Helen_S-C
Active Member
- Messages
- 26
- Location
- Stockton-on-Tees, UK
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Mood swings
You don’t NEED to low-carb, but you may find that it is easier to manage your levels and insulin intake on a low-carb diet. I have personally made the choice to low-carb (like many others with type 1), but I will happily enjoy myself on rare occasions with as much as 500g of carbs in a day (that’s obviously a bad idea for the most part).
Carb counting is the foundation of insulin management because it allows you to calculate how much insulin you need for a particular meal. That makes it more of a math problem and takes some of the guesswork out of the equation.
Unfortunately, even if you know your insulin:carb ratio, that doesn’t mean everything is easy…just EASIER. Many people find their ratios change slightly throughout the day, and our bodies don’t always process carbs at the same rate.
In layman’s terms, eating 500g of carbs a day is kind of like trying to guess how many tennis balls will fit in a swimming pool. In theory, you could calculate the answer, but even a slight miscalculation could make your answer off by thousands.
Eating 50g of carbs is kind of like trying to guess how many tennis balls will fit in a 1ft x 1ft x1ft box. It’s still not easy, and you can still miscalculate, but it’s a heck of a lot easier and even if you make a mistake, you probably wouldn't be off by very many.
Thanks guys for your responses, it just seems so complicated! I don't want to get in the habit of eating what I like and adapting insulin to suit, I want to eat healthily and get back in the gym. I'm doing the great north run in sept and I haven't trained for weeks now due to generally feeling unwell and muscle pain. I desperately want to be training again but that will be another insulin hurdle to jump - excuse the pun!
What did you read? Booklets, diabetes uk, NHS??It's all about putting in the time to learn it. If you're willing to do that it's easy.
I'd say it takes about 20 hours of reading/learning to learn all of the carb counting basics. That may sound like a lot, but I taught myself in less than a week after diagnosis.
If you read for an hour or two before bed every night, this can become second nature to you in a couple weeks. If you rely solely on your doctor's visits it's going to take you years.
No one wants to get in the habit of eating nonsense, but that has nothing to do with insulin. Your insulin should ALWAYS match what you eat whether that's vegetables or an entire gallon of ice cream. Remember, your body used to automatically do that for you. Nothing has changed aside from now it's a manual process.
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