I went through the devastation of miscarriage tears ago. Go very easy on yourself,the impact of what has happened to you is massive. You will start to feel better,but your sugars are bound to be wild. I believe the most important thing for you is to allo yourself the time it takes to move on. I found a group which supports women who have miscarried and it helped a lot. Couldn't see it at the time but looking back it was invaluable.Talking helps.xxI've been type 1 for 7 years now. I was diagnosed at 14 and have never been able to control. I'm now at the point where I need help I'm terrified of complications I am about to move to the other side of the world and I am a bit lost! I've recently had a missed miscarriage and since then I've been so exhausted, hardly sleeping or eating and my sugars are crazy. Any advice welcome and appreciated.
thanks for the very honest reply !!Hi thank you for taking the time to help me. I am throwing myself into work so just now my routine is I am up at 6 every day for work I have two cups of coffee every morning and don't eat till around lunch time most days. At work I'll always eat lunch but maybe not dinner at the minute because I just feel so sick most of the time. I have gone down in weight to around 7 stn 6. I get home from work around either 7 or 9 depending on my shift and work over time just now so long days and rotas weekly. Leaving not a lot of time for anything else tbh and I'm pretty rubbish at testing these days I just don't know how to make it stick
thanks for the very honest reply !!WOW !! where to start !! I was diagnosed at 14 too. Much like you I never really eat breakfast - black coffee was my only "food until lunch time when I was in work ( looking back it was dawn phenomenon ( high BG's) and i always wanted to wait till my bloods were lower to eat my first food )
enough about me though !
why are you "throwing" yourself into work ? ( i may have answered this myself - post miscarriage - totally understandable )does your employer allow you any break time to test etc ?
why are you feeling sick all of the time ??
this next bit is old person speak ( i am 57 )so it may not resonate with you -- but trust me "if you don't look after yourself nobody else is going to" - especially at work sooooo...............my advice is start small and TRY and just get a couple of tests a day in and as @Juicyj says -- get them recorded to a phone app.
your medical peeps will want to help you get your BG's sorted but in fairness they will want to see some commitment from you to KNOW you are taking it seriously - in this sense your health care is a 2 way street.
well I have said enough for a start and I am sorry if this hasn't been the nicest message in the world ( but part of me just wants to give you a big hug , tell you not to worry , and that I will wave my magic wand and make it all get better for you )
all the best !!
Hi @Miriamenily . Sorry to here about what's been going on. That's really tough. If you are struggling to remember to do things then I highly recommend choosing from a couple of apps to stick on your phone.
One Drop has the ability to alarm at times that you set it to for what it calls "Scheduled Meds". This is really useful if you forget to test, take insulin, eat, etc as you can add the alams in and it will tell you what to do. If you are struggling remembering all of this it is very helpful. It also allows you to take photos of food and other things to build up a personal database of your own information. Alongside this, it is designed to allow you to share how you are doing with other users, which leads to encouragement and operates similarly to the forum.
Dario and Diaconnect, whilst not having the social media aspect, provide the ability to set up reminders throughout the day to test. This may also be useful for you.
Many of the apps also include reminders. These are just the ones I've looked into.
it is really tough because your mental wellbeing and your ability to look after yourself physically day to day pretty much go hand in hand.( so can see where your Dr is coming from )
do you have some holiday time accrued where you could maybe take a couple of days off and just concentrate on "you"
i keep coming back to( in my mind) , just try to slow yourself down a bit if you can and take things 1 day at a time , try not to worry , try to get 1 or 2 small things right each day ( testing and food wise ) and don't beat yourself up about what you don't do.
( living with D is a marathon race really - not a sprint round the track once )
haha- i am personally not the best person to ask as regards getting apps to work on phones -- this is 1 thing that I can talk the talk but not walk the walk
there are others here on the forum that can help loads with that sort of thing though
i will tag @Mrsass and perhaps @Juicyj will come back and advise too.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?