Hey all,
I'm a type 1 diabetic joining today after a bad set of blood results. For the first couple of years after my diagnosis, I was very vigilant with my blood sugar levels and managed to maintain Hba1c levels of below 7%, but today, four years after diagnosis, that has shot up above 8%. My treatment plan has remained almost identical and I'm not in worse physical shape than when I started, I am just losing my sense of danger; it has set in that I am never not going to have diabetes and I've consequently found it much harder to motivate myself to care about each individual reading. I've started injecting late, guessing my dosages and generally being careless.
I'd be really interested to hear from others who have gone through similar stages in their journeys with diabetes and how they coped.
Ideally, I'd love someone to chat to and to poke me into caring for myself better, perhaps with a weekly accountability conversation with a buddy (How were your levels this week? Did you test regularly? etc.). I would, of course, be very, very happy for this to be a mutally supportive relationship. I'm not a medical expert, but I have lived with type 1 for four years and would love to be able to help anyone starting out or at any other stage.
All the best!
I'm a type 1 diabetic joining today after a bad set of blood results. For the first couple of years after my diagnosis, I was very vigilant with my blood sugar levels and managed to maintain Hba1c levels of below 7%, but today, four years after diagnosis, that has shot up above 8%. My treatment plan has remained almost identical and I'm not in worse physical shape than when I started, I am just losing my sense of danger; it has set in that I am never not going to have diabetes and I've consequently found it much harder to motivate myself to care about each individual reading. I've started injecting late, guessing my dosages and generally being careless.
I'd be really interested to hear from others who have gone through similar stages in their journeys with diabetes and how they coped.
Ideally, I'd love someone to chat to and to poke me into caring for myself better, perhaps with a weekly accountability conversation with a buddy (How were your levels this week? Did you test regularly? etc.). I would, of course, be very, very happy for this to be a mutally supportive relationship. I'm not a medical expert, but I have lived with type 1 for four years and would love to be able to help anyone starting out or at any other stage.
All the best!