SarahCarrick
Member
- Messages
- 16
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
@SarahCarrickHi there ... Looking for a bit of advice. I was diagnosed on 26th aug with type 1. I was in hospital for three night with DKA. My blood was 32.7 when I was admitted. Am now taking novarapid and levemir. I feel utterly overwhelmed and a bit lost and have already had enough of diabetes. My hba1c readings have been 123, 112 and now is 92. I've been told that it will b 18 months before I can do Dafne as I have to b diagnosed a year before I can go on waiting list. I've been told I must eat carbs at every meal and not eat anything with more than 10g sugar per 100g. My average bg readings have gone from being 20 each day to around 8. I think I am trying my best but still am over correcting with hypos and get different advice from GP and diabetic nurse who is slightly patronising. Can anyone suggest anything I should be doing? I've seen that there are carb counting things online similar to dafne... Are these easy enough for a beginner or should I wait?
I definitely think you are depressed, but diabetes does not have to be the end all. It can be controlled with diet and some exercise, mainly diet.I guess diabetes burnout is my problem at present, although I've never heard of such a thing before. I've been thinking recently "why bother? Why not just forget the diabetes - eat and drink what I want (it wouldn't be extreme, but I might have more carbs) and just take the consequences. If I'm going to die with this thing anyway, I might as well enjoy what time I have left and maybe pop off before my insurance runs out (which I find it will do when I'm 70)". I am well into my 70th year at present. I don't give up, but only because I have a very sick husband who needs 24 hour care and I don't want to leave such a burden to my sons, so I hang on meantime. Once he goes though ... who cares? Am I depressed do you think? Or is this a fairly normal reaction?
I definitely think you are depressed, but diabetes does not have to be the end all. It can be controlled with diet and some exercise, mainly diet.
I was diagnosed with Type 2 in September 2012. I immediately went into a very low carb diet and the levels were normalized. I went a bit off the track in the last 6 months and they crept up a little bit (not much).
Just two weeks ago I started on the Newcastle Diet and they have gone back to normal levels again. I have already stopped one capsule of Metmorfin and I expect to stop all of them in a few more weeks. I am also 69 now and I don't intend for diabetes to take me down.
Don't forget that if you give up it is not a matter of popping off (as you describe it) but it could mean amputation, stroke or blindness and you don't want to be a burden to your children.
I wish you the best, but trust me it can be beaten with a bit of effort!
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