Maggie/Magpie
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 279
- Location
- Isle of Wight, U.K
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Butternut Squash, Cabbage and confrontation.
Ok thanks.The tests I did on dumplings years ago suggested that they affected your blood sugar according to how old they were. Fresh dumplings with the suet still there were not a problem. Old dumplings (the next day) were a problem.
Hi Maggie
She is not such a good friend if she serves you food that is bad for you and takes offence if you don't eat it.
Can you invite her to yours and dish up healthy food. Or just eat the healthy bits of food and say the remaining food is "killer food". Because that is the end result, too much stodgy food is bad for us all, especially us .
I have been blaze about my condition and am now experiencing effects. I get burning feet and sensations in my legs. I try and tell myself that carbs, especially sugar, are directly causing this; and since I have listened to myself the symptoms have improved.
Good luck with your "friend"
I think if it were me I would just eat the stew and leave the dumplings and say sorry but can't have those due to my diabetes and if you do it every week (where possible) the penny might drop or alternatively suggest a few low carb meals for her to make as she may not like to admit she doesn't fully understand the low carb "thing".
HiIt wouldn't be the dumplings that concerned me but the gravy in the stew - and the type of vegetables used. Sorry ......
Maybe a quiet word with her next time about what you can and can't eat? If you were a vegan she wouldn't be serving you with any animal based foods. I had to do this with my friend once. I was really worried about her reaction but she was the embarrassed one and had to admit she had no idea that carbs were the problem in addition to sugar.
Hi
I know but its so difficult, I don't want to loose her friendship as she understands me on so many other level's. I've tried talking, making suggestions etc maybe I should print some info off for her, but I don't want to make life harder for her, she already puts herself out for another friend who says she can't tolerate dairy (but for some reason can eat cheese? Umm I know dosen't make sense to me either). I guess I'm trying too hard not to offend. She's now talking about dishing up potatoes in the stew as well as mash potatoe! She clearly isn't taking anything on board.
Hi,Admittedly i don't know your friend(s) but i know none of my friends would be offended when i told them i couldn't eat those. I understand the temptation issue but honestly that's something that's going to happen a lot but self control and being a bit assertive should cover those.
You have no choice but to take the bull by the horns and talk to her. Explain your condition is carb intolerance and that when you eat carbs your BS levels go sky high and this is very bad for your health.( If by chance she watched that Panorama programme the other week she may have some idea of what you are facing if you don't control matters.) If she has no idea you shouldn't eat carbs then she needs to know. If she does know but is ignoring that fact, then she isn't doing you any favours at all.
Yeah, I know your all right, it's just knowing how to approach it?
Only you know your friend and the situation, but i am a bloody minded old bird, and i value my health enough to get my point across - though i would have to think long and hard about how to do it.
Depending on the friend, i might
- take my own large salad and eat it out of the tupperware, while stabbing the chunks of meat out of the stew with my fork - leaving the dumplings, the gravy and the root veg behind
- invite her over instead of going there, and serve MY food, explaining why.
- stop going
- explain, openly and clearly, that carbs are bad for me (for all you know, she has been busily looking up carb-stuffed Diabetic Recipes online and thinks she is giving you superbly diabetic foods. There are a lot of recipes like that on the diabetes UK charity website - because they think carbs are GOOD.)
- simply stay 'I can't eat that. Can I just have a ham salad?'
- give her some recipes or the web address of some diet doctor recipes
- eat before I go, so that I don't even want her stew...
We have an interesting situation going on with my In Laws. None of them know that I am T2. I'm not hiding it. I just don't want the aggro, confusion and fuss that will accompany the revelation, and strangely I have never raised the subject. And I can't face the sympathy. I don't feel I need any sympathy - but they would offer it - in spades.
So we gently manipulate things (it isn't hard!) to always take them out to places I know I can find something. Luckily Pops loves carveries.
- they never notice that my choices are subtly different from theirs.
That really surprised me. Almost as though I wasn't the centre of their universe!
It is hard, I appreciate that, but it has to be direct whilst telling her how you absolutely love her cooking and are devastated that you can't eat it. Be full of praise.
Until you have done this it may be best to suggest either you all go out to eat, or you simply stay away in order to avoid temptation. Either that or you eat it, suffer the binge cravings, and take the consequences with your blood sugars.
I see no other choices.
It is hard, I appreciate that, but it has to be direct whilst telling her how you absolutely love her cooking and are devastated that you can't eat it. Be full of praise.
Until you have done this it may be best to suggest either you all go out to eat, or you simply stay away in order to avoid temptation. Either that or you eat it, suffer the binge cravings, and take the consequences with your blood sugars.
I see no other chioices.
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