Thank you that is very interesting to hear!I eat the same macros at every meal and know the dose. After much trial and error this way works for me and allows me to take very small doses of insulin so I don't fear hypos and I stay steady.
I do switch up my proteins but I always keep protein carbs as well as far consistant.
I eat VERY low carb so j do bolus for protein and meal size.
I can have a few nuts or a little guacamole as snacks without blousing.
Personally, I found that I could not keep bs any where near steady when eating carbs other than salad greens or a small serving of steamed veg. Others have done it but I have no idea how. I like a tight low range though.
Thank you for that advice! 1/2 unit bolus and 1u lantus sounds very nice and smallI forgot to respond to going out. I pretty much just stick with Caesar salads with chicken shrimp or salmon. I veered to other foods but never know what's in sauces etc. or I will get shrimp cocktail ( no sauce) and a side salad. Buber without bun and side salad. I have learned to keep things very simple.
I decide on a moderate amount of protein, steam some veg or make a salad and add some fat. I don't gob fat but I don't fear it. I eat three small meals with protein and few nuts in between or guac. Guac is my go to food. Never hurts me. I usually have turkey on a leaf of lettuce with mustard and mayo for BF. Lunch is usually salmon tuna or chicke with mayo on another large piece of lettuce and some celery radish and 1/4 avococado. Dinner is usually fish but sometimes beef or lamb and either a handful of steamed veg or a salad with 1/4 avocado. I use different herbs or hot sauce to change flavors. Not nearly as gourmet as I used to be but it keeps it simple and still tastes good. I only eat 2 oz protein at lunch and dinner and 1 at BF. Seems to be enough for me. Like I said though I do bolus for protein because I am very low carb so really I am just blousing to eat something. I take 1/2 unit with meals and 1 lantus.
Hope that helps and I give Bernsteins way of eating a BIG YES
Yes I agree that the restrictive nature scares me a little and that maybe his approach is something to take what works best for you from it. I think I will try to follow a regime similar to his at first to see how it works for me as I feel the reduction in anxiety about hypos and complications make up for some of the restrictive nature. After trying it and adjusting to myself I will see what works best. Congratulations on your hba1c and managing to control your diabetes through diet and exercise, that's amazing! And thank you for your advice and opinionHi,
(I'm type 2, diet and exercise controlled, which requires less than 50g carbs a day to achieve. I do best at less than 30g carbs)
When i first read Bernstein's book, my initial reaction to the uber controlled, consistent daily carb intake was revulsion - and that isn't an exaggeration. I had a deep visceral refusal to live such a regimented and limited life. Awed by the man and his methodology, but appalled by his restrictive rules and goals.
Having read the book a second time, and 2 years into keto eating i still have the same reaction, but it is no longer so strong.
Turns out that i have drifted naturally into a way of eating that (5 days a week) gives me almost no carbs for breakfast, a few at lunch (veg only) and a few more for dinner. I probably av 30-40g nowadays. Weekends are much more fluid, but the carb count shifts around usually without increasing the total. I consider that flexibility very precious. I suspect that i would feel exactly the same as a T1 because i value flexibility and reject restrictive habits in most areas of my life. It works excellently for some, but it will never work for me. My projected a1c is in the mid-late 30s, so below pre-diabetes. The Freestyle Libre helps with this.
So i appreciate his advice on low carb, but reject his regimented delivery and exercise regime (my body has other issues that prevent a punishing gym regime).
Having said that, i think that reversing complications probably requires more extreme measures than preventing complications - and i am lucky to not (yet) have any detectable complications. My attitude may change if symptoms arrive in the future!
Wow congratulations on your control, I hope you manage to push your diabetes into remission! It's very interesting to here how type 2s control as well as type 1s. I think the keeping of the protein and carbohydrate content is so you have the same insulin doses for type 1s but at the moment I am managing with changing it around so I'll have to seeI can't address what it takes to control T1 diabetes, but I can share that I have had my blood sugars under tight control since 3 days after my diagnosis (the first day I was brave enough to test). By tight control, I mean within non-diabetic normal ranges - not the higher recommended caps for people with diabetes.
My meals range from 0 carbs to 20 (recently a bit higher) per meal. I eat between 0 and 50 grams of protein in a meal. I eat between 1 and 6 meals a day. Yesterday I had two meals at noon and 9:30 PM, my BG low was 4.4, my high was 5.6; the day before I had one snack and one meal at 5:00 PM and 1:00 AM. My BG low was 4.05, my high was 5.4.
My ranges are tighter, at the moment, because I'm in the middle of an experiment to try to put my (T2) diabetes into remission by a combination of Michael Mosley's 8-week diet and daily fasting (the reason for the late first meal). That started Monday - before then a more typical daily range was from 4.7 to 7.0 on a maximum of 20 grams of carbs per meal.
So - for at least some T2 diabetics, it is not necessary to keep the timing and carb/protein content of meals regimented.
Wow congratulations on your control, I hope you manage to push your diabetes into remission! It's very interesting to here how type 2s control as well as type 1s. I think the keeping of the protein and carbohydrate content is so you have the same insulin doses for type 1s but at the moment I am managing with changing it around so I'll have to see
If you are taking insulin, or a drug that "squeezes" insulin out of your pancreas at times that don't fit the natural cycle (sulfonylureas) , it is much harder.
If you have an unnaturally steady supply of insulin running about (the non-bolus insulin or the sulfonylurea generated insulin), you need a unnaturally steady supply of carbs to keep the circulating insulin from taking out too much glucose and sending you hypo. It's an ineffective imitation of how our bodies are supposed to work - which is all about call & response (bolusing mimics that better) But once your body loses the ability to create enough insulin to keep you from going hypo when you're not eating, you've got to keep some insulin going all the time. I know a number of T1 diabetics who have minimized the background insulin they are taking by cutting back on carbs.
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