chris55561612
Member
- Messages
- 14
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
Hi all, this is my first post. I wrote a comment today on youtube about my experiences with diabetes and I thought: "hey maybe this could help someone else", so I signed up here. It occurs to me that you might have heard this all before as, to be honest, I haven't given the other threads much of a look threw, but here it goes anyway:
+Julie “JulieTheRockChick” hermiz Hi, chromium has helped me, I never got diagnosed with type 2 but carbs and sugar would make me feel terrible and I would also wake up in the night with adrenaline. I restricted my diet to porridge, nuts and buckwheat to help me feel more normal. When I did have say, a bowl of tomato soup, it would knock me out and would have to sleep for about an hour. Buckwheat in the form of buckwheat pasta or groats(its natural form) is fantastic for a constant energy level. I had to do a lot of exercise too, to feel better. Cinnamon dropped my energy too much every time I tried to use it but ymmv. I would add kidney beans, onion, broccoli and canned tomatoes to go with the buckwheat pasta and some spices too and I still got an excellent energy level from the meal because of a chemical in the buckwheat. I have read about vanadium since but I never took it. Honestly, buckwheat was great to use and buckwheat and chromium worked almost like magic. One thing I realized about chromium is that the cheap tablets are garbage, I had to use a high quality nano sized particle chromium supplement (in liquid) to be effective. I have been trying going on a ketogenic diet since i.e. making my body run on fats instead of glucose, but I might go back to a low gi diet again and take chromium (and vanadium this time).
PS I have always, that I can remember, been very acidic i.e. even as a teenager I was having acid reflux. I guess maybe because of all the diet coke I would drink after and during school hours. I have tried using alkalinizing powders before but I have found that eating lots of vegetables works best for me and avoiding wheat products helps a lot as well. Wheat things made me have acid reflux quite badly afterwards. I think exercise is really important too.
So in summary I would, if I were you: Take chromium (ionic, nano sized particles, in a liquid) and vanadium (same deal on quality). Make buckwheat your major source of carbs in your meals, add steamed broccili, kale, cauliflower or beans (i.e. chickpeas, kidney beans, butter beans) and eat some raw veggies i.e. cucumber, lettuce, celery etc and if you have a meal with a lot of buckwheat you can add tinned tomatoes too. Some nuts are great for energy i.e. brazil, macadamia.
Avoid the saturated fat in meat or dairy (they really screwed up my energy while on a carbs based diet (UPDATE: actually I can't remember if was using chromium at that time, that could make a big difference)). If you are a protein person or just want some protein, steamed fish, squid, prawns, shellfish are all good. Take some trace minerals too, colloidal works fine for me; If you have tooth sensitivity or weak knees or suffer from cramps I find that it really helps! Obviously avoid refined carbs and do lots of exercise; Just a stationary bike machine is enough, maybe try to have a good session in the morning and another in the evening and see how it makes you feel, hopefully much better.
So that's what I would write to myself if I could go back in time and give my old self some good advice
FYI I have never been on insulin but I did go for a test at a local(ish) GP's practice to have access to that treatment. The problem for me at the time was that they said I had to fast for 24 hours before taking the test (this was before I had learnt about chromium) and I thought to myself " how the heck am I going to function without eating for 24 hours" because I knew that if I didn't eat porridge or buckwheat meals on a very regular basis I would feel terrible. The solution I figured was to do lots and lots of exercise in the morning before the test so that I would feel well enough to take the bus and walk to the GP's office; So that's what I did, I still felt horrible when I took the test and when the results came back it said I had a normal blood sugar level ! In hindsight, I realize now that all the exercise must have used up all or most of the excess sugar in my blood. It took me a while to figure that out though and so I abandoned insulin as a solution.
*End of my youtube comment*
These are own experiences and while I do think different peoples body chemistry's can vary I'm still hoping that it might be valuable to someone else
PS I don't mean to sound like a "know it all" by putting "solutions" in the title, I just thought more people might bother to click on and read my thread. ^_^
+Julie “JulieTheRockChick” hermiz Hi, chromium has helped me, I never got diagnosed with type 2 but carbs and sugar would make me feel terrible and I would also wake up in the night with adrenaline. I restricted my diet to porridge, nuts and buckwheat to help me feel more normal. When I did have say, a bowl of tomato soup, it would knock me out and would have to sleep for about an hour. Buckwheat in the form of buckwheat pasta or groats(its natural form) is fantastic for a constant energy level. I had to do a lot of exercise too, to feel better. Cinnamon dropped my energy too much every time I tried to use it but ymmv. I would add kidney beans, onion, broccoli and canned tomatoes to go with the buckwheat pasta and some spices too and I still got an excellent energy level from the meal because of a chemical in the buckwheat. I have read about vanadium since but I never took it. Honestly, buckwheat was great to use and buckwheat and chromium worked almost like magic. One thing I realized about chromium is that the cheap tablets are garbage, I had to use a high quality nano sized particle chromium supplement (in liquid) to be effective. I have been trying going on a ketogenic diet since i.e. making my body run on fats instead of glucose, but I might go back to a low gi diet again and take chromium (and vanadium this time).
PS I have always, that I can remember, been very acidic i.e. even as a teenager I was having acid reflux. I guess maybe because of all the diet coke I would drink after and during school hours. I have tried using alkalinizing powders before but I have found that eating lots of vegetables works best for me and avoiding wheat products helps a lot as well. Wheat things made me have acid reflux quite badly afterwards. I think exercise is really important too.
So in summary I would, if I were you: Take chromium (ionic, nano sized particles, in a liquid) and vanadium (same deal on quality). Make buckwheat your major source of carbs in your meals, add steamed broccili, kale, cauliflower or beans (i.e. chickpeas, kidney beans, butter beans) and eat some raw veggies i.e. cucumber, lettuce, celery etc and if you have a meal with a lot of buckwheat you can add tinned tomatoes too. Some nuts are great for energy i.e. brazil, macadamia.
Avoid the saturated fat in meat or dairy (they really screwed up my energy while on a carbs based diet (UPDATE: actually I can't remember if was using chromium at that time, that could make a big difference)). If you are a protein person or just want some protein, steamed fish, squid, prawns, shellfish are all good. Take some trace minerals too, colloidal works fine for me; If you have tooth sensitivity or weak knees or suffer from cramps I find that it really helps! Obviously avoid refined carbs and do lots of exercise; Just a stationary bike machine is enough, maybe try to have a good session in the morning and another in the evening and see how it makes you feel, hopefully much better.
So that's what I would write to myself if I could go back in time and give my old self some good advice

FYI I have never been on insulin but I did go for a test at a local(ish) GP's practice to have access to that treatment. The problem for me at the time was that they said I had to fast for 24 hours before taking the test (this was before I had learnt about chromium) and I thought to myself " how the heck am I going to function without eating for 24 hours" because I knew that if I didn't eat porridge or buckwheat meals on a very regular basis I would feel terrible. The solution I figured was to do lots and lots of exercise in the morning before the test so that I would feel well enough to take the bus and walk to the GP's office; So that's what I did, I still felt horrible when I took the test and when the results came back it said I had a normal blood sugar level ! In hindsight, I realize now that all the exercise must have used up all or most of the excess sugar in my blood. It took me a while to figure that out though and so I abandoned insulin as a solution.
*End of my youtube comment*
These are own experiences and while I do think different peoples body chemistry's can vary I'm still hoping that it might be valuable to someone else

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