Hi all
I went to doctors for results of blood tests today and was told I am diabetic. I was told the norm was 48 and my reading was 115.
I don’t understand why other people’s readings are 8 or 10 etc???
Also worried how this will effect my lifestyle and what I can or can’t eat or drink!!
I would appreciate any info on the above
Thanks
Lee
Hey Lee,
Others have tackled the numbers, so I'm just going to put my 2 cents in regarding lifestyle. Yeah, it might change. Technically speaking, it should, really. (Medication and insulin are an option of course, but those have their own drawbacks.) But what exactly are you worried about in that regard? What do you think you'll miss? Are there routines you don't want to go without? If you give us specifics, maybe we can offer ideas?
Diabetes had me exhausted all day. When I woke up, all I wanted to do was have a lie down, only to realise I already was laying down, and had been for 8 hours or so, and still didn't feel rested. I did change my diet to low carb, high fat. I could ditch the diabetes meds and the statins in 3 months. And after a year and a half of that I went a step further with keto and intermittent fasting. My latest HbA1c was 34 (non diabetic range), and though I stay indoors on weekdays mostly, on the weekends I go for, to me, lengthy walks, hauling camera equipment around, as photography is my outdoorsy-hobby. Which 2 years ago was all still out of the question without looking for a chair every half mile. So the diet/lifestyle change has made me a happier, healthier person than I was, (plus a whole lot lighter) so it doesn't have to be a bad thing. Honest.
Meals, for me, look like this;
Breakfast could be just tea or coffee, nothing else. If I do have breakfast it's 3 eggs, bacon, cheese and mushrooms and/or cherry tomatoes.
Lunch can be salads with tuna, mayo, capers and olives, or goats cheese based, or salmon... Sometimes if I want quick and easy I'll just have some celeey sticks with hummus. Makes me feel like a hipster saying ut though, haha.
Evenings I usually have broccoli or cauliflower rice with some bacon and cheese, and meat or fish.
Snacks for me are cheese, olives, nuts and extremely dark chocolate.
If I'm out and there's no option of having any of the above, I can still resort to a Burger King or a McD's; order any hamburger and ask for them to hold the bun. Voila, low carb, even in fast food.
Notice there are hardly any carbs in there? Mainly because as T2's, we can't process them back out of our bodies. Potatoes, bread, rice, fruit, (berries are okay) underground veggies, corn, cereal, they all tend to spike us. If you want to find out what is harmful to you, buy a meter. NHS is probably not going to pay for one, but it is truly invaluable. Test before eating and 2 hours after. If your bloodsugar's gone up more than 2 mmol/l, the meal was more than your body could handle.
You can do this. If you want to. It's not as hard as it may seem, and the rewards are pretty awesome. No complications are so worth it.
Of course, you can go with medication and insulin, but, and this is a big but, if you go that route, diabetes is a progressive disease. You will need more meds and more insulin, step by step. Some people's pancreasses are too far gone to go without meds entirely, but they have also stopped the diabetic progress by adding a diet. Quite a few of us are diet-only controlled, while still coming from a HbA1c as high as yours. So it's up to you, really.
For me, my husband was my main motivator. I am chronically ill so he takes the brunt of the housework and takes care of me, when I am unable to due to chronic pain or anxiety/depression. I didn't want him to have to deal with my amputated feet, dialysis, blindness, or becoming an early widower on top of it all. So I went into it with a vengance, and it worked. I hope you find a reason to take care of yourself too.
Good luck,
Jo