I agree with @slip about fantasising about not being a diabetic, I also had a brief spell when I was diagnosed..
Am I strange? Don't answer that.
Definitely.
I still have many times when I "forget" that I am diabetic and suddenly hits me I need to check my BG or inject.
Hi Craig,Hi Shane,
I'm very similar to you only now much more experienced. Apart from the feeling of your blood going around your body everything you have described you could have been describing me. The blurred vision will resolve itself. Your body is still adjusting it's delicate chemical balance back to the new normal.
Although you don't realise it you are going through a grieving process "denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance"
You have entered the first challenge Everyone's D is personalised, however 99% is common to all of us. Most of us we have Diabetes. With a few Diabetes has them. What I mean is don't let D rule your life. Yes there are going to be occasions when it get is the road, but for most of our lives ti's there for our convenience. I just wish I had this forum 14 years ago. We can provide advice that your D team can't and that is personal experience. Except for airline pilot and a few other professions, you can still do anything. For the last month things will have been a whirlwind, you will have been running to appointments, being jabed and poked, in a daze partially from D and from information overload, let alone the mental stress.
Get yourself back into your old routine with the obvious minor adjustments as much as you can. I promise you in a year you will look back and wonder what all the fuss was about.
Don't take any notice of the whinges here. We are experts at having good whinge every so often, sadly for some that is all they do. I suspect if it wasn't D, they would be complaining about something else and unfortunately D has them. Most whinges are relevant, but may never impact you. With some, well lets just worry about you mastering D, then you can take on some of the more interesting challenges D can present.
Whenever you feeling down come and ask for support here. When you have a question ask it here and expect 10 different answers many contradicting each other. Look around you, out of all the nasty things out there you were lucky enough to get D and in this amazing technological world. 80 years ago this would have been a death sentence, it's now a minor inconvenience, well it will be once you get yourself sorted and some experience. I'm now off to inject, have a shower then breakfast (I'm in Oz) and off to challenge Saturday.
Craig
Definitely.
I was diagnosed just over a year a go at 31/32 (I was diagnosed the day before my birthday!) and I still have many times when I "forget" that I am diabetic and suddenly hits me I need to check my BG or inject. It has certainly taken some getting used to, even though my partner is type 1 also and has been since she was a child.
I think in the back of my mind I sometimes think it will go away and I won't be diabetic anymore, but I think I just tell myself that to get through the days and keep my BG under control. The days I realise this is for life are the days it gets me down and upset. I try to ignore those days, especially after the death of my friend last year from complications after not looking after himself, but trying to use his mistakes as a way to motivate myself to do the best I can.
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