barriebanana
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 113
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
Hi everyone I new here
I was diagnosed T2 around 2 years ago
I still don't have a regular plan of diet and exercise
I look through diabetic cookery books and make recipes from them some weeks and then slip back to my love of chips (actifry) burgers curries other weeks
Exercise swimming every weekday some weeks others the odd day
Drink too much wine
I have recently bought a meter which is giving me more determination to take back control
I would love to talk to someone regularly for a bit of mutual support
Hi everyone I new here
I was diagnosed T2 around 2 years ago
I still don't have a regular plan of diet and exercise
I look through diabetic cookery books and make recipes from them some weeks and then slip back to my love of chips (actifry) burgers curries other weeks
Exercise swimming every weekday some weeks others the odd day
Drink too much wine
I have recently bought a meter which is giving me more determination to take back control
I would love to talk to someone regularly for a bit of mutual support
Welcome to the forum @barriebanana. A wise decision, as this is something very dificult to go alone. Having a meter will assist in keeping good control.Hi everyone I new here
I was diagnosed T2 around 2 years ago
I still don't have a regular plan of diet and exercise
I look through diabetic cookery books and make recipes from them some weeks and then slip back to my love of chips (actifry) burgers curries other weeks
Exercise swimming every weekday some weeks others the odd day
Drink too much wine
I have recently bought a meter which is giving me more determination to take back control
I would love to talk to someone regularly for a bit of mutual support
Hi. Good move buying the meter. Testing before and 2-2.5 hours after eating will soon let your know what to avoid/reduce. I'd advise recording the readings alongside details of what you ate...it's the best way to see patterns at a glance. By the way, most burgers are fine...and a number of curries are too. It's the chips you need to avoid. I used to love a nan bread with a curry but they are crazy high in carbohydrates. I recently found these microwave or oven cook curries that are very low in carbs and taste delicious. I am even managing a small amount of chips these days if my pre-meal level is low enough. You will get there but try your best to cut out things as you identify them as villains of the piece. If you arr looking at sugar content on labels..stop..start looking at carbohydrate content and aim for the stuff that is 10g of carb or less per 100g...that is where you will make the difference. The more you inform yourself, the more control you will have and the better you will feel about all of it. Good luck.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?