A few weeks ago I managed to get a reading of 6.6 but since then all my figures have been in the 7s. Yesterday I had:-
Breakfast
2 low carb pancakes with lemon juice.
Lunch
Half Lidl protein roll with ham and a small chunk of cheese. A slice of low carb sponge cake.
Dinner
Salmon, 2 large mushrooms and a small helping of peas. A handful of blueberries, 2 strawberries, walnuts and double cream.
6 cups of coffee made with single cream.
What am I doing wrong?
I've been low carbing since the end of May when I found this site before that it was NHS **** advice. I have never been thin and at my current weight for many years, in fact I can still get into my wedding dress (40 years in 2016).
Love your advice but what is carb creep?I don't think you need to be concerned over your levels at all. If you're not going over 8.0 after meals then you're still well within recommended type 2 post meal levels.
All sorts of things can affect your readings: illness, stress, the weather, and "carb creep", so be aware of them and make allowances. And please DON'T compare the results you get with anyone else's - you're not them, and some forum members are pre-diabetic so may well be doing better than we can ever manage.
If you want to fine tune things, are you keeping a food diary, as well as recording your glucose levels? That will tell you if there are currently any foods you're eating that are causing you bigger spikes than normal, but I can't actually see very much wrong with what you've been eating.
Robbity
Thank you all for your words of encouragement. I tend not to have spikes as I've worked out what I can eat. My husband does not like me having cream and butter because he still believes that you shouldn't have fat. Will find out on Friday if my cholesterol has gone up, I hope not so I can say told you so.
Thanks, that probably explains a couple of oops momentsSometimes you'll find that your cholesterol may go up before it comes down. But what matters is how the total is broken down; so you should expect and hope for lower LDL (bad cholesterol), and higher HDL (the good stuff), so ask for this information.
And tell your husband you must eat more fats and oils on low carbohydrate diet, as these are used to provide energy that your body is no longer getting from the carbohydrates you've excluded from your new diet. If he's not happy, spend a tenner of Trudi Deakin's "Eat Fat!" book and make him read it!!
@timerich: "Carb creep" appears to be the name given to the unintended process of increasing your carbohydrate intake, so you're actually eating more of them than you think you are.It's easy to do unless you're very careful about quantities and portion sizes.
Robbity
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