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What was your fasting blood glucose? (full on chat)

Afternoon all

A 5.8 this morning

Stay safe all, smile and those of you that were on this site a few years ago will remember the upset I caused with a few over the top cat loving posters. @ianpspurs

These days I am more tolerant, or so I think, but please please don’t write about cat bowel movements.

Now it’s time to get on with life, the universe and elasticated stone movers, only joking.
:) . I have been informed that the answer is 42, but then so is 6x7 and 2x21.
Ah cats - John Cheever had something to say about Cats, as read by Barry Humphries. The text of his letter is Here.
 
How quickly we forget. Not one post remembering it is 9/11 Mea culpa. Was it even mentioned at PMQs? Considering how people felt at the time quite the act of blanking out bad memories. I'm absolutely certain my neighbours remember the date.
I do agree .
However with everything that is going on, with so many tragedies, Southport being the latest, covid enquiry starting up again, blood scandel, post office, and not forgetting the recent Grenfell enquiry. 7/7.
To my mind, we do need to remember but the dreadful need to replaced by hope.
Far too much is down to those who hate and want to divide rather than bring together the lot of us.
 
Hail to you lot.
hail to those that have the continuing issues abound with old age.
hail to those that need support and a bit of kindness.
hail to our little ones who deserve our encouragement.
hail is falling on us, and another one in about half an hour.
hail to those that unfortunately were out in it.
hail in September?
Hail while the cricket gods in Durham, still playing.

forecast is hail, more showers, high winds, cool temperatures and possible frost.
Heating is on and I have my full lounge wear on.
Shorts have disappeared, t-shirts folded and put away.
Mrs L has her thick one and indoor dressing gown on.

Keep warm, stay safe.
Hail the bloody weather!
My best wishes to you lot as always.
You need one of these. Doesn’t protect against “Hail Hydra!”
 

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Afternoon all

A 5.8 this morning

Stay safe all, smile and those of you that were on this site a few years ago will remember the upset I caused with a few over the top cat loving posters. @ianpspurs

These days I am more tolerant, or so I think, but please please don’t write about cat bowel movements.

Now it’s time to get on with life, the universe and elasticated stone movers, only joking.
:) . I have been informed that the answer is 42, but then so is 6x7 and 2x21.
Cats and those who love and derive pleasure, comfort and company from them are fine by me. I will do no harm to cats but try to keep well away from them at all times which seems to be be due to a bad experience as a very small child. JKP is exceptionally allergic to them so we are well suited there.
 
Who thought up the schedule of the entire cricket season?
County and test,
The oz will love Old Trafford in September. Maybe, more than likely, it will be rained off, it is manc land after all, they could take in one of many footie matches,.
a southern cricket commentator, said it was the coldest, wettest summer since 2015.
A spokesman for the northern leagues, saying it had been an impossible summer of weather disruption.
And having the best pitch technology and still not produce decent playing squares.
Some clubs couldn't play on the same strip twice.
Durham county cricket club announced the square wasn't ready for the season.
Lancs have one of the best squads in the U.K., But languish in the bottom of the league, due to the worse weather of any county club.
But the schedule should have been more realistic!
It is freezing now!
Lancashire - Clive Hubert Lloyd was an absolute legend, loved everything about him - are being absolutely mullered. Some very lopsided games in DIV 1 with Surrey once again going to win (and probably the T20) - as with Man City, follow the money.
 
BG on the high side today. Took my normal insulin - basal and then the bolus one before breakfast - and ignored it until about noon, when It dropped to 3.4 and I started feeling woozy. Fruit pastilles and some oatcakes brought it back above 8, which is where it is sitting atm.

I recently got hold of a copy of my grandfather's service record. He was a Gunner in the RFA/RGA from 1916. Spent most of his time in one or other hospital because he really wasn't fit to have been signed on as a soldier. He was also said to have been gassed in 1916 which wouldn't have helped. He was eventually discharged in 1918 as medically unfit. He wasn't the perfect soldier by any means - AWOL a few times, inappropriate language, fined a day's pay here and there. However, his discharge papers commented that he was a hardworking man.

Anyway, all this led me to thinking about where his regiment had actually served and what role they had. It seems that his battalion (a Siege battalion) operated the Howitzer guns. I've heard of the name but had no idea what it was so I looked it up and found a picture of a Howitzer with the soldiers who operated it in WW1. It was monstrous! What a thing to have to drag around the countryside - not that they had to drag it often, being better as a fixed weapon, or on a train. Presumably they used horses (that would make sense, my grandfather was a Carman before the war).

I was astonished, but more so when I told Neil about it and found he has wide ranging knowledge of weaponry and the development of cannons from the bronze ones, through the cast iron ones to rifled steel ones. He was telling me about the influence the development of these guns had on the ability of Britain to dominate others, who were behind in the technology race, and so "rule the waves" and therefore expand the Empire. He also has read a lot about future developments in armaments. I got the full lecture, as usual. I was surprised because Neil is an absolute pacifist and I thought he would have no interest in the subject at all. He never ceases to amaze me.
 
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How quickly we forget. Not one post remembering it is 9/11 Mea culpa. Was it even mentioned at PMQs? Considering how people felt at the time quite the act of blanking out bad memories. I'm absolutely certain my neighbours remember the date.
Actually @ianpspurs I did remember it but didn't post it as it is still so upsetting. We were in New York visiting Mr K's uncle at the time. It was horrible, made even more sad because my eldest daughter's brother in law had been murdered in Nantwich 3 days earlier.

Mr K 's uncle lived in Riverdale and so many firemen who lost their lives also lived there. We went to a memorial service in their honour and met one lady who had lost her husband, father and brother, who were all firemen, in the twin towers. It was heartbreaking.

The people in New York were so kind to us as we were English and couldn't get home because all flights were cancelled. We went to the Bronx Zoo and they wouldn't take the entrance money. Nor would the bus drivers take the fare from us.

When we finally were allowed to fly out we had to be at the airport 6 hours early for security checks. As my bags went through the scanner I was told 'you have a gun in your suitcase'.

I resisted the urge to say jokingly 'yes I have' and asked to see what they were looking at. It did look scarily like the barrel of a gun. Then I realised it was a blusher brush in a metal case.

Worse was to come. We went to the departure lounge which had several big TV screens around it. Guess what they were showing over and over again. The planes crashing into the twin towers over and over again. Then they showed people jumping out of the twin towers and you could hear the thud as they hit the ground. I think what they showed was more graphic than what was shown in the UK.

Sorry for the long post. Every year the memories come back and I feel very down. It has actually helped to write this post as it feels good to let them out instead of bottling them up inside me.
 
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BG on the high side today. Took my normal insulin - basal and then the bolus one before breakfast - and ignored it until about noon, when It dropped to 3.4 and I started feeling woozy. Fruit pastilles and some oatcakes brought it back above 8, which is where it is sitting atm.

I recently got hold of a copy of my grandfather's service record. He was a Gunner in the RFA/RGA from 1916. Spent most of his time in one or other hospital because he really wasn't fit to have been signed on as a soldier. He was also said to have been gassed in 1916 which wouldn't have helped. He was eventually discharged in 1918 as medically unfit. He wasn't the perfect soldier by any means - AWOL a few times, inappropriate language, fined a day's pay here and there. However, his discharge papers commented that he was a hardworking man.

Anyway, all this led me to thinking about where his regiment had actually served and what role they had. It seems that his battalion (a Siege battalion) operated the Howitzer guns. I've heard of the name but had no idea what it was so I looked it up and found a picture of a Howitzer with the soldiers who operated it in WW1. It was monstrous! What a thing to have to drag around the countryside - not that they had to drag it often, being better as a fixed weapon, or on a train. Presumably they used horses (that would make sense, my grandfather was a Carman before the war).

I was astonished, but more so when I told Neil about it and found he has wide ranging knowledge of weaponry and the development of cannons from the bronze ones, through the cast iron ones to rifled steel ones. He was telling me about the influence the development of these guns had on the ability of Britain to dominate others, who were behind in the technology race, and so "rule the waves" and therefore expand the Empire. He also has read a lot about future developments in armaments. I got the full lecture, as usual. I was surprised because Neil is an absolute pacifist and I thought he would have no interest in the subject at all. He never ceases to amaze me.
Very interesting.
I am a total pacifist myself, I just cannot understand why the need for military action, against other peoples.
Even for power.
However (as always) I have an interest in a lot of military history.
My main interest is U.S.civil war.
But cos of my dad, WWII had been studied. The local history including, why I had to grow up in an area bombed by the Luftwaffe? Derby house. The u- boat war. And of course the war in Burma, with my father's regiment. The chindits.
I got an A level history result, but not on military history, but the industrial revolution History.

The U.K.is the second highest sellers of military hardware from bullets to missles, aircraft and hardware, software. Which we sell to a lot of countries. We have a contract to sell submarines to our Anzac friends. And we share a lot of technology. Such as the latest drones used in Ukraine.
We have quite a few areas not open to public eyes. And are very top secret.
I remember visiting a disused U.S.military establishment. And the named area and town is not on any map.
I wonder why?

BTW, .My front garden has been invaded by the hordes of evil dead
The local foliage has declared was to cover my kingdom of Lamont.
 
Good morning everyone on a bright and sunny yet chilly start to the day here in the dark and dangerous north. 5.3 this a.m. Girl In The Bubble stayed over last night. We did some finger painting. She has now departed on the Mrs Miggins school run. No idea what today will bring so I am just going to enjoy this sunshine while it’s on offer. Art bit - a tree and something called “a flower in the sunshine”. Have a good day, I am now rushing off to try out my new koffy appliance.
Interesting tree @dunelm
GITB inherits her painting talent from you!

Hope the coffee was good!
 
Afternoon one and all. No known fbg here due to a combination of medical appointment and forgetting to take my phone to bed meaning no sensor in place and I'll be blowed if I finger prick. @gennepher thank you for sharing another wonderful kaleidoscope. @dunelm thank TGIB for sharing that tree - such a talent for one so young. Your tree and a flower in sunshine may need some work but call it naive art and flog it as an NFT. Meanwhile DJT fully leaned into the crazy uncle meme. @Krystyna23040 keep Poppy on a lead :eek: Swifty is a crazy childless cat woman - who knew? Enjoy as much of Wednesday as possible, I'mma hugging 4 grandchildren very close later but I won't do cats.
Thank you @ianpspurs
 
Hail to you lot.
hail to those that have the continuing issues abound with old age.
hail to those that need support and a bit of kindness.
hail to our little ones who deserve our encouragement.
hail is falling on us, and another one in about half an hour.
hail to those that unfortunately were out in it.
hail in September?
Hail while the cricket gods in Durham, still playing.

forecast is hail, more showers, high winds, cool temperatures and possible frost.
Heating is on and I have my full lounge wear on.
Shorts have disappeared, t-shirts folded and put away.
Mrs L has her thick one and indoor dressing gown on.

Keep warm, stay safe.
Hail the bloody weather!
My best wishes to you lot as always.
I got the hail. I was in Birkenhead today to visit my friend. It was horrendous @Lamont D
The journey over was the foulest of weather's.
 
I had my annual foot tickling today. All good including finding out I had an A1c in June, taken in West Suffolk hospital, which was 32. Weight and bp good so I conclude T2 is low on the list of my health issues. I will still swipe (perhaps 1 sensor a month), weigh food and enter into Cronometer. An innocent cricket ball is being bludgeoned mercilessly in Southampton.@Krystyna23040 apologies for raking over painful memories.
 
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I had my annual foot tickling today. All good including finding out I had an A1c in June, taken in West Suffolk hospital, which was 32. Weight and bp good so I conclude T2 is low on the list of my health issues. I will still swipe (perhaps 1 sensor a month), weigh food and enter into Cronometer. An innocent cricket ball is being bludgeoned mercilessly in Southampton.@Krystyna23040 apologies for raking over painful memories.
Please don't apologise @@ianpspurs. I actually am feeling a lot better afterj writing the post. It feels like a weight has been lifted.

Must dash as I can hear the class members of the last evening class arriving.
 
I had my annual foot tickling today. All good including finding out I had an A1c in June, taken in West Suffolk hospital, which was 32. Weight and bp good so I conclude T2 is low on the list of my health issues. I will still swipe (perhaps 1 sensor a month), weigh food and enter into Cronometer. An innocent cricket ball is being bludgeoned mercilessly in Southampton.@Krystyna23040 apologies for raking over painful memories.
Great results mate.
Lancs still getting thumped in sunny Durham.
 
I got the hail. I was in Birkenhead today to visit my friend. It was horrendous @Lamont D
The journey over was the foulest of weather's.
It actually had a little snow briefly as we were watching across the footie pitches.
The joys of Birkenhead.
I actually think the peninsula has migrated to Greenland.
Blinking weather.
 
rve me intoGreat results mate.
Lancs still getting thumped in sunny Durham.
Thanks bud. I already had the same in May but I wonder if the immunotherapy is a suspect in that. I don't think I will ever accept Elsie Keto does anything other than starve me into weight loss.
 
Thanks bud. I already had the same in May but I wonder if the immunotherapy is a suspect in that. I don't think I will ever accept Elsie Keto does anything other than starve me into weight loss.
Each to his own mate.
Whatever it is called (Elsie or Deidre) it is working.
for some us, Gladys keto, is the only way to go.

T20 a mess.
 
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