Thanks very much for your reply and advice. Very helpful.Putting diabetes into remission is not about dieting but about what you eat, which is slightly different.
If you can get a blood glucose meter with cheap supplies, I use the Tee 2 from Spirit Healthcare, then you can see if you are eating correctly to produce as close to normal levels as possible.
The best way to start off is to check the amount of carbs you are eating each day, and from what sources.
Thanks very much - very helpful.It isn't calories that we need to count, it is carbs, and with reduced carbs we need extra fat such as cheese, butter, oily fish, fatty meats especially bacon, plenty of eggs. . Using your scales and a blood glucose meter with a food diary you can find the right balance to reduce your blood sugar levels and maintain your weight without losing any more. There is absolutely no need to "diet"
Oh .... and there is no need to cut out the red wine. It is good for us.
Thanks very much - very helpful.carbs are colourblind. Brown or wholemeal can be as damaging as their white counterparts.
So too fruit especially tropical or exotics as well as apples and pears can be very carby.
Your meter will soon show you which your body can cope with and which it cant.
I'm 6 months in now and still trying to retrain my brain away from old thoughts as to what is healthy food and what really is good for my diabetic body.
Thank you very much.I'd suggest taking a look at the link in my signature for diet, what to avoid etc. It's great advice written by one of our members here. Make sure you get enough protein and fat in your diet. I'm lean like you, so following a 500cal diet would not be a good idea. You would be starving your body of food which will cause weightloss. Energy dense foods, like meats, cheeses, nuts, eggs are far better choices then low cal vegetables.
It might well be worth your while getting a c-peptide test and GAD antibodies done. I think it would be helpful to know how much insulin you are producing, could help to rule out a lack of it too.
And welcome!
Thank you very much.Hi. I would just keep the carbs down and see how your readings go. Don't worry about Calories as they are irrelevant. Your numbers are still only just diabetic so I wouldn't worry too much. It's possible your pancreas beta cells are beginning to fail reducing the amount of insulin you produce.
Hello, I’m new to the forum and would like some advice on the following if anyone can help.
I’m 72, exercise regularly, fit, have a body fat reading of 20.9 which occasionally dips to 19.xx, and a BMI of 21.7. <snip>
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