Thanks for the input! I was just out for a walk (went a bit too hard up the hills though as it turns out I hit 10 on my libre) and realised while I thought I was doing well in August because of diet the overly intense and increased exercise and mega stress/lack of sleep would have hurt big time. I just have to be patient and give it time I guess and trust in the changes I have made. I feel so much better now with reasonable results on my meter I just need to get it to good
One of the hardest things about this is I feel very alone. My wife is the only person I talk to about it and she is a bit over me going on about it and I don't blame her. I'm still struggling with social aspects where food or beer is involved that I decline and invariably when I say no thanks I get the but you are so skinny comments. I can see how it is easy to get isolated as it is just easier to avoid things sometimes. I'm still not sure how I am going to manage this but that is also on my to figure out list.
Thanks
In the end if you want to socialise you just have to find something that you can tell people.. Because I was very fat and people can now see I am less so then they tend to ask what I have done. In explaining I then say what I do and don't eat these days which then lets them know (that I'll be a difficult ****** to cook for!) what I eat.
You can always come here and moan, ask, or celebrate.. especially the last one.. we all love a good success story which I reckon it sounds like yours will be. You're making a great start to better health just keep it up.. it really does get easier over time.
So, after all that info, my main question is if I keep up what I am doing are my BG levels likely to continue to drop over time or do you get most of the gains early on? My main thing seems to be just a highish average BG level and that needs to drop. I'm trying to figure out if I should start taking metformin or give my body more time to adjust to the changes?
I'm struggling to understand why you wouldn't tell your freinds about the diabetes. True freinds would support you and those that do not are not worth your freindship.
Recalling what is was like deciding to tell freinds that I was going tee total (this was a personal choice and was not due to any health reasons at the time) was far, far harder than telling them I am now T2. I find most of them want to understand and are interested in learning more. Being pro active in reaching and maintaining better health needn't mean becoming isolated at all, get out there and enjoy yourself with your wife and your circle of freinds. Do not allow diabetes to become all consuming.
Maybe I should just tell them and that way if it gets awkward at least it will be clear why that is.
And all the "would you like to's" and "can you just's" also seem to go away since I am now tainted with diabetes and secretly I am enjoying it.
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?