To Lauram16,
Hopefully you get a chance to read this, this is my first ever post on here and I hope it really helps out. I was newly diagnosed as type one shortly after my 18th birthday and right before Thanksgiving. It can be a very hard change and hit me like a freight train. I can understand what you niece is going through, and it can be incredibly confusing.
I can not speak for her or put words towards how she is feeling, but I can tell you about how I felt. At first I was incredibly sad and felt isolated. I didn't want to talk to anyone and I was scared to tell people about it. But shortly after I realise that's what friends are for. Friends are there for you at your darkest times and will always be around to help you and love you when you need it most. I wish I had told them earlier. While it can become annoying having to explain to them certain things like low blood sugar, they will also listen intently and try to understand as best as they can, because for starters they are not you and can only understand how you feel as best as you tell them.
Some words of advice I would give your niece would to just be yourself. Do not let you diabetes control you and become you. While it is a large part of who you are it is not everything you are, and you should learn to live side by side with it. You will have it for the rest of your life and you must learn to be ok with it. I currently go to college and when I go out to the bars or out to a party people always ask me about it. I always thought about making a card just to hand to people, instead of having the same speech over and over again. I realised this was instead a good time to educate people on something they might not understand, such as I can have as much sugar as I want, but it's about the balance.
I understand that she is fairly new to this and it can take some time to realise these things, simply be there for her and ask her what she needs, and sometimes it's ok to just want to be left alone. I am currently 21 and I have been diabetic for three years. It's not something that happens overnight you just don't fix everything and understand how it works, Rome wasn't built in a day. After three years I am still working on it, but have gotten my A1c down from a 13 to a 6.4 and still going. It takes time and one day you will realise it becomes like second nature.
Tell her to reach out to her friends they are only there to help. Sometimes I find that I do feel isolated because I don't know anyone with type 1 or diabetes in general. Thats why I'm on here. I don't even live in the UK I live in New Jersey in the United States, but it is nice to have people to talk to and realise that there is a large part of the world who feels and has the same problems you do.
Sure it is a chronic illness and will never go away, I thought my life was over when I got my diagnosis. But, now I'm 21 I frequently go out to bars (and drink) with my friends, I have a loving family, a great set of doctors, and a girlfriend that I couldn't live without. And while sometimes they may not understand me and what I am going through, they are always there for me.
I know I don't have a picture and my profile is not the most complete, but I hope that this still helps. Tell your niece to reach out to those around her and maybe you could take some classes to try and understand better as well. It only gets better when you try your hardest, and it's gonna take alot of work.
If you have any questions or still want to talk about anything please feel free to message me.
Sending a hug with this,
JTSilver98
