Hi Rich, and welcome to the forums. It would help folks to reply to you if you'd give a little bit more detail. For example - what was the HbA1c reading they gave you? Also - what exactly are you eating? You may find that you need to revisit what you understand to be "healthy" eating.Hello, I have recently been diagnosed as prediabetic, which I think stems from me not eating correctly for over a decade & less physically active.
Upon recieving this news I have begun to eat breakfast again, have lunch & more veg with my tea as well as drinking a minimum of 1.5 litres of water daily.
However I usually find myself overeating & rarely feeling full despite the changes.
I would appreciate any advice or ideas on how reduce this
Hello, and welcome!Hello, I have recently been diagnosed as prediabetic, which I think stems from me not eating correctly for over a decade & less physically active.
Upon recieving this news I have begun to eat breakfast again, have lunch & more veg with my tea as well as drinking a minimum of 1.5 litres of water daily.
However I usually find myself overeating & rarely feeling full despite the changes.
I would appreciate any advice or ideas on how reduce this
Hello, I have recently been diagnosed as prediabetic, which I think stems from me not eating correctly for over a decade & less physically active.
Upon recieving this news I have begun to eat breakfast again, have lunch & more veg with my tea as well as drinking a minimum of 1.5 litres of water daily.
However I usually find myself overeating & rarely feeling full despite the changes.
I would appreciate any advice or ideas on how
Thanks,Hi Rich, and welcome to the forums. It would help folks to reply to you if you'd give a little bit more detail. For example - what was the HbA1c reading they gave you? Also - what exactly are you eating? You may find that you need to revisit what you understand to be "healthy" eating.
Both carbohydrate and sugar in your diet are digested to glucose, and if your system does not deal with that it both hangs around in your bloodstream (leading to increased blood glucose levels) and is converted to bodyfat.
Elevated blood glucose is a symptom; however high blood glucose over time will do physical damage to nerves and capillaries, and that needs to be avoided. Many of us on this forum have had success lowering blood glucose through a low-carb diet, instead earting mainly proteins and fats which do not affect blood glucose.
Read around a bit on the forums (the Success Stories is a good place to start) and don't be afraid to ask questions. I'd strongly advise getting hold of a blood glucose monitor and testing before, and two hours after, eating.
You can ditch the expensive lean/light stuff. Fats don't ruin blood sugars, but they do give us something to run on. (Besides, if they take the fats out, they often put carbs in to bulk it up and for flavour.)Thanks,
Unfortunately I was never given an exact HbA1c figure, only that I fell into the range for prediabetes.
As for what I'm eating/drinking: before I'd be eating & drinking all-sorts, I've knocked all fizzy drinks on the head, stopped adding sugar to tea/coffee & dilute fruit juices.
I'm eating more greens, lean meats, generally things with no added sugar or light versions.
My 2nd checkup is in a few weeks so should know after then if any progress has been made.
It's worth finding out. You could be just above normal, or just below the auto-diagnose diabetes level. That might affect your strategy.Thanks,
Unfortunately I was never given an exact HbA1c figure, only that I fell into the range for prediabetes.
As for what I'm eating/drinking: before I'd be eating & drinking all-sorts, I've knocked all fizzy drinks on the head, stopped adding sugar to tea/coffee & dilute fruit juices.
I'm eating more greens, lean meats, generally things with no added sugar or light versions.
My 2nd checkup is in a few weeks so should know after then if any progress has been made.
Thanks,
Unfortunately I was never given an exact HbA1c figure, only that I fell into the range for prediabetes.
As for what I'm eating/drinking: before I'd be eating & drinking all-sorts, I've knocked all fizzy drinks on the head, stopped adding sugar to tea/coffee & dilute fruit juices.
I'm eating more greens, lean meats, generally things with no added sugar or light versions.
My 2nd checkup is in a few weeks so should know after then if any progress has been made.
Hello Kenny, when I had my checkup this week I asked what my HbA1c was, it's currently 44 mmol/mol. So just over the prediabetes mark for now, I've got a follow-up in 3 weeks, hopefully know more afterwards.It's worth finding out. You could be just above normal, or just below the auto-diagnose diabetes level. That might affect your strategy.
Fats are our friend: if you reduce carb (which should have an impact on your blood glucose) you'll still need energy - which can come from both dietary fat and bodyfat. Reducing carb/glucose should also mean that you won't be storing the excess glucose as new bodyfat. If by "light" versions you mean low-fat, these often have extra carbs added.
Be careful about the "no added sugar" claim: it might even be true, but the item can still be full of sugars and carbs. They just haven't been "added".
Best of luck!
Hi Jo, I was wondering, if I were to return to say 3 meals a day, from well over a decade with just one (stupidly large just thrown together meal), would this immediate change potentially confuse my body or am I just being daft, lol?Hello, and welcome!
Sounds to me like you were accidentally doing something right before, actually... Skipping meals. Quite a few people here practice Intermittent Fasting, which gives our pancreases a break from continued insulin demands. If you don't want to eat three meals a day, but stick with one or two, that's perfectly fine, and even wise. Just make sure that the meals you do have, are low in carbs, if you want to go the dietary route. https://josekalsbeek.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-nutritional-thingy.html should help.
In any case, again, welcome and good luck!
Jo
I doubt it. Bodies do get confused rather easily, but they tend to (try to) adapt, which usually doesn't take more than a few weeks. After that, they're used to the new normal. Which is probably why, if you were to switch back to one meal a day, you'd be hungry in the morning and afternoon: your body'd be used to eating then as well, so not eating would likely mean another slight period of adjustment.Hi Jo, I was wondering, if I were to return to say 3 meals a day, from well over a decade with just one (stupidly large just thrown together meal), would this immediate change potentially confuse my body or am I just being daft, lol?
Regards, Rich
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