Hi Kaz,
Glad you've had a chat with the boss, hope that working patterns can be made more diabetic friendly.
If your HbA1C is low, then the spikes are probably not a significant part of your blood sugar load. Try not to fret. However, finding ways around them will be good.
I will post my new HbA1C when it arrives. I've only had one, it was over 100!
Best wishes
Adam
I can't remember if you have said what your BS levels are, but I can say that if mine are either high or low then it does effect my mental state. Low tends to send me very agitated, twitch and physically shaky. If they go high then I get tired, grumpy overly emotional, and unable to concentrate. I basically start to behave like a tired 3 year old. Fortunately I now realise what is happening and why and can do something about it, even if it is just running up and down the stairs a few times.
I think eat when you want, my eating times are all over the place and it doesn't seem to matterjust wondering..
does anyone think that eating at 7.30 at night is too late for a diabetic? as my shifts are often late ones.. 6.16pm finishes... drive home get changed prepare and cook food etc. it can be quite late eating. however my boss has agreed to let me finish no later that 5, apart from one day a week. i feel like i am being unfair on the other staff though.. :-( would i be better eating at around 6-6.30 every night? or am i ok at 7.30? does it make a difference to a diabetic? x
I find I am best if I can make sure that the gap between meals is between 3 and 5 hours, so to eat at 7.30 I would need to be have lunch at about 3.30 ish. Less than 3 hours and my BS won't have dropped to my normal pre meal level, more than 5 hours and I start to drop too much and my liver seem overly enthusiastic in dumping glucose into my blood stream which also puts my pre meal level higher than I would like. If I know I will have to go more than 5 hours between eating I try and have a low carb snack, something containing about 5 - 10g of carbs as this seems to be enough to hold my BS stable and prevent a liver dump.
We rarely eat that early, because we fit our evening meal around my partner's shifts.
And now the evenings are longer, I often take the dogs out immediately after work and before eating.
I don't find it a problem.
However, I do make sure that I have easy, instant snacks available at all times - if you open my fridge and cupboards you will always find a few of the following:
Cheese slices
Mattersons sausage
Yoghurt (Greek full fat)
Pork scratchings
9bars
Berries and cream
70% choc
Sunflower seeds
Nuts
Nut butters
So if I find myself going too long between lunch and evening meal, there is always something available.
And I've learned to have something in my bag 24/7. Just in case.
I have a history of hypos, so have learned to eat before I feel wobbly, shakey or spacey. That way I keep on an even keel.
Ooh! Be careful of those naked bars. They sweeten them with dates, which are VERY high in sugar...
9 bars are snack bars made of seeds and nuts. They come in several flavours (I have learned to avoid the fruity ones!). Despite looking as though they are quite carby, they actually seem very slow release, and work very well for me.
I find them in tescos, Asda or buy them direct online. Worth shopping around for when they are on special.
Revealing guilty secret: we get deliveries. I try to avoid the shopping trolley bumper car rally whenever possible (sets my back off, every time).
I think they are in the snack bar section of Asda. Maybe.
well im not sure i could keep myself out of the supermarket! i would still have to pop in once a week! hahah!!I used to enjoy my food shopping days too, but husband took over this "duty" when he retired early , and has since decided that online shopping is the way to go. I do miss both choosing fresh fruits and veggies, and having a nosey round to see what looks good. But one advantage of online shopping is that I can view the nutritional labelling at my leisure!
Robbity
that sounds like a good idea! but i think i will stick with my shopping myselfI tend to do my shopping early Saturday as Asda is quite civilised at that time, I like to be able to chose my own items, you see the staff packing the multi basket trolleys and just throwing things in. I have heard people say they do click and collect for tinned and packaged items, and then go in and pick their own meat and veg out when they collect the rest, seem to be a reasonable compromise if you really hate doing the shopping.
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