If you read the comments, the author is named as Dr Stephen Ponder.An excellent piece, thanks for posting. I'm just curious as to how people know whether the author is male or female? I didn't read any indication of that in the post. Granted, given the author's likely age they are more likely to be male, since 50 years ago most doctors were male, but I don't think we are told their gender in the post.
Thanks, I hadn't seen that.If you read the comments, the author is named as Dr Stephen Ponder.
I agree Anaelena. It opened my eyes to a work colleague who continually criticises what I eat/drink. Yet they eat continually throughout the day (diabetic t2 as well) stuffing herself with anything and everything anybody brings in. A big shopping bag with containers of food, chocolate, crisps, biscuits and several cans fizzy drinks. Her excuse? My doctor says I should eat 6 small meals a day!!
Sorry everybody, rant over.
I have experienced a lot of bullying from healthcare professionals other than my GP. I have ended up crying, several times. A consultant shouted at me for wearing low heeled closed-toe slingbacks, a nurse tried to prevent me leaving a room, physically. I've been told not to eat cakes and biscuits (I didn't before diagnosis anyway) by umpteen nurses and to eat porridge also, even if they are way fatter than me.
I don't tell people that I have diabetes in real life or social media other than here because people are so judgmental. I get really annoyed with my mother for telling people, especially when her friends start recommending diets to me !
If I test away from home and some one asks I tell them I have carbohydrate intolerance. That works, I get sympathy without judgment.
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