Thanks for the tag,
@Grant_Vicat
Hi
@Ljsmith11176 , and welcome to the forum!
I agree with the above, you're newly diagnosed, so your pancreas is likely to splutter out insulin in rather random ways. On top of this, you're trying to make sense of your numbers (very good!) and trying to find the logic in what you see, while being in the most chaotic stage of having T1.
It's perfectly expectable for things to not make sense regularly. I'll include a picture of things which can influence our blood glucose, and I'm sure there are more than those 42.
As for Tresiba, as far as I know it's the most stable background insulin, and it's very forgiving to injecting hours earlier or later than you usually do. For this reason I wouldn't expect the cause of your higher rise in your Tresiba, especially as your waking number was as good as the same. (Waking up between 4.8 and 5.2 is remarkably stable, not many T1's who manage this!)
The one thing you did differently was the timing of waking up and having breakfast.
Many of us find we need more insulin for the same amount of carbs earlier in the day, so it could be this. But it could also be you're brewing a cold, your pancreas is having an off day, lack of sleep seems a likely candidate as well, seeing as you woke up 4 hours earlier than the last couple of days
Could be anything really!
It is also a result you saw only once, you want to look for patterns and not act on one-offs. It's only after you find out you go high after breakfast every time you wake up early that you can conclude waking up early means you need more insulin for breakfast.
It takes a lot of time to get to know how to manage diabetes, testing often and keeping notes on meals, insulin, blood glucose, time and exercise can help a lot in spotting patterns, but you'll need to find a way which is acceptable to you.
It's perfectly fine if it takes time, and even when you think you got it, diabetes will do something unexpected regularly.
Your numbers are pretty awesome already!