XxBeaudynexX
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
I am so fed up. Every special occasion. Every 'enjoyable' time. There it is. Ruining everything.
My pump set failed at 12pm on Christmas Day so I had to sit and watch all the normal people enjoying Christmas lunch with a blood sugar of 18, feeling ill, and I couldn't eat anything. One piece of toast I had on Christmas Day to eat and that was all. I know it's not the end of the world but it just spoils everything. I can't plan anything in case it's a day my blood sugars aren't behaving. I can't go out for meals. I can't go on holiday. I can't sleep more than two hours in a stretch as I have to get up to check my blood sugar. And after all that my a1c remains mediocre at 46. What is the point?! I may as well give up.
It's not like I can think in six months it'll be better. In a year. Two years. Because it won't ever be better, this is how it'll be for the rest of my life.
I don't understand how people with t1 say they can do everything other people do or how t1 fits in with them. Mine dominates my life every second of the day and night.
I thought that until I had a kidney pancreas transplant in 2013, after 54 years of Type 1. I have been rejuvenated, even at the age of 59. You live in the right times for this sort of miracle. I hope you have the luck I have hadWhat's going to change? It's permanent.
Don't forget that in my first 20 years, treatment was at best primeval and largely guesswork. Talking to a retired doctor who was at University College Hospital London up until the mid 1980's, she said that they didn't really know what they had to do for a considerable part of her career - they were just glad to keep people alive. We live in VERY different times and it is not in any government's interest to ignore finding a cure. I hope for your sake that my optimism is not unfoundedAt that rate I will be eligible by the time I'm seventy-eight years old.
Don't forget that in my first 20 years, treatment was at best primeval and largely guesswork. Talking to a retired doctor who was at University College Hospital London up until the mid 1980's, she said that they didn't really know what they had to do for a considerable part of her career - they were just glad to keep people alive. We live in VERY different times and it is not in any government's interest to ignore finding a cure. I hope for your sake that my optimism is not unfounded
What was the reason for yoyr transplant? Ive been type 1 for almost 43 years,lost a lot of my sight and have kidney problems but im only at stage 1.Im not sure i would qualify.I thought that until I had a kidney pancreas transplant in 2013, after 54 years of Type 1. I have been rejuvenated, even at the age of 59. You live in the right times for this sort of miracle. I hope you have the luck I have had
What was the reason for yoyr transplant? Ive been type 1 for almost 43 years,lost a lot of my sight and have kidney problems but im only at stage 1.Im not sure i would qualify.
Hi @nessals946. I feel almost a traitor when I talk to people like you. I was put on the waiting list for a kidney/pancreas transplant at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge in early 2012. Prior to that they had noticed kidney problems as far back as 1973, when I was fifteen. Fortunately I got a place at King's College, University of London and was therefore made an in- and outpatient at King's College Hospital. I was looked after by this internationally respected Diabetic Department for 22 years, and although my kidney function did not stop deteriorating, they slowed the process down, having read the Riot Act! In 2000 I was referred to Addenbrooke's Hospital Cambridge, who gave an estimated 5 years before I would go on dialysis. by 2012 my Creatinine level was over 600 and hence going on the list. As it happened, they decided that in spite of very poor kidney function, for a nearly 54 year-old I was remarkably fit, especially regarding heart and liver. So they suggested pancreas while they were at it. To this day that is the most astonishing suggestion in my entire life. They ordered me to go home to think about it, but my mind was already made up!After six false alarms, I had the op on 13th August 2013. I had been given an appointment to start dialysis on 22nd August...As Fats Waller sang: "I believe in miracles"What was the reason for yoyr transplant? Ive been type 1 for almost 43 years,lost a lot of my sight and have kidney problems but im only at stage 1.Im not sure i would qualify.
You don't have to be on lantus. There are other insulins (tresiba???). Can you phone your clinic and make a pest of yourself till they give you an emergency appointment? (Freely admit I'm out of date with UK medical system, since I moved to Australia in 1999 and NZ this year). Good luck.Going by the timing of peak crappiness it's lantus, though.
I don't get this at all.
OK lots of people are better at this than me and I am not arguing with them for a heartbeat.
But how can you possibly not resent it. I didn't do anything. I looked after myself. I went running, I ate right, I was in decent shape. It isn't in my family. I was happy, I was living my life, I had a job I was good at and now I am at the very least, far less good at it, I am turning down work I would desperately love to do because I just can't handle it. It is slowly wrecking everything and I did not ask for this in any way.
How can you possibly not resent it. It's hateful.
What's going to change? It's permanent.
I think I was diagnosed around the same time as you. I've chosen option 1. I try and keep BG levels <10. I haven't given up my chocolate addiction - in fact I need it to be able to exercise - but I have given up pasta because eating it leaves me feeling hungover. That's about the only change diet wise.As far as I know the options are:
1) don't be so careful - have a nicer life now - have a worse life later
2) be really careful - have a worse life now - have a nicer life later
But either way it will probably get me in the end and even the less careful option is miserable.
Or, you are fortunate that you have at least 20 years head start on @Circuspony to benefit from medical advances. As for your options, well, The Grim Reaper gets us all in the end. It could be any number of things - cancer, heart disease, accident, the No. 57 bus ***. And yes, it could be T1. But considering the longevity of some members with T1, then the other tricks of the man with the scythe are more likely. I am sorry to be so dismissive but I fear that you are not yet in a position to take any advice and support, of which there is a considerable amount in this thread, and every post of yours is a negative counter-argument. Many others have said that you should try and find counselling or even a helpline: voicing your fears, sadness and anger against the ****** hand you have been dealt will help you to work through those emotions. I do send you my virtual hug and fervent hope that you can find a better way to ease your pain, but it looks as if we cannot help you, sadly, even though we all dearly would wish to. XYes well unfortunately I'm 24.
Yes well unfortunately I'm 24.
My sister also type1 was ten when diagnosed and nobody in family at that time was ever diabetic that was 46 years ago, then at 18 years of age my grandson was diagnosed type1,I'm type2 my grandson was at first like you he felt is life wasn't worth living because he only dwelt on what he couldn't do like going out drinking with friends etc. But he's Now in his thirties and leads a full life works miles away from home driving their everyday and has had some issues to deal with but on the whole he's doing good.Yes well unfortunately I'm 24.
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