Hi and welcome,
Great to see you have picked up a low carb diet, and also that you are testing your blood sugars.
Are you testing before and 2 hours after meals in order to find the right diet for you? Keeping a food diary including portion sizes and recording your before and after levels alongside can be a great help. You can see for yourself how your body reacts to certain foods and be able to reduce or eliminate these foods. If the rise from before to after is more than 2mmol/l there are too many carbs in that meal. Ideally the rise should be under 1.5mmol/l.
For me, feeling positive came with lowered blood sugars and weight loss. I record all these things and this was (still is) my motivation - I am competitive with myself. My diagnosis in 2014 was the kick up the bum I needed and I have never looked back.
Hi, I have been type 1 for eight months now it comes a bit of a shock doesn't it, If you get this book called Carbs and Cals off amazon its amazing in controlling the carbs and sugar very simple to understand you can look at food and sort of count how many carbs there are. I get down sometimes about myself but then I always say there is someone out there a lot worse off than me.Hi
Recently diagnosed with an HbA1c of 96 and put on 1x500mg slow release Metformin and told to double the dose after 2 weeks. The double dosage really didn't agree with me so I have gone back down to one tablet. Feeling very shaky this morning and when I tested my blood sugars it came out as 15.4. When first diagnosed I was pleased (not the usual reaction I'm sure) but it at least meant, after months of suffering, I knew what was wrong and could work towards a healthier me but a couple of weeks later I have hit a real low and am struggling to stay positive. The more I read about diabetes, however, the more confused I seem to be getting. The main thing I've picked up on is a low carb diet - I've invested in a spiralizer and courgetti is my new best friend! Any tips will be gratefully received, particularly your thoughts on how you stay positive.
Thank you
Welcome to the forum. First of all, relax. You are now with a support group who will help you through these trying times. Remember to reduce carb intake, keep your fluid intake up and test regularly to keep track of your bgl's. You will have your good and bad days, we all do. Keep positive, be active and stay with the program.Hi
Recently diagnosed with an HbA1c of 96 and put on 1x500mg slow release Metformin and told to double the dose after 2 weeks. The double dosage really didn't agree with me so I have gone back down to one tablet. Feeling very shaky this morning and when I tested my blood sugars it came out as 15.4. When first diagnosed I was pleased (not the usual reaction I'm sure) but it at least meant, after months of suffering, I knew what was wrong and could work towards a healthier me but a couple of weeks later I have hit a real low and am struggling to stay positive. The more I read about diabetes, however, the more confused I seem to be getting. The main thing I've picked up on is a low carb diet - I've invested in a spiralizer and courgetti is my new best friend! Any tips will be gratefully received, particularly your thoughts on how you stay positive.
Thank you
Make sure you keep a record of glucose levels to help track your progress. Very important!!Thanks - I shall start a food diary
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