I have been eating poorly for along time and have been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes almost 11 years ago but I've been eating healthy recently keeping my stress down I eat very healthy portions of healthy food every 3-4 hours but Everytime I check my Blood it first read 312 last night at 10pm then 298 at 12:30 I stayed up untill 5 because I do sleep late so I only sipped warm water all night then I woke up and checked and it read 251 it didn't go down much understandably but I had a healthy meal for breakfast/Lunch only one slice of toast with 4 tablespoons of black bleans from a can I soaked with half of a small avocado and One egg and two slices of Ham! And 4 hours later it reads 276! So I'm in this dilemma of reading high numbers and eating healthy but when it's time to eat I still get these high readings! Sometimes discourge me from eating but I will have something because that's not healthy either! Any tips will be appreciated....Thanks in advance by the way I don't smoke or drink at all!
Ok I have a question I always see that going without eating will make your sugar spike because of the liver dumping glucose into the blood stream right! It sounds right but if you think about it if the liver is full of it and it releases it into our bloodstream then wouldn't eating every 3-4 hours be bad too!
I'm asking because I have fasted when I was a member of a church the first time ever I lasted 19 hours 2nd time The full 24 hours I'm always confused with this because eating that many times to not get your sugar spiked sounds bad but also not eating sounds bad too! For example I didn't eat since 10:30 last night went the whole night sipping warm water because I usually do better during the day but I consume 1500 calories most nights between 11-3am which is unthinkable! Do no more of that I did do the math cutting out meals late at night in 3months will help me lose just over 30lbs just cutting out that meal at night! Sounds simple we'll see we all at one point have struggled with something that plagued us...So far it's that and I'm doing alright so far will just have to sleep early!
I eat twice a day, early and late. No potatoes, no grains, small servings of peas and beans.
The bread and porridge would not be on my menu.
There are no foods which lower BG. All carbohydrates break down into sugar, so I keep to foods which are 10 percent carbs or less.
NewTD2 thanks for the link. It’s helpful to newbies like me
We can also chat privately
There are no foods which lower BG. All carbohydrates break down into sugar, so I keep to foods which are 10 percent carbs or less.
Hi,cheat.
I am only recently diagnosed myself but Bread & beans is not a good idea. Both tend to be high in carbs.
I had a pretty healthy diet before being diagnosed, it just was not healthy for a T2. I'm tagging @daisy1 who will post some good advise. Daisy - If I have this wrong as a newbie, apologies and please correct me.
I have been eating poorly for along time and have been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes almost 11 years ago but I've been eating healthy recently keeping my stress down I eat very healthy portions of healthy food every 3-4 hours but Everytime I check my Blood it first read 312 last night at 10pm then 298 at 12:30 I stayed up untill 5 because I do sleep late so I only sipped warm water all night then I woke up and checked and it read 251 it didn't go down much understandably but I had a healthy meal for breakfast/Lunch only one slice of toast with 4 tablespoons of black bleans from a can I soaked with half of a small avocado and One egg and two slices of Ham! And 4 hours later it reads 276! So I'm in this dilemma of reading high numbers and eating healthy but when it's time to eat I still get these high readings! Sometimes discourge me from eating but I will have something because that's not healthy either! Any tips will be appreciated....Thanks in advance by the way I don't smoke or drink at all!
Protein also turns into glucose but at a slower rate than carbs. Both add to raising blood sugars. Canned fruit and veg tend to have added sugar or syrup or sugar alcohols: it is better to use dried ones soaked in water then you know what goes into it.I eat twice a day, early and late. No potatoes, no grains, small servings of peas and beans.
The bread and porridge would not be on my menu.
There are no foods which lower BG. All carbohydrates break down into sugar, so I keep to foods which are 10 percent carbs or less.
Ah - it depends on the definition of food - something in a plastic tray or pot heated up in a microwave fails on several levelsI've seen a few folks say they stick to foods that are less than a certain percentage of carbs, but surely the total carbs is more important than the percentage?
For example, I was checking the labels on a ready meal in a supermarket the other day and it was around 9g carbs per 100g. So going by your <10% rule it seems OK. However, the pack size was 400g so the total carbs were nearly 40g. For someone low-carbing that seems pretty high.
Dried fruit tends to be very high in sugar, as it is fully ripened in the sun as it dries out - so perhaps best avoided or used in very small amounts.Protein also turns into glucose but at a slower rate than carbs. Both add to raising blood sugars. Canned fruit and veg tend to have added sugar or syrup or sugar alcohols: it is better to use dried ones soaked in water then you know what goes into it.
I personally can tolerate a small helping of porridge oats, but remember that milk also contains carbs, The diet you are currently using would be considered healthy for a non diabetic, but you may benefit from lookin at one of the Low Carb diets such as Paleo or Pioppi (the one I am using myself) or the Mediterranean diet. You have not declared any medications, which makes it difficult to give advice.
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