Hi Aurora, I'm glad that you're posted your story and want to get yourself sorted. My suggestion is to ask your DSN or GP to put your name forward for a DAFNE course. I did the course at Addenbrookes in Sept 2013 and it's done wonders for my diabetes management and self confidence. They will also look at your insulins to make sure that they're working for you. You don't need to do 2 hour testing as DAFNE will advise..I test after 4 hours unless I feel unwell. I've always carb counted with my meals.Hi, I agree with all the advice given to you. I have had diabetes for 22 years now and have gone through a long period (since becoming a teenager) of struggling with my control, motivation, success rates etc etc!
I think the advice to ask to go on a carbohydrate counting course is great as this gave me a whole new aspect to focus on and I really enjoyed it. It became a habit/routine to do a blood test, carb count, give insulin and eat. As I couldn't correctly dose without having a blood glucose reading it helped me to see how much they were all linked and how important they all are.
Also I realised after many years of feeling rubbish that if I don't look after myself its me and my own health that suffers-nobody else and on the flip side when I do get a good result its because of my amazing skills at carb counting!!
I still struggle a lot with diabetes and am in a cycle of improving then having to give myself another pep talk so I know exactly how you feel. I hope all this advice helps and please keep us updated
Hi there,
So I've been in a pretty terrible place over the last few years, despite having had T1DM for 13years now, and I hope that joining this forum might be the start of getting back on track.
I do enough diabetes management to get by with living and I mean living in its simplest form i.e. I take my basal insulin and if I can remember to take my bolus then that's me excelling at diabetes... (mmm exactly). My measuring is sporadic. I might measure for a few days perfectly. Pre-meal & 2hrs post meal because I'll be on a brief "sort-your-life-out" mission. Then if I get some really rubbish readings, I become really disheartened and stop.
I've been trying to get a pump for the last 5years. During that time I've seen GPs, Endocrine Professors and numerous nurses saying a pump would be a really good thing for me, why am I not on a pump already? etc etc. 5years ago my bloods were reasonable. Not great but suitable for nhs pump consideration. With each appointment that goes past I see the pump moving further and further away from me. This also really makes my motivation plummet. Currently there's no chance for pump consideration because I don't measure enough. Which sends me into feeling even worse. Another thing I find hard is that I work in healthcare and I feel like a fraud because I know all the complications and I've seen people with the complications. I can help others but I can't find the 'get up and go' to help myself.
My partner split up with me at the beginning of this year and said my approach to my diabetes was a big factor in the breakup. This was at a point where my control was actually on the up. HbA1c was the lowest it's been in years! Although it was still a pretty horrible number, I was measuring and I felt like it was the turning point and that I could keep this downwards trend going on. I felt like this was a person I could actually talk to about my diabetes. Since the break up it's left me feeling alone, feeling even worse about my diabetes and I ended up a few months ago in A&E resus with DKA.
Can anyone help please? Wise words, motivational tips, strategies to get some measuring/ injecting stability back, ...honestly anything will help.
I hate that I've let diabetes control me, to the point that the only way I can feel I have control is by ignoring it completely. I can't go on switching from accepting my diabetes for a few days to ignoring it for a few weeks, and overall making me feel like I lead a really really miserable life. Help.
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