I agree, with diabetes you need to carry on with your life. I was diagnosed at 43 with type 1, i have to inject 4 times a day, it was a shock it changed my life but with medication and a positive out look on life, I carry on with my life, don’t let your diabetes control your life. You have your good days and bad days everyone does but you are alive, live every day to the full.Diabetes control........... 80% mental/emotional. 15% medication. 5% winging it.
Your diabetes has got you exactly where it wants you. At its mercy. It's dictating life for you.
The more you fight the stronger it becomes. It will thrive and grow on your negativity.
You need to find a more positive approach to life.
A pump failure shouldn't create as much distress as it did.
A high BS level on Christmas Day shouldn't be a problem if your long term (HbA1C) control is as good as you say.
Life is only ruined when it ceases. You was fortunate to see Christmas Day, that is life, be positive.
Consider your avatar. I feel it says too much about you as an individual. ExtremelyLUcky is what it needs to say. You're here , you're alive and you're a bad ass in control diabetic.
Yes I used to feel bitter about the fact I'd never see my children get married or graduate or meet my grandchildren.
Now I'm glad it takes years off my life. I'm hoping not to make it to 50. That means only another 15 years of it at most.
It is impossible to live life at all in my experience.
Tonight dh said let's get a take away as it's new year. Well obviously I can't eat anything from an Indian take away. I mean I can't eat an apple so I think rice may be out of the question.
Said I'd order something for him but I would just have a Diet Coke and now he's annoyed because he says he doesn't want one on his own. However if I order it and don't eat it he will be more annoyed as it's a waste of money. But I don't want to start 2018 with a blood sugar of 20 so will just cook something for him and the children and go to bed I think.
It is impossible to live life at all in my experience.
Tonight dh said let's get a take away as it's new year. Well obviously I can't eat anything from an Indian take away. I mean I can't eat an apple so I think rice may be out of the question.
Said I'd order something for him but I would just have a Diet Coke and now he's annoyed because he says he doesn't want one on his own. However if I order it and don't eat it he will be more annoyed as it's a waste of money. But I don't want to start 2018 with a blood sugar of 20 so will just cook something for him and the children and go to bed I think.
Just to put a little perspective on it, I HAD Type 1 from 1959 to 2013 and I'm only 59 now. Throughout my life until 2012 the torture of "We think a cure could be available within 5 years" regularly reared it's demonic head with depressing outcomes. When I started at King's College, University of London in 1978, I already had kidney and retinal damage and life was bleak. I was told at the age of 13 that I might make it to 20 and at the age of 20 an actuary informed my father that I would be lucky to reach forty.I just feel at the moment like it is all too much really.
I'm so worried that my children are going to be t1 as well, that I've selfishly inflicted this life sentence on them. I feel a lot of the time like I'd be better off dead than having t1 diabetes, it has sucked all the joy and fun from everything. It is no longer a death sentence - or at least it's a slower death sentence - but it is still a life sentence isn't it?
Thanks everyone for your support. I keep hoping and hoping that technology will improve even more - to the point of a bionic pancreas - because I don't see any cure on the horizon to be honest.
If I'm lucky I may now live to be in my mid 60s so I am looking at 40 years of it. It's like being sent to prison.
Yes I used to feel bitter about the fact I'd never see my children get married or graduate or meet my grandchildren.
Now I'm glad it takes years off my life. I'm hoping not to make it to 50. That means only another 15 years of it at most.
To be honest I feel I'd be better off dead. I'm a drain on the NHS and it'll only get worse when I develop complications.
This is depression talking. There are many perfectly healthy T1s on here who've been T1 for 40 years or more (remember the oldest ones won't be posting because they're less computer literate). It's an admittedly small sample size, but 4 out of the 5 long term T1s that I've known personally have led perfectly normal lives (sport, work, kids etc). Diabetes doesn't have to rule you. The 5th one does have problems but he has serious learning disabilities combined with other health issues, so is unable to manage his own diabetes.I can't really do anything other than sit around nursing myself.
Most of the people at the clinic are T2s. It's not the same illness. (I know many people posting here are T2s who've successfully controlled their illness with diet/lifestyle changes but there are a large number of T2s who haven't.) And remember, the better diabetic control you have, the less often you attend a clinic.I see it every time I sit waiting at the clinic and it is literally a nightmare.
As far as I know depression is only a mental health problem when it's not being legitimately caused by anything. Personally I am totally ****** off but I don't think there's any great secret why. I don't want to be prescribed some sort of pills that will make me dance around happily loving the fact that I can't really do anything other than sit around nursing myself.
As to having kids I wouldn't even think about it, by the numbers given here it is a three times greater likelihood that the baby would develop diabetes, and I have read that it is a 1 in 17 chance if the mother has it. I would not sentence my worst enemy to this let alone my child. I was never someone who definitely wanted children but it would have been nice to have the choice, I do not feel that I can reasonably make that choice anymore.
I have read about 12 to 20 years reduction in life expectancy, I would normally expect to make mid 70s perhaps so perhaps around 60 is a realistic expectation. I did not know that I was already nearly half way through my life at 24 but apparently I had better get used to that idea. I am also not very anxious to hang around until I'm 90 on the basis that I know what is very probably going to happen to me and it is not very nice, I see it every time I sit waiting at the clinic and it is literally a nightmare.
In the end I have said the same thing, it sucks the fun out of everything, it reminds you it's there just often enough that you can never really get away from it. It's almost exactly designed to be utterly utterly hideous and miserable and if someone told me that oh, it's been a big mistake, it's not diabetes and you actually have six months to live, my first thought would be thank god for that.
But they might not feel this way.NO NO NO. I'm a T1 and a daughter of a T1 and am so happy to have been born. Thank you Mum.
You're kids will get angry at you for being unhappy. They deserve a happy dad. You can give them that.But they might not feel this way.
I'm a t1 of a t1 father and I am NOT happy I am here.
I'm the mother not the father. My own dad is t1.You're kids will get angry at you for being unhappy. They deserve a happy dad. You can give them that.
Why make your kids unhappy because you're diabetic?
Your misery in depression is the problem not the diabetes.
None diabetics get depression too.
Don't make your kids suffer your I'll mental health, go and TALK to your GP.
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?