Thanks, I suspect that would be the same with me. I should test more regularly for a week or so and look for patterns but I already get through so many test strips!What works for me (I can't give advice about what might work for you) is to eat something a bit fatty and very low carb or carb free for breakfast as, if I don't, my BG just carries on rising until just before lunchtime. My breakfast doesn't make it go down though - except on rare occasions - it just stops the rise. I'm a veggie so I usually have scrambled eggs or an omelette.
Your nurse sounds surprisingly sensible. I wish mine was like that!
“If you have a liver releasing even more glucose” my mentality is, if my BG is high, I burn it, otherwise, where does it go? What burns BG? If my liver dumps, I’ll burn that too! .. The solution, eat if your BG is high doesn’t sit well with me. Nor does not exercising in a fasted state. I figure, I’ll burn it allThe trouble is that - exercising/being particulalry active if you have a liver releasing even more glucose malfunction as part of your diabetes, which is the Dawn Phenomenon not being at normal levels, but elevated at diabetic levels - the worse thing can be to exercise on an empty stomach. Your glucose elevation can get very high indeed. Or at the very least - not 'normal'as it would be for someone without the blood glucose regulation problem, but becomes abnormally elevated. (This is certainly my own physical situation.)
I have experimented with 'which time to be physically active is best', with breakfast, and without, for the morning experimentation and it was not pretty in the a.m. without at least a wee shot of protein (hence the egg) to calm my liver and the DP first. Greek yoghurt is also good, as in just a small amount - half a wee pottle. (But that is more for the warm season. Something warm for the cold and damp and wet, the current experience, suits me better. )
For yourself - the only way you are going to know what is best for you is to eat and meter, and, to exercise and meter. And check out how you feel physically. (I know for instance I am not the best exercising in a fasting state.) When I incorporate intermittent fasting or fasting into my treatment (I've been a bit slack lately - during our national emergency/lockdown in NZ the last thing I wanted to do was not eat), I am not my usual active self, as it does not suit my constitution, the diabetes included, to be so on an empty stomach.
People, even people with blood glucose dysregulation, maybe even especially those with dysregulation? typically differ wildly on their personal tastes and feel-good conditions when it comes to the body, and to eating, and to physical activity. You will know what suits you and your BG levesl, is my best guess, soon enough.
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