- Messages
- 4,020
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Hi - thanks for the tag @LupfHi Jo,
Just wanted to say that I really appreciate your post on another persons thread that I've just read which was very helpful to me. My lovely diabetic nurse when I was initially diagnosed seems to be quite outdated with her advice (still have chocolate but not as much to treat yourself etc.)
She told me that I must have my metformin (2 in the morning and 2 in the evening) as I actually eat the food, but looking at your post saying you should eat the food first and then have it. How long should I wait? 10 minutes, 20 minutes etc? When you mentioned the "explosive" bit that explains a few things to me, haha.
Unfortunately I never got any diet advice at all from my nurse. She forgot to put me on the NHS course that she initially offered. I was diagnosed at 110 h1abc in Jan 2023 and when I got it down to 60 she said I must know what I was doing so the diet course probably wasn't worth it.
I have got down to 38 which I am grateful for but it's meant I literally hardly eat anything anymore.
A days meal consists of 2 slices of wholemeal bread toast for breakfast with no added sugar drink (1/2 a pint). Lunch time is a sandwich of lettuce, tomato, onion, peppers and two slices of meat (ham, beef, turkey etc.). I then have dinner at about 5pm which is usually chicken, steak, gammon with a side salad (lettuce, tomato, onion, peppers) while the people I eat with have chips, jacket potatoes, new potatoes.
Does this sound ok to you?
I noticed that you mention greek yoghurt so I'm going to start having that as I do really like yoghurt.
Any other food recommendations would be gratefully received. I have moved last year and have got my first meeting with the diabetic nurse in my new area next week - I have a feeling that because I am down to 38 she is probably going to just tell me to carry on with what I am doing. To be honest, because the old diabetic nurse seemed a bit outdated with her approach (she was asounded that I got it down from 110 so quickly and kept it off as she said most of her other patients hadn't been able to do that - but if the advice she gives isn't the greatest ......).
She told me that crisps were fine to eat diabetes wise (she did say there are no health benefits at all to them but they are a nice treat). Is the thinking of that still the same? I thought potatoes were bad so I stopped eating crisps entirely (I do really miss them).
That's an amazing reduction. Well done.
The thing about metformin is that it has zero impact on carb/glucose in your food or bloodstream. What it does is stop your liver making glucose when it thinks you need it. Modern science knows it does this, but how it does this "isn't fully understood" (Bilous and Donnelly Handbook of Diabetes). What that means in practice is that often people find that their BG (HbA1c) will rise a little if they stop taking metformin because the liver will try to push BG levels up to where it thinks they should be - and that might be quite a bit higher than where you currently are.
I have no personal experience of this myself (never having taken any medication) but I do wonder if building up a bit of "experience" at the normal BG level might make the liver less inclined to try to raise levels if/when metformin is stopped.
I would disagree with the nurse about crisps. They're potato - and about 70% carb. I know they're only 13-14g carb a (small) bag but personally one bag is never enough and two is too many. Bear in mind that I aim for around 20g carb/day total, so one bag is nearly a full day ration. I also don't go near bread at all, for much the same reason. I do buy low carb rolls and bagels at about 3g carb each, which you definitely aren't going to be fooled into thinking are "real bread" but do allow for bacon sandwiches etc.
Is it sustainable? I'm over five years in, and if anything it's got much easier as time has passed. My BG was normal within four months of starting low carb, and in the years following I have lost around six stone (not entirely sure where I was when I started, some estimates in sig block). I can say I've never been hungry in that time, but then I eat a lot of fat with my protein.
I eat meat (all kinds) fish, dairy (cream, cheese etc, but not milk) green vegetables (I think my carb intake is all from veg) and in smaller quantities pulses/legumes - which seems to have no impact on my BG. Low carb beer, red wine, spirits, and a lot of coffee. None of the things that are normally used to bulk up meals - eg pasta, bread, pastry, potatoes, rice, and nothing sugary, including most fruit (berries an occasional exception).
After I'd lost enough weight I went back to playing football again and while I'm still losing size/bodyfat (much more slowly than in 2022/3) I am gaining a bit of weight which is clearly due to new muscle. I'm not bothered by that because the weight itself doesn't matter, it's the bodyfat, and especially visceral bodyfat, that I want/need to avoid.
Does that help?