't need it.
Without liver dumps your HbA1c will drop.
Enjoy exploring your own bodies response to different fatty proteins. (eg nuts, cheese, pork scratchings).
Once you've found those foods which block by eating before bed, treasure them as they will see you through the rough type2 periods.
You hold the key to the lower hba1c.
We are all different so explore. They won't shoot your bgs up but the right ones will block that over helpful liver, other organs and muscles glucose release.
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