VioletViolet
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 428
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Hello
I look at this site a lot for general health advice because my blood sugars are on the high side. I have a feeling when I started looking here that most people used to count the number of carbs they eat in a day rather than exclude certain foods. Has there been a shift in methods used? I've tried following the Diet Doctor plan but I always crack and end up bingeing on biscuits. I'm thinking it would be more successful for me to count daily carbs. Or is that asking for fututure diabetes trouble?
Thanks
I did sign up then didn't actually do it... maybe it's time to go back to it.Have you had a look at this @VioletViolet ?
http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/low-carb-program-free-10-week-course-for-t2d.87741/
Thanks for all the replies
@azure when I have my blood tested I am usually borderline and have been warned to keep my weight down. I get a fright and look after myself for a bit then drift back to poor eating habits. What I mean by "asking for future diabetes trouble" is that if I don't start taking care of myself diet wise I am likely to end up diabetic through my own eating habits. I just wondered if it's wiser to get good habits low carb wise rather than count them and have all my carbs in one yummy evening meal!
I think the way my brain works is cram all this dodgy food in now just in case one day I can't. Suffice to say I don't feel well!@VioletViolet, I too find it hard to stay motivated when you are not in one camp or the other. It's been 6 years for me being borderline/prediabetic and most days I feel just fed up. I have had ups and downs in weight and blood sugar. Moan over.
What has worked for me: this forum, getting hold of and logging my lab blood tests, getting a blood glucose meter and testing at least once a day at my problem times and understanding what it means, a fitness app to log my carbs and weight.
Most importantly finding a balance that works for me
@VioletViolet
It sounds to me as though you haven't got your own glucose meter. These are essential tools, and if you "eat to your meter" you can't go far wrong. This means testing before you eat and then again 90 minutes to 2 hours after first bite. The rise from before to after is likely to tell you what that meal has done to your levels and gives you the opportunity to look at the carbs in that meal, reduce the portion size next time, or eliminate completely. Keeping a food diary and recording all these levels alongside will be of great benefit as you will see patterns emerging and be able to see which carbs are worse for you.
I do have one, but ran out of test strips over a year ago. If there were awards for gormlessness.....
I guess you need to re-order a load!
Done! When can you move in and sort out all my other problems ???
This made me smile, @Bluetit1802 how about a low carb boot camp for the glucose impaired?Done! When can you move in and sort out all my other problems ???
Although I think I would prefer a low carb cruise in the carribean.
You may sort your own out when your strips arrive.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?