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Feeling upset and lonely about type 1
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<blockquote data-quote="JMK1954" data-source="post: 2035004" data-attributes="member: 352098"><p>Well, I was aged 50 when my mum came with me to a hospital appointment (nothing to do with diabetes). We planned to go into the city centre afterwards. As I got up to walk into the consultant's office, my mum started producing a selection of cakes and biscuits from her shopping bag and thrusting them in my direction, with the comment, 'You might go hypo'. (I had been diagnosed 40 years at this point and was fully-equipped with glucose in my handbag and my coat pocket and biscuits in my own shopping bag. </p><p></p><p>I apologised to the consultant because I knew my BP would be up when checked and I was feeling really exasperated. It was slightly up. She smiled and said she had met mother-induced raised blood pressure before. To be honest, I think my son suffers from it at times. I think the problem is almost universal.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JMK1954, post: 2035004, member: 352098"] Well, I was aged 50 when my mum came with me to a hospital appointment (nothing to do with diabetes). We planned to go into the city centre afterwards. As I got up to walk into the consultant's office, my mum started producing a selection of cakes and biscuits from her shopping bag and thrusting them in my direction, with the comment, 'You might go hypo'. (I had been diagnosed 40 years at this point and was fully-equipped with glucose in my handbag and my coat pocket and biscuits in my own shopping bag. I apologised to the consultant because I knew my BP would be up when checked and I was feeling really exasperated. It was slightly up. She smiled and said she had met mother-induced raised blood pressure before. To be honest, I think my son suffers from it at times. I think the problem is almost universal. [/QUOTE]
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