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I am not T1, but have had terrible symptoms of hypoglycaemia, which includes, those swinging moods, from depression, severe anxiety and the temper tantrums, which have been on a hair trigger .Hi All,
My blood sugars have been fluctuating massively recently, hence affecting my mood. I tend to become very short tempered, flustered, and sometimes very sad. I have a partner of 10 months who doesn't quite understand the link between low mood and blood sugars.
I'm hoping some of you would be kind enough to write a few words of your own experiences with this? So that he can see it's not just me, and it happens with other diabetics too.
Thank you in advance
I'm a T2, but I spent years being high and undiagnosed... I was an absolute dragon. I'd rip my -very patient- husband's head off out of nowhere, the moodswings and depression were a horror... The rage-out-of-the-blue vanished into thin air when my blood sugar control became better, but that can be a lot easier for a T2 than for a T1. Spikes and hypo's, they just happen... And when they do, quite often, we're not quite in control of our emotions and reactions, say things we don't mean and deeply regret later. Doesn't mean there's no love or respect there, we just literally can't help it in the moment, and feel like a heel afterwards.Hi All,
My blood sugars have been fluctuating massively recently, hence affecting my mood. I tend to become very short tempered, flustered, and sometimes very sad. I have a partner of 10 months who doesn't quite understand the link between low mood and blood sugars.
I'm hoping some of you would be kind enough to write a few words of your own experiences with this? So that he can see it's not just me, and it happens with other diabetics too.
Thank you in advance
This echoes what @Chris24Main says above:Hi All,
My blood sugars have been fluctuating massively recently, hence affecting my mood. I tend to become very short tempered, flustered, and sometimes very sad. I have a partner of 10 months who doesn't quite understand the link between low mood and blood sugars.
I'm hoping some of you would be kind enough to write a few words of your own experiences with this? So that he can see it's not just me, and it happens with other diabetics too.
Thank you in advance
Hi, I’ll like to know what your glucose readings are like daily. If it’s not asking too much. I was functioning fine without medication. However, at the start of this year I began to take medication because of fluctuations in my reading. I’m pretty active person, but exercise and diet wasn’t cutting it anymore. I had to introduce medication. I’m sure I’ll be off the meds but I’ll like to try other things that would definitely help me stay off medication.I'm a T2, but I spent years being high and undiagnosed... I was an absolute dragon. I'd rip my -very patient- husband's head off out of nowhere, the moodswings and depression were a horror... The rage-out-of-the-blue vanished into thin air when my blood sugar control became better, but that can be a lot easier for a T2 than for a T1. Spikes and hypo's, they just happen... And when they do, quite often, we're not quite in control of our emotions and reactions, say things we don't mean and deeply regret later. Doesn't mean there's no love or respect there, we just literally can't help it in the moment, and feel like a heel afterwards.
At the moment I hover between 4,5 and 6.0 mmol/l, but it's diet-only, doing low carb high fats, moderate protein. https://josekalsbeek.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-nutritional-thingy.html might help some in that regard. But it'd be more useful if you started your own thread, as others'll be able to reply as well when they find it. Now you're kind of buried in someone else's question, and neither of us are T1's to boot. Hope this helps tho'.Hi, I’ll like to know what your glucose readings are like daily. If it’s not asking too much. I was functioning fine without medication. However, at the start of this year I began to take medication because of fluctuations in my reading. I’m pretty active person, but exercise and diet wasn’t cutting it anymore. I had to introduce medication. I’m sure I’ll be off the meds but I’ll like to try other things that would definitely help me stay off medication.
I studied Classics at university, including Ancient Greek. Dia means through and the first means flowing and the second means going or passing and therefore exactly as you say! I have been a great fan of etymology since at least the age of 7 - my mother ought me Blackburn's Study of Words for my 8th Birthday! Sorry to cause you nightmares.Uh-huh... very well described @Grant_Vicat - I still find it difficult to ...go there.. to better describe how I felt in that moment, but your description comes close... I get a kind of PTSD flashback just reading your post.
As a light aside - are you aware that the words diarrhoea and diabetes are related etymologically? just too much of a thing coming out different orifices..
Dia betes is Greek in origin as outlined above. Diabetes (διαβήτης) is a noun derived from this verb and originally meant a siphon, then the condition itself. It is true, as in so many other cases, that the Romans adopted this word.I wondered about diatribe - but that is Greek and diabetes is Latin.
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