I do have unexplained tiredness and have had several trials of different insulins, and to be perfectly frank I remember becoming intensely more aware of the tiredness when I became a guinea pig for human insulin at the Institute of Child Health, London in 1981. Perhaps going from ox insulin (since 1974 aged 5) to human, triggered something in my body?
I am still wrapping my mind around my daughter's diagnosis...
Got lazier as I grew older! Latterly, my relationship with the great outdoors became popping my tent up in the Red Squirrel campsite, then adjourning to the bar at the Clachaig Inn!
And when the beer garden has this view, why not?
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** envy **Got lazier as I grew older! Latterly, my relationship with the great outdoors became popping my tent up in the Red Squirrel campsite, then adjourning to the bar at the Clachaig Inn!
And when the beer garden has this view, why not?
View attachment 23393
Love the cartoon !Understandably so. Almost thirty years in, I think my parents probably worry about it more than I do!
One thing which has made a major difference for me was starting using freestyle libre about a year ago. Instead of having to second guess with strip testing and only catching highs and lows after they happened, being able to see a graph and direction indicator whenever I want allows me to predict developing situations and catch them with a slight 5g or 1 or 2u tweak and proactively stop them happening.
Non-Ts, including a lot of old school docs, cannot truly understand the significance of that.
It's explored in depth by Stephen Ponder in his book Sugar Surfing. Some hospitals here in Scotland recommend it in connection with cgm.
It's such a radically different approach that it's allowed me to stop thinking about T as an enemy I'm constantly fighting to thinking it more as a bit of my body has gone wrong, so I need to help it out. That way, I feel more that I'm co-operating with it, helping myself, like I might help my nephew when he falls off his bike, rather than fighting a relentless enemy. I'm at peace with my T1 because if it. Libre metaphorically levels the playing field, and literally levels my blood sugars!
So, I'd encourage you to look into getting cgm. Don't know what the score is with libre in the USA at the moment is - last I looked was that it was just the patient-blinded Libre Pro version, don't know if the patient viewable version is licensed yet, but there's also Dexcom and Medtronic available in USA. They're all good.
There's a good book, Breakthrough...by Thea Cooper, which deals with the discovery of insulin but also the humanity of it all, by covering Elizabeth Hughes, the daughter of a prominent politician at the time. There's a moving letter by her shortly after she first starts getting insulin: she decides she's going to get by without her nurse and be, "the captain of my own ship." T1 is never going to be a walk in the park, but I found reading that book makes me appreciate how (relatively) easy things are now compared to the early days.
Google Eva Saxl too for some inspiration: fled to Shanghai in the war to escape the Nazis only to find insulin supplies were cut of by the invading Japanese. Found a paper on insulin production, ended up making her own in a make shift lab from water buffalo pancreases! Saved hundreds of others too. Hero. I can never complain about my lot when someone in those circumstances is capable of that.
Best of luck!
And remember...
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PS: there's a lot of good stuff on the ncbi site you mentioned. You should be able to post links now. I think it's just restricted for the first 3 or 5 posts for newbies to avoid spamming.
One thing which has made a major difference for me was starting using freestyle libre about a year ago. Instead of having to second guess with strip testing and only catching highs and lows after they happened, being able to see a graph and direction indicator whenever I want allows me to predict developing situations and catch them with a slight 5g or 1 or 2u tweak and proactively stop them happening.
Non-Ts, including a lot of old school docs, cannot truly understand the significance of that.
It's such a radically different approach that it's allowed me to stop thinking about T as an enemy I'm constantly fighting to thinking it more as a bit of my body has gone wrong, so I need to help it out. That way, I feel more that I'm co-operating with it, helping myself, like I might help my nephew when he falls off his bike, rather than fighting a relentless enemy. I'm at peace with my T1 because if it. Libre metaphorically levels the playing field, and literally levels my blood sugars!.
Anyone here volunteering to pass on the idea to Elon Musk/ Tim cook/ Bill Gates?
That gave me a lot of hope....
Hi Everyone,
A little confused by differing opinions on tiredness for type 1s. I am very tired a lot. I have no underlying conditions and no deficiencies and sleep and eat fine. My sugars are largely under control aside from the odd blip or really hot weather like we have just had. My DSN has said that its just part of the condition which is totally ok but.....when on this forum, people tend to say that we shouldnt be tired just because of diabetes so I am a bit confused.
Do any of you suffer this tiredness with no other explanations? Ive read up on it and fatigue has been attributed to type 1 even when well managed so not sure why thats not more commonly said in other threads.
I have been T1 for 25years. I have never had massive energy levels! I have always kept fit, ate well and my HBACs have always been well in control!! I have been told that diabetes is a strain on the body and that is why the extra tiredness is felt! I always put my energy levels down to T1... Hope that makes you feel a bit more normal..... Everyone is different so don't let other people experience make you feel bad. We are all individuals XHi Everyone,
A little confused by differing opinions on tiredness for type 1s. I am very tired a lot. I have no underlying conditions and no deficiencies and sleep and eat fine. My sugars are largely under control aside from the odd blip or really hot weather like we have just had. My DSN has said that its just part of the condition which is totally ok but.....when on this forum, people tend to say that we shouldnt be tired just because of diabetes so I am a bit confused.
Do any of you suffer this tiredness with no other explanations? Ive read up on it and fatigue has been attributed to type 1 even when well managed so not sure why thats not more commonly said in other threads.
Could you be overdosing on a vitamin, somewhere? Just a thought. Some eat too many brazil nuts and that can be enough to cause a problem.I get HB bloods done once a year, the last being in February 2017, it was 13.6, which is normal for a female. For most of my adult life I've included vitamins and nutrition in my diet to avoid defficiencies, I get my potassium, iron etc.., I exercise daily (less strenuously than I did in my 20s and 30s when I used to climb and cycle a lot), I've toned it down because of work demands/time. Thankfully I don't have any nutrition defficiencies. Yet I sometimes feel as though I'm low on something or just pulling myself through, which is demoralising but not the end of the world.
I became aware of 'odd' tiredness at around age 6 (I was diagnosed T1 at age 5), I remember going to bed at night feeling tired and waking up tired but still active like most kids. That's when blood defficiency tests started, to rule out anaemia/cancer/low calcium etc...Always shown normal which is why I harp on about accepting my tiredness as a part of living. I 'cope' with it and live actively (as agesture towards diabetes) but some days are worse than others and I can become a Moaner Lisa about it. Yesterday was on those bad days, like yesterday. By 8 p.m I was practically singing the blues about the meaning of life.
I regularly insist on follow up tests, especially for anaemia, and if refused due to cutbacks I'll pay for a test. Nothing to prove a reason for concern.
It's fantastic that your iron tablets have made such a difference to your breathing and tiredness. I take several supplements as a precaution, including 60 mg iron daily, but my tiredness is just there, it's more like a drained feeling. It's an enigma, a complete mystery - but life goes on, does it not!
I like it!Got lazier as I grew older! Latterly, my relationship with the great outdoors became popping my tent up in the Red Squirrel campsite, then adjourning to the bar at the Clachaig Inn!
And when the beer garden has this view, why not?
View attachment 23393
Thanks so much christine18! Also lovely to hear from someone whos had it that long and still healthyI have been T1 for 25years. I have never had massive energy levels! I have always kept fit, ate well and my HBACs have always been well in control!! I have been told that diabetes is a strain on the body and that is why the extra tiredness is felt! I always put my energy levels down to T1... Hope that makes you feel a bit more normal..... Everyone is different so don't let other people experience make you feel bad. We are all individuals X
The vitamins I take, the dosage, are based on blood count readings. I try not to guess if I'm overdosing and I get bloods done twice year, the second batch of tests paid for privately as I'm allowed one set of full blood tests.Could you be overdosing on a vitamin, somewhere? Just a thought. Some eat too many brazil nuts and that can be enough to cause a problem.
I sympathise. I have huge tiredness too. Mostly from medical conditions and meds to keep me alive which cause tiredness.The vitamins I take, the dosage, are based on blood count readings. I try not to guess if I'm overdosing and I get bloods done twice year, the second batch of tests paid for privately as I'm allowed one set of full blood tests.
My heart goes out to you, truly. It's tough feeling run down, and your meds are a kind of obligation in your life that sometimes makes you yearn for that lost feeling of vim and vigour, like you said. I hope you can somehow find ways to keep your morale up, it's not easy, but my thoughts are with you.I sympathise. I have huge tiredness too. Mostly from medical conditions and meds to keep me alive which cause tiredness.
I'd love my youthful energy back.
I get told I'm getting older, not surprised with all your meds and you do have a few medical conditions.
I'm shattered, even now typing this, I need to go back to bed.
Its my own fault , I should have had my afternoon nap earlier but mr ickihun wanted supervising in the garden. He cannot do anything on his own anymore, since his breakdown. I had it so I would watch out for him out of kitchen window but he was nervous today so he needed me.
No energy at all.
Food is just a necessity for me now. I'm trying to prepare my stomach for an operation which could reduce some tablets.
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