Michelle-richards3
Newbie
- Messages
- 2
Then told friday my bloods have gone from 49 to 66 and I've been put on medication.
Hi, I'm new here, but feeling a bit sorry for myself and as supportive as my family are x unfortunately they just dont get it.
I've been overweight for as long as I can remember. I really struggle to lose weight, even if I'm following a plan to the t and doing lots of exercise I dont seem to lose it like other people.
At the beginning of January I did a total overhaul of my diet, cut of fizzy drinks (even diet) cut out bread, chocolate, sweets, crisps and literally only let healthy nutritious food past my lips. Doing lots of walking and keeping active. And actually losing a little weight. Then told friday my bloods have gone from 49 to 66 and I've been put on medication. I'm devastated. Cant help but feel I've done this to myself and I just feel so out of my depth with it all.
I've an appointment with the diabetic nurse Tuesday to check I've tolerated the meds and she is going to increase them. Should I be checking my bloods regularly? Not sure what to do next.
Sorry for waffled post x just feeling a little overwhelmed today xx
Rice and pasta whatever the colour will likely be pretty awful for spiking blood sugars.Aw thank you all for your replies and understanding it really means alot.im following slimming world at the mo. Using white rice and pasta so I've seen that changing to brown will help. I'm cooking/eating a lot of fresh food including fresh fruit, onions, peppers, mushrooms, spinach etc and varying what we are eating, following pinch of nom recipes.
Is sw a good diet for diabetes? Any other suggestions
Thanks
Michelle x
I was diagnosed a little over a year ago. One of the hardest things I had to adjust to is that all the "healthy eating" advice we get bombarded with by the media and health services is simply wrong for T2. Fruit, bread, pasta, rice, the eatwell plate, "wholemeal" "base your meals around starchy carbohydrates", all that stuff, is no good for T2 (I might also argue that it contributes directly to the diabetes problem the western world has). I have friends who can't quite understand why I eat an "unhealthy" high protein, high fat diet when I already have diabetes.... I was about to link you to Jo Kalsbeek's info but I see someone else has already done it. Sorry for the rant, but following the usual "healthy eating" advice will do T2s no favours at all.Aw thank you all for your replies and understanding it really means alot.im following slimming world at the mo. Using white rice and pasta so I've seen that changing to brown will help. I'm cooking/eating a lot of fresh food including fresh fruit, onions, peppers, mushrooms, spinach etc and varying what we are eating, following pinch of nom recipes.
Is sw a good diet for diabetes? Any other suggestions
Thanks
Michelle x
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