Thank you for your kind words. I am going to give the low carb another go. I will just concentrate on breakfast 1st of all.
More information about me I'm 46, was diagnosed with gestational diabetes in 1991 then it disappeared, I was told that I would probably have it later in life. Then it reappeared in 1997 to stay! Apart from diabetes I have osteoarthritis, I was diagnosed with depression in 2010 (due to undiagnosed chronic hip pain, later to be diagnosed in 2012 as osteoarthritis of the hip and needing a total hip and the fact I wasn't able to work) but slowly coming off anti depressants now. I'm on morphine for pain. I used to get bad headaches for days on end so now take tablets that prevent them. I have no idea why I'm so fussy with food. I don't really enjoy savoury and don't like spicy foreign foods. I like plain British foods, I like pasta meals and chilli and curry now and again. I work full time as a carer if I work a full day I'm up at 5.45am for a 7am start, I'm home again at 10am out between 12-2pm then home, then out from 4-8 and usually in bed by 9.30. Working these hours seems to make eating more difficult. When I wasn't working I could eat just 3 proper meals a day. I have no emotional issues connected with food I just like what I like. I have children aged 18 & 23 so have to buy for them also. I do have a limited budget for food. Apart from being a fussy eater my main issue is chocolate. I believe it may go back to when I was first diagnosed and probably being told 'you can't eat chocolate', so I did the opposite and ate more. I just love it, it is like a drug to me. If I eat some I'm fine and I don't mean just a small bar for instance if there's a pack of 4 ripples on offer for £1 I'll buy it and eat all four. I've eaten a sharing bag of malteasers at once. If I don't have any then it's on my mind and I'll have to go and buy it, this where I'm hoping a psychologist will help me. I don't know what else I can tell you about myself, I'm happy, loving the job I'm in, have a bit of debt but who doesn't! If there's anything else you want to know just ask. I am determined to try and give this low carb a go with the help of everyone but don't wish to be a pain in the ass!
Hello @Sarah69
Rather than ( or in addition to) the psychologist ) have you considered a hypnotherapist ?
Much like smoking & eating it may be possible to be treated so that you actually 'dislike' or 'couldn't care less' about chocolate
Obviously it requires some willpower but it may be an avenue you'd wish to consider
Did you eat that qty of choc before diagnosis?
The only reason for asking is that you may be just blaming diabetes for a habit that was not the best in the first place. This then actually makes it harder to change to better eatig habits because you can blame diabetes for making you eat less chocolate...
Lidle .... full fat plain with cultures one pound fifty a litre tub.I really can't remember if I ate as much chocolate before diagnosis.
I have bought some plain greek style yoghurt (didn't realise it was so expensive!) will give it a go in the morning with some strawberrys. In another thread somebody mixed the yoghurt with sugar free free jelly powder so I'll try that too. Is rhubarb ok to have? Have also bought some of the burgen bread to try.
Lidle .... full fat plain with cultures one pound fifty a litre tub.
Or make your own overnight.
I make a couple of litres over night from full fat milk.
O
Unfortunately I can only shop at sainsburys!
I'd hate that!O
Unfortunately I can only shop at sainsburys!
I used to eat tonnes of chocolate. I started dieting just before diagnoses and didn't have any chocolate until some month after diagnosis. Once the shock and shaking had got out of my system I was fine. Once it's out of the system it kind of stays out. I have chocolate now and find the taste uninspiring. I went on a long hike last week. Took a bar of Dairy Milk type chocolate with about 12 squares in it. I ate 4, and then stopped at a shop, binned the chocolate and bought a sandwich! It's a monumentally diificult few weeks - but when you're through it then you realise it was worth it
Hi @Sarah69
You are always so brave talking about your diet and eating problems , you don't have a easy time .. Sorry about that ...
Good to know you are looking into ways of change .. Stay positive ... You keep trying that is the main thing ..
please feel free to PM me if you want to ...
Yes I remember a past chat , you can indeed only get a bus to sainsburys... Understand that ...
Take care .. Don't give up .. You will get there .. Kat
Hi SarahThank you for your kind words. I am going to give the low carb another go. I will just concentrate on breakfast 1st of all.
More information about me I'm 46, was diagnosed with gestational diabetes in 1991 then it disappeared, I was told that I would probably have it later in life. Then it reappeared in 1997 to stay! Apart from diabetes I have osteoarthritis, I was diagnosed with depression in 2010 (due to undiagnosed chronic hip pain, later to be diagnosed in 2012 as osteoarthritis of the hip and needing a total hip and the fact I wasn't able to work) but slowly coming off anti depressants now. I'm on morphine for pain. I used to get bad headaches for days on end so now take tablets that prevent them. I have no idea why I'm so fussy with food. I don't really enjoy savoury and don't like spicy foreign foods. I like plain British foods, I like pasta meals and chilli and curry now and again. I work full time as a carer if I work a full day I'm up at 5.45am for a 7am start, I'm home again at 10am out between 12-2pm then home, then out from 4-8 and usually in bed by 9.30. Working these hours seems to make eating more difficult. When I wasn't working I could eat just 3 proper meals a day. I have no emotional issues connected with food I just like what I like. I have children aged 18 & 23 so have to buy for them also. I do have a limited budget for food. Apart from being a fussy eater my main issue is chocolate. I believe it may go back to when I was first diagnosed and probably being told 'you can't eat chocolate', so I did the opposite and ate more. I just love it, it is like a drug to me. If I eat some I'm fine and I don't mean just a small bar for instance if there's a pack of 4 ripples on offer for £1 I'll buy it and eat all four. I've eaten a sharing bag of malteasers at once. If I don't have any then it's on my mind and I'll have to go and buy it, this where I'm hoping a psychologist will help me. I don't know what else I can tell you about myself, I'm happy, loving the job I'm in, have a bit of debt but who doesn't! If there's anything else you want to know just ask. I am determined to try and give this low carb a go with the help of everyone but don't wish to be a pain in the ass!
Hi Sarah,
I've been reflecting on your tale of woe and your difficulties facing a big shift in your diet.
My mother used to love the idea of "you are what you eat". This is true in the literal chemical sense, but also in the way that our diets are part of what define us as people.
4 months I had a big kick up the backside when my doctor rang me up to summon me following a blood test. I had been comfortably overweight for a fair old while, attempts to cut the fat to lose weight came to pretty much zilch. My Achilles heel was crisps and other savoury snacks. I realised that I needed what philosophers of science call a paradigm shift. I had to review my attitude to food and change some things fast. I could control the BG with diet and exercise - if I chose to.
Partly in discussion with my nurse, and partly as a result of reading, including this website my new diet evolved.
I set some non-negotiable markers.
No more crisps
No more cakes, biscuits, sweets etc. (this was less sad than the no more crisps).
I set some desirables
Heavily limit bread.
Carbs with cooked meals to be reduced.
I had some strategies.
smaller plate,
leave some food in the saucepan,
mix rice with other stuff
let Mrs P buy the boring bread she prefers (I then eat much less of it and feel less pain when the last bit has to be chucked).
less beer
I rediscovered salads - particularly red cabbage based slaw.
I rediscovered eggs
I rediscovered tinned fish.
my dislike of added sugar to things like pasta sauce was reinforced.
I got a glucose meter, and used it systematically for a while to review the effects of portion sizes and meals on the blood sugar.
I set the non-negotiables to draw a line in my brain (and the brains of those around me). The apparently nice ladies on the Desmond course tried ever so hard to convince me that there are no bad carbs. (Odd that they didn't reflect that cake is also quite high in dairy fat, which according to them is the work of the devil). I sort of accept this but take the view that the amount of cake I can tolerate is small, and that there are more interesting ways of getting carbs.
That's what I did - you have different views on food and possibly have more sensitive taste buds than me, leading to a dislike of veg and a greater love of chocolate.
I would respectfully suggest that you consider:
low carb breakfast- if you cannot move away from the boxes labelled Kellogg, look for the lower levels of carb, avoiding rice which is metabolised fast.
Have a good lunch, meat or fish to form a significant chunk of it, carb garnish, whatever vegetables you do like.
Find something less sugary for the evening when you get in after a hard days work.
Maybe chocolate needs to be saved for a Friday night indulgence, or in smaller bars, or substituted by cheese.
best wishes
Adam
Hi Sarah,
I've been reflecting on your tale of woe and your difficulties facing a big shift in your diet.
My mother used to love the idea of "you are what you eat". This is true in the literal chemical sense, but also in the way that our diets are part of what define us as people.
4 months I had a big kick up the backside when my doctor rang me up to summon me following a blood test. I had been comfortably overweight for a fair old while, attempts to cut the fat to lose weight came to pretty much zilch. My Achilles heel was crisps and other savoury snacks. I realised that I needed what philosophers of science call a paradigm shift. I had to review my attitude to food and change some things fast. I could control the BG with diet and exercise - if I chose to.
Partly in discussion with my nurse, and partly as a result of reading, including this website my new diet evolved.
I set some non-negotiable markers.
No more crisps
No more cakes, biscuits, sweets etc. (this was less sad than the no more crisps).
I set some desirables
Heavily limit bread.
Carbs with cooked meals to be reduced.
I had some strategies.
smaller plate,
leave some food in the saucepan,
mix rice with other stuff
let Mrs P buy the boring bread she prefers (I then eat much less of it and feel less pain when the last bit has to be chucked).
less beer
I rediscovered salads - particularly red cabbage based slaw.
I rediscovered eggs
I rediscovered tinned fish.
my dislike of added sugar to things like pasta sauce was reinforced.
I got a glucose meter, and used it systematically for a while to review the effects of portion sizes and meals on the blood sugar.
I set the non-negotiables to draw a line in my brain (and the brains of those around me). The apparently nice ladies on the Desmond course tried ever so hard to convince me that there are no bad carbs. (Odd that they didn't reflect that cake is also quite high in dairy fat, which according to them is the work of the devil). I sort of accept this but take the view that the amount of cake I can tolerate is small, and that there are more interesting ways of getting carbs.
That's what I did - you have different views on food and possibly have more sensitive taste buds than me, leading to a dislike of veg and a greater love of chocolate.
I would respectfully suggest that you consider:
low carb breakfast- if you cannot move away from the boxes labelled Kellogg, look for the lower levels of carb, avoiding rice which is metabolised fast.
Have a good lunch, meat or fish to form a significant chunk of it, carb garnish, whatever vegetables you do like.
Find something less sugary for the evening when you get in after a hard days work.
Maybe chocolate needs to be saved for a Friday night indulgence, or in smaller bars, or substituted by cheese.
best wishes
Adam
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