Clairebear2005
Member
- Messages
- 8
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Hey! This was awesome! I made it this morning and ate it with my eldest - we both loved it <3 Thanks for the tip!Sorry to hear about your struggles.
Here’s the recipe for the low carb coconut porridge that @Guzzler mentions. I absolutely love it and have it everyday for breakfast with strawberries and cream
https://www.dietdoctor.com/recipes/keto-coconut-porridge
Your banana contained c.27g carbs.I added a half banana to each serving for a touch of sweetness.
Indeed! Sorry, inappropriate reply on my part. I got carried away by the contrast between the virtuous low carb pudding and the wickedly high carb banana. But of course banana + porridge or muesli would have been a whole lot higher / wickeder!Not too worried. My average bg is at 124mg/dl so I think I'll be good until my doc appt on Wednesday...
Indeed! Sorry, inappropriate reply on my part. I got carried away by the contrast between the virtuous low carb pudding and the wickedly high carb banana. But of course banana + porridge or muesli would have been a whole lot higher / wickeder!
As you are not 'fat adapted' and can use insulin injections to counter the effects of eating carbs then you are perfectly 'safe' not eating low carb - but for type twos - particularly those without any medication, the idea of adding in banana to make something taste sweet just doesn't compute.Well, if I go too low carb with the amount of activity I have, I end up hypo. Plus a half banana is only on carb-unit (15gm) which is still pretty good, I'd say. Trying to maintain some balance here while this is still so new to me - been just 2 weeks since diagnosis.
I'm reassured to read this, as my energy levels and endurance capacity are not yet at all what they should be.I find that ketones are a far better source of energy than carbs, and it gets better over time - I went to the Winchester Folk festival last Saturday with my morris side and managed far better than one year ago, which was six months after diagnosis.
Goodness me, how well you are coping!Trying to maintain some balance here while this is still so new to me - been just 2 weeks since diagnosis.
As you are not 'fat adapted' and can use insulin injections to counter the effects of eating carbs then you are perfectly 'safe' not eating low carb - but for type twos - particularly those without any medication, the idea of adding in banana to make something taste sweet just doesn't compute.
My entire day's carbs is a maximum of 40 gm, at the moment in order to get normal numbers and some fat loss. I find that ketones are a far better source of energy than carbs, and it gets better over time - I went to the Winchester Folk festival last Saturday with my morris side and managed far better than one year ago, which was six months after diagnosis.
Your problem is that your body isn't producing insulin, so all the injections do is replace what you should be producing naturally. You're not insulin resistant or carbohydrate intolerant. By all means go low carb if you like, but realise that T1 is not the same as T2 and your reasons for going low carb are different...I just don't like the idea of eating something that my body obviously has difficulty with and then having to counteract that with insulin.
Actually, T1 and T2 are exact opposite. T1 is not enough insulin and T2 is too much insulin. However, from what I've read I think there's plenty that speaks for a low carb diet for T1 patients. If I can reduce the amount of insulin I inject by eating fewer carbohydrates, I can reduce the chance of developing insulin resistance (ie T2) later in life. For me personally, I've also coincidentally used low carb intermittently for years to stop my symptoms of colitis.Your problem is that your body isn't producing insulin, so all the injections do is replace what you should be producing naturally. You're not insulin resistant or carbohydrate intolerant. By all means go low carb if you like, but realise that T1 is not the same as T2 and your reasons for going low carb are different...
Hi Clairebear! I just wanted to say that I am sorry to hear about your plight. I have heard that fibromyalgia reacts well to low-inflammation foods (basically stay away from grains and refined sugars). Maybe that's a direction you could look into? I hope you find a solution soon and that you begin to feel better.Hi everyone, just been diagnosed as type two and feeling a bit overwhelmed by it all . I have fibromyalgia too so I spend a lot of time in bed on morphine which leads to comfort eating etc etc , I also will be having all my teeth removed when I finally get a date. I’m really struggling with what to eat, I have no teeth to bite with and my back teeth have all been broken so I can’t chew on anything so I need ideas for soft foods to eat, I would appreciate any tips available.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?