Diabetic Girl
Newbie
- Messages
- 3
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
I'm 26 and have been a T1 diabetic since the age of 4. I went through the typical rebellious teen stage of denial with my diabetes and let that go into my early 20's. I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price. I now have neropathy, kidney disease and have gone partially blind to the point where I can no longer drive. I know this is my own doing and I deserve this. I feel so alone and have yet to know or hear of a diabetic around my age with these complications. I go to my eye clinic and I'm surrounded by diabetics well
into there 60's or above. Am I the only one my age with all these complications? Did I screw up that badly that I somehow managed to get these "later in life" problems earlier in life?
Let me start by saying that I do not think that you deserve this or brought it on yourself. I am type 2 and have been for over 2 years now and I do not have mine under control either. Usually I run high but recently have had issues with being way too low. It is so hard to keep the levels right, especially when the Novolog drops me so low I get the shakes, sweats, and confusion. It makes me so scared of the short term that it's much easier to just ride high. I'm at 23.3mmol right now and just took 50 units of Lantus along with 3 units of the Novolog. My point is that since the long term effects aren't something you notice immediately, and it's so scary dropping so low you can go into a coma, it is easy to just ignore it. I am so sorry for the problems you are having, just don't blame yourself, your human just like me and I "get it". I don't have all the symptoms you do but they are starting. My left arm has started to go numb and my hand tingles most of the time. My sight isn't going yet, but I do have noticeable changes in my vision. I have already lost my gall bladder and 80% of my pancreas, but those are what caused my diabetes, not lost because of it. And that is after only 2 years. I can't tell you that you will get better, but I can tell you that it is never too late to at least do what you can to keep it from getting worse, and believe me, there is worse. My wife's mother had both her legs amputated from complications from diabetes. Not wanting to scare you, just want you to know that there are even worse thing that can happen. You can't change the past but you can change, or at least shape, the future. Hang tough and don't let this get the best of you.I'm 26 and have been a T1 diabetic since the age of 4. I went through the typical rebellious teen stage of denial with my diabetes and let that go into my early 20's. I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price. I now have neropathy, kidney disease and have gone partially blind to the point where I can no longer drive. I know this is my own doing and I deserve this. I feel so alone and have yet to know or hear of a diabetic around my age with these complications. I go to my eye clinic and I'm surrounded by diabetics well
into there 60's or above. Am I the only one my age with all these complications? Did I screw up that badly that I somehow managed to get these "later in life" problems earlier in life?
Firstly, I’m so sorry. You sound quite down and frustrated, understandably so.
I’m t1, and 35. In the 7 years since diagnosis, I have ignored my Diabetes to the point I have retinopathy, stage 4 nephropathy, Gastroparesis, peripheral neuropathy and autonomic neuropathy. Unfortunately, Diabetes can be very cruel. I also went blind through severe cataracts, now fixed.
I feel I bought this all on and take full responsibility, but I also acknowledge that no other medical condition puts so much emphasis on self management and that although I can’t change what has happened I can work to reduce further damage and move forward with life.
There are times it feels so unfair, but you are obviously strong and can work with everything. Plus, there is always some small comfort in comparison- you’ve not screwed up you’ve got everything wrong!
Complications come hand in hand with the condition, I know a perfect diabetic instead of a diabolical one like me and she also has nephropathy, so I do feel luck can also play a part.
Embrace the nonsense, stick two fingers up at it and keep on moving forward. You can live with all these things, although hard. Plus, my attitude is I’ve got this all out the way early, old age will be a breeze! (Sorry, not being flippant, Just had to develop humour about myself)
Keep trying, and don’t give up. Good luck x
Hello diabetic girl i got diabetes when i was 3 and from the age of 18-21 i had laser treatment on both eyes and had to finish it by knocking me out but to no avail. This did not work and i had 3 ops on my left eye and 2 on the right all in the space of 3 years and was told by my eye doctor last years if i did not have all the treatment that i would have been blind by now. Just 3 months after all that i was told that by the time i was 30 that i would need a kidney transplant and it looked like it was going that way but when i was 30 my kidneys were working at 20% and did so for the next 7 years and after a meeting with all the doctors we thought having a kidney and pancreas would be the best plan. So i had the op in April 2015 which went well no more injections but i was one of the unlucky ones as when my BS was normal all the damage came to light. The thing was i wanted to live as i wanted to see my children grow up and i was to young to die. I know how you feel and i admit that i went off the rails for a while and i think most diabetics do. In my personal feeling are form the age of 14-24 are the hardest for a diabetic as your life changes so much and you don't want to be left behind so you do try to push your diabetes. The thought of meeting a partner and how they will react to you being a diabetic, how alcohol will effect your BS is always there and you see your friends without a care in the world and think why can that not be me. At about 20 i started to have mental health issues as i could not cope with all the changes in my life and diabetes and still suffer form mental health to this day. The thing is when these problems come along you either sink or swim, once you get over the shock the one thing diabetes has given me is a will to fight and as you know everyday is a new fight but if you do not fight then you will need a transplant sooner. You say it is all your fault well now is the time to fight diabetes for you and not to take it, the longer you can keep your BS and renal levels stable then your eyesight will not get worse and you will delay a transplant and who to say by the time you need a transplant that research has found away to make a kidney last a lifetime. You are still young and have made mistakes which i think most diabetics so we are only human fighting a disease that no one can see what it is doing inside your body. If you would like to chat, have a rant or just want someone to talk to about anything that is on your mind then drop me a line
I'm 26 and have been a T1 diabetic since the age of 4. I went through the typical rebellious teen stage of denial with my diabetes and let that go into my early 20's. I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price. I now have neropathy, kidney disease and have gone partially blind to the point where I can no longer drive. I know this is my own doing and I deserve this. I feel so alone and have yet to know or hear of a diabetic around my age with these complications. I go to my eye clinic and I'm surrounded by diabetics well
into there 60's or above. Am I the only one my age with all these complications? Did I screw up that badly that I somehow managed to get these "later in life" problems earlier in life?
Huh? Why would someone deserve diabetes and diabetic complications? Most of us did stupid things between the age of 12 and 24, and most of us got away with it. I was lucky I didn't have diabetes back then or I would likely be in your shoes right now.I know this is my own doing and I deserve this.
I wonder if you have come across Dr Bernstein's famous book "Diabetes Solution"? Here is a chapter from that book where he tells his story.I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price
I'm 26 and have been a T1 diabetic since the age of 4. I went through the typical rebellious teen stage of denial with my diabetes and let that go into my early 20's. I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price. I now have neropathy, kidney disease and have gone partially blind to the point where I can no longer drive. I know this is my own doing and I deserve this. I feel so alone and have yet to know or hear of a diabetic around my age with these complications. I go to my eye clinic and I'm surrounded by diabetics well
into there 60's or above. Am I the only one my age with all these complications? Did I screw up that badly that I somehow managed to get these "later in life" problems earlier in life?
I'm 26 and have been a T1 diabetic since the age of 4. I went through the typical rebellious teen stage of denial with my diabetes and let that go into my early 20's. I have been fighting to control it and do the best I can with my health for a few years now but I am scared it's too late. I went off the rails and now I am paying the price. I now have neropathy, kidney disease and have gone partially blind to the point where I can no longer drive. I know this is my own doing and I deserve this. I feel so alone and have yet to know or hear of a diabetic around my age with these complications. I go to my eye clinic and I'm surrounded by diabetics well
into there 60's or above. Am I the only one my age with all these complications? Did I screw up that badly that I somehow managed to get these "later in life" problems earlier in life?
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