- Messages
- 10,196
- Location
- New Zealand
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
- Dislikes
- hypos and forum bugs
I hate the having to preplan so many things. Things my hubby can just go out and do, like deciding to take a swim or go off walking somewhere.
I hate everything at the moment with it. Bee T1 for 3-4 years now. You just can't have a day off from it.
Exactly. It just never goes away. Some days you just forget about it but when you have weeks like I have just had when bloods have just dropped quickly as you've worked an extra hour or so at work.@MarkHaZ123 It's when those other things are going on that it can sometimes be the hardest. Because besides what's happening you still have to deal with everything type 1 and it feels very unfair. Hugs.
We definitely live with it best we can. The day they find a cure would be great or even managing it without having to do much would be great.The “I hate everything” thing sounds pretty normal after three or four years. I’m not sure I ever felt that strongly but then again everybody’s different. Over the years, I have managed a sort of rapprochement with this disease. I look at my relationship with the diabetes like the Cold War. The two sides avoided antagonizing each other as much as possible because of the consequences of doing that. They exist, we exist and for now, that’s not changing. So you just live with it the best you can.
Of course, then the Wall came down and everything changed (for a while, anyway). At some point, they’ll find a cure for Type 1 and that should make this whole conversation and thread a moot point.
I agree on that. I imagine it was alot worse than it is now and in x amount of years we'll be saying how easy it is compared to now.@MarkHaZ123 - I've found the L2 sensor a great boon to the constant finger-pricking we had to do a few years ago - loads of things got better over the 40+ years I've had it, gone are the days of boiling syringes before use and also the 2" needles that also had to be boiled before use and the pain when they started to go blunt, it can only get better I say
I am sorry but I don't use instagram.I would love to hear your thoughts on this important topic...............
your final sentence hit the nail .... you can never switch off .... sending good shoog vibes xxxHow long have you got
Its a constant treadmill, you can never switch off
The unpredictability of it all. Take same amount if insulin each, at same time, eat same food, do the same things. And yet 1 day its perfect, the next day dreadful
It is difficult to do things spontaneuosly.
Going away for a day is like planning a military operation. Glucose tablets, insulin, spare insulin, carbs, test strips or Libre reader, or both
Even after 41 years I can never stitch off
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