June_C
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 821
- Location
- West Sussex
- Type of diabetes
- Prefer not to say
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- Diabetes, know it alls
Thank you Mike. I might be labelled a "Senior", but truth be known, I'm still a newcomer really, but if I can help a newer newby than me have the confidence to know it's a manageable condition that some of us seem to be able to come to grips with quite quickly, then that's my good deed for the dayGreat advice. Superb post
I'm not sure if it's part of the T1D condition or just me being a moody barstool, but I'm experiencing some quite severe mood swings since diagnosis (3 weeks).
One minute I'm superman and I'm going to kick Diabetes' ass, and the next I'm down in the depths and can't even contemplate dealing with all the counting, calculating and general Diabetes nonsense.
A friend of mine who was in hospital at the same time as me has been diagnosed with cancer....Pancreatic cancer. I know, the irony isn't lost on me. He has 6-12 months to live. I go from thinking I got away with a lucky escape given his situation to just wanting to put my head in my hands and sob.
I'm not expecting any magic bits of advise, I just needed to vent I suppose.
I'll get over this stage but it's a real roller coaster ride at the moment and I'm just trying to keep it together for the sake of my wife and kids.
I simple meant I have been experiencing the same recently and have not before. I may have been t1 for 7 yrs but it's all still very new and changing all the time for me too. didn't mean to ruffle feathers
Forget your GP, talk to your endocrinologist about ALL this. He/she is trained precisely in the hormone system and its effects. And your depression etc is probably linked not only to your diabetes but also to the removal of your ovaries. It sounds like a sudden onset of menopause. Your endo should be able to help you with that.I was diagnosed with T1 in my late 40's (fortunately I was with my family). If I'd been on my own I'd probably be dead. I thought I had a cold. My mum insisted I see a doctor. I was sent to A+E as I was dehydrated. Almost immediately on reaching A+E I became desperately thirsty and developed shortness of breath. Initially I was told I was hyperventilating but I was suffering from ketoacidosis. I had an abdominal CT scan (I'm sure not looking for gallstones as I was told). i'm sure they were looking to see if I had a pancreatic tumour (my pancreas had atrophied to about the size of a walnut). However the scan showed I had a lesion on one of my ovaries. Six weeks after being diagnosed with T1 I had a hysterectomy and removal of my ovaries. Fortunately the lesion was a cyst and not an ovarian tumour as had been suspected. Up until about 2 weeks after I felt quite good and my mood was good. Then i think everything hit me and I kept bursting into floods of tears and I ached all over and my skin was hypersensitive to anything that touched it. A lovely GP told me I had post traumatic stress disorder. I also lost a huge amount of muscle mass and strength.
I am still on an emotional roller coaster seven years later. The GP with whom I am registered is a waste of space. I tried to speak to him once about feeling very down and he just shouted at me and told me I'd need to make another appointment (I refuse to ever see him again). I could have been someone who was feeling suicidal. I think I have finally accepted that I'm diabetic but I feel guilty. I feel inadequate. I don't participate in certain activities with friends. I like to be in control (I'm a bit O.C.D) and feel guilty when I get a blood glucose reading which I consider is unacceptable. My control is very tight (at my last diabetic clinic visit the consultant said she was a little concerned my control was too tight). I don't imagine after this time I will ever feel any different. Sometimes I think I'm just passing time till I die. I struggle with planning for the future (such as holidays) as I wonder whether I'll still be fit to work so will I be able to afford the holiday, or will I still be around.
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