Hi I’m Claire my estimated results on my sensor is 7.7% (6.1 mil) I always seem to wrong vibes when see the diabetic nurse always saying I’m high
My weight is up & down always say I’ve not lost any, my scales say diff I’ve lost 12 kg to date
Each time I come out of Drs I feel totally deflated thinking I’ve done well considering I can’t exercise as my body has osteoarthritis in back knees
Certainly makes feel so fed up & down
We all diabetics work so hard & get no reward or say ohh your doing well
Hey Claire, no reason to feel down at all, I'd say. Some thoughts from my 40 years of being with type 1:
1. get control of things. If you do that, no matter what anybody tells you, you are doing great.
2. estimated hba1c (from the sensor) and actual hba1c are most of the time different. My actual hba1c is always lower than the one estimated by the sensor app. It is normal, different measures, different software, different methods altogether. The one from blood tests is the reference - in case of doubt.
3. I'm not here to give you or anybody "lessons". However, people in general, including nurses and doctors, have stereotypes. If they see "overweight", they may react in ways you feel unappreciated. If your scale says a different story, then make sure you do a proper monitoring and you bring that story to the visit. Make them hear you. And, this is just a thought, if you cannot exercise, then maybe you can control what, how much, and when you eat. Use the sensor to stay in control of your blood sugar while doing everything else you enjoy in your life.
4. A personal note: I've been doing this for 40 years, since I was 10. I went into depression when I was 20 but I decided to fight and live. Since then, I've enjoyed life, I've tried to experience as much as I could. I went to places just to challenge my mind (Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, China, Vietnam, and many more). Some for work, some for pleasure. The point is, diabetes never stopped me from getting what I want. Don't let people in charge of helping you do that.
PS: and I lived in 5+ countries. It happens everywhere ie the reaction from care takers. I'm sharing the one I found honest. A doctress in Paris. She told me: there's nothing I can tell you that you don't already know. You are doing great. Maybe just consider this then that thing happens...