JulesTheMan
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
I read in papers that GPs tend to stuff you with more and more pills or jabs for controlling diabetes, I'm type 2; however since May when I got hit with some peripheral neuropathy, I began to eat the right stuff, walk and hour a day and can happily say I have lost 2 stones (now at under 12 stones) and for the first time in 6 years, when I got diagnosed, I have had a "normal" HbA1c reading (6.5%, used to be over 9%). So I agree with the likes of Prof Roy Taylor (Newcastle Univ) that losing weight and keeping fast burn carbs intake down really is the holy grail - yet I never got that from the surgery, who seem to like prescribing more and more pills; don't you think?
It really is the case that if you burn off (or reduce) the fat around the tummy that the pancreas and liver can then cope; I'm proof positive of that. I feel much better, look younger (they tell me) and have much more energy - none of which the darn pills gave me. It does take will-power, or in my case the scare I got from the neuropathy (a great motivator, as it can get worse), which sadly persists regardless, but at least is manageable if I keep the glucose controlled in this way. So I encourage everyone to drop the pounds reasonably quickly and do some tummy exercises, for which yoga (and zen meditation for will-power) is great. I did it in 4 months which is quite good, and only through no sugary intake, less bread and potatoes and good, determined, brisk walking, and some metformin (less than prescribed me). So I didn't have to do much that I wasn't already doing in my 30's; alas, we tend to lose ourselves as we get older, a pity.
Also, do avoid all things that state 'diet' as most sweeteners are neurotoxic, especially aspartame (an msg by another name), avoid all msg's too - they are hidden under many guises, check out the web for a comprehensive list; they mess up your brain and nerves. The modern day life and the evil push by advertising to consume all manner of rubbish not good for us has gotten us in this mess, they want to get rich at all costs, including people's lives. Say no, live a more natural, simpler and less-conditioned way of life, I say - I do (after so many corporate years) and I feel far, far better for it. It's (usually) never too late to see the light and make the change. It's very possible.
It really is the case that if you burn off (or reduce) the fat around the tummy that the pancreas and liver can then cope; I'm proof positive of that. I feel much better, look younger (they tell me) and have much more energy - none of which the darn pills gave me. It does take will-power, or in my case the scare I got from the neuropathy (a great motivator, as it can get worse), which sadly persists regardless, but at least is manageable if I keep the glucose controlled in this way. So I encourage everyone to drop the pounds reasonably quickly and do some tummy exercises, for which yoga (and zen meditation for will-power) is great. I did it in 4 months which is quite good, and only through no sugary intake, less bread and potatoes and good, determined, brisk walking, and some metformin (less than prescribed me). So I didn't have to do much that I wasn't already doing in my 30's; alas, we tend to lose ourselves as we get older, a pity.
Also, do avoid all things that state 'diet' as most sweeteners are neurotoxic, especially aspartame (an msg by another name), avoid all msg's too - they are hidden under many guises, check out the web for a comprehensive list; they mess up your brain and nerves. The modern day life and the evil push by advertising to consume all manner of rubbish not good for us has gotten us in this mess, they want to get rich at all costs, including people's lives. Say no, live a more natural, simpler and less-conditioned way of life, I say - I do (after so many corporate years) and I feel far, far better for it. It's (usually) never too late to see the light and make the change. It's very possible.
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