Our usual manager is on maternity so Head of HR is our boss at the mo. For a forthcoming do I said I will bring my own lunch and she said OK - no fuss, no explaining, no drama. Wonderful. Wish she organised all our events. I am diet controlled so have no drugs to accomodate the whims of the rest of the world. Just me; responsible for me.
I just so love this thread............
Like robin above i too am coeliac and my outlaws whilst admittedly in their 80s still offer me biscuits after 8 years of coeliacs and 42 years of injections.
They bought my wife and i a box of posh chocolate biscuits at christmas!
The label said "to tony and dawn merry christmas love mum and dad"
How i laughed...........
They offer me something ghastly and when i politely decline they then ask my wife who is sat next to me
"can he not eat those"
How i laugh............
Peoples grasp of coeliacs is far far worse than their grasp of diabetes i find but please don't anybody think i'm being rude its just my observations on life and what happens to me.
Tony
Hi there partner. Do you want to join me in a grumble about everyone that assumes we can compensate for the effects of their food with fairy dust? I have had to stop going to knitting group because I am so rude when I refuse cake.Pleased to meet another diet controlled T2!! There don't seem to be many of us about!
Hi. I'm brand new to posting but have been reading the forum for years. I'm a parent of a teenager who's been T1 for 13 years, since the age of 4. I have a good laugh/cry at a lot of the threads. Reading this thread reminded me of what my mother-in-law said to my son 4 or 5 years ago (bearing in mind he'd been diabetic for 8/9 years then ). She used to give my 2 boys a huge tub of chocolates (like Roses) every birthday and Christmas , until I suggested to all the wider family that it may be a good idea if we all just didn't give any sweets/chocolates for birthdays/Christmas presents. (I wanted to buy sweet things myself so I knew what they were eating)...next Christmas she handed him a huge sugar loaded gingerbread cottage, saying " your Mum says you can't have chocolate so I got you this instead". I could have cried.
Oatcake n cheese?Um...the coffee morning thing...I am catering officer (ie it's me that buys the milk and biscuits and makes sure the kettle is working) for a gardening club that fund raises with coffee mornings...nice range of choccie biccies and WI cakes on offer...what SHOULD I offer to our mainly elderly, often overweight, and occasionally diabetic punters? The last lunch, I put out plates of nicely trimmed fresh veg & toms, which were totally, but totally ignored. (I roasted them for supper...scrummy). A simple finger food that goes well with tea/coffee? Anyone? Please?
One that still sticks with me many years later was shortly after being diagnosed ... In my first few weeks at university my tutor group were invited round to the tutor's house for a meal. He had taken the trouble to ask me beforehand if there was anything I shouldn't eat which I thought was very kind. As I was still honeymooning and following dietician's advice of carbs at every meal I said I could pretty much eat anything. He ended up serving a buffet so there was lots to pick and choose from. Then it came to pudding... He listed a range of options including ice-cream, chocolate cake, sticky toffee pudding and went round the group asking what each person wanted and served it to them. When he got to me, before I'd even had a chance to open my mouth to politely decline, he said loudly "You can't have any of this! Don't try and be naughty and say it's ok. If you eat this you're a bad diabetic. You're not allowed any sugar!" I was speechless and so embarrassed. I could feel myself turn bright red. I felt so upset, especially because some of the ppl in my group had no idea I'd got diabetes.
It didn't make much of a difference to my group as it happened...They still got me a gigantic chocolate cake for my birthday the following month but they ate most of it ☺
Similar thing happened to me in an English class as a 13/14 year old just before Chrismas break, regarding a "selection box" brought in & passed round by the teacher...
When she got to me she waived it under my nose, snatched away & barracked to rest of the class. "Aaaaaaaand. (Holding the attention of the whole class.) if YOU think I'M going to give SWEETS to a DIABETIC??!!"
Thinking back & briefly summing up this teachers general "professionalism."I wish people didn't do this.
Karma works in mysterious ways @Jaylee, it will always come and bite you on the ****.Flaunced out of the job in the end, ventured into local council politics. Then fell off the "grid."
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