woollygal
Well-Known Member
So I’ve always been a good sleeper, when I was a baby apparently I had to be woken up to be fed and that really never changed (apart from the feeding). I could sleep for hours undisturbed and through e erything.
Since I moved to this place (which coincided within days with being diagnosed type 2 ) (well I don’t know when it started but it’s only since I’ve been here, so whether it’s 2 years or one year I’m not sure).
I was fine getting off to sleep, usually instantly but I couldn’t stay asleep. So I’d be waking up at say 3 am if I was lucky I’d get back to sleep but quite often I couldn’t. But I was always waking up at say 5 then 4.30am and was always exhausted but just couldn’t stay asleep.
Didn’t matter what time I went to sleep still woke up same time.
but since the new year when I have dropped my carbs even lower ( I now don’t have carbs at all at breakfast or another meal and only have 2 hot chocoates and limited carbs the other meal) my snacks are carb free if I need them.
But since then I have literally been sleeping for England. It can’t be the lockdown because I’ve had two lockdowns and nothing changed in them at all. The only thing that has changed is my carb intake. so could carbs have been mucking up my sleep?
Now I am in lockdown and obviously because not working at all there is no stress there but that didn’t matter in the last two lockdowns.
Funnily enough if I do have a meal that is higher in carbs (I make a butter chicken curry with shop sauce and a stir fry) they have about 20-30g of carbs in that meal. My sugars don’t react at all, and are within the range. But it does interrupt my sleep slightly.
I will try and keep a diary because if it is that I’ll have to think of who to cut them a bit more.
I’m going to be around 10-10.30 and I’m sleeping till 6 which in itself is a miracle and then I’ll go to loo go back to bed and sleep for another couple of Hours. It’s fabulous because I do love my sleep. But it’s very strange.
But after the ramble, do carbs affect sleep? My sugars don’t go stupidly high but they can be in the 9s or 8s.
Since I’ve cut down carbs that has improved a bit as well.
Since I moved to this place (which coincided within days with being diagnosed type 2 ) (well I don’t know when it started but it’s only since I’ve been here, so whether it’s 2 years or one year I’m not sure).
I was fine getting off to sleep, usually instantly but I couldn’t stay asleep. So I’d be waking up at say 3 am if I was lucky I’d get back to sleep but quite often I couldn’t. But I was always waking up at say 5 then 4.30am and was always exhausted but just couldn’t stay asleep.
Didn’t matter what time I went to sleep still woke up same time.
but since the new year when I have dropped my carbs even lower ( I now don’t have carbs at all at breakfast or another meal and only have 2 hot chocoates and limited carbs the other meal) my snacks are carb free if I need them.
But since then I have literally been sleeping for England. It can’t be the lockdown because I’ve had two lockdowns and nothing changed in them at all. The only thing that has changed is my carb intake. so could carbs have been mucking up my sleep?
Now I am in lockdown and obviously because not working at all there is no stress there but that didn’t matter in the last two lockdowns.
Funnily enough if I do have a meal that is higher in carbs (I make a butter chicken curry with shop sauce and a stir fry) they have about 20-30g of carbs in that meal. My sugars don’t react at all, and are within the range. But it does interrupt my sleep slightly.
I will try and keep a diary because if it is that I’ll have to think of who to cut them a bit more.
I’m going to be around 10-10.30 and I’m sleeping till 6 which in itself is a miracle and then I’ll go to loo go back to bed and sleep for another couple of Hours. It’s fabulous because I do love my sleep. But it’s very strange.
But after the ramble, do carbs affect sleep? My sugars don’t go stupidly high but they can be in the 9s or 8s.
Since I’ve cut down carbs that has improved a bit as well.