spook_kate_
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 650
- Type of diabetes
- Researcher
- Treatment type
- Other
Oh buddy, some of us have gone through diabetes for 25-30 YEARS with only the penny dropping. Diabetes has nasty habit of messing with your emotions and mental health but sneakily!! Good luck, you might find you need itI guess I'm one of the weird ones. For me, it was the day I was diagnosed when the doctor said "We think you have type 1 diabetes. I hope you have good insurance because you're probably going to need it." (I'm in the USA).
I kept waiting for that moment when I would feel sad, frustrated, or angry, but it still hasn't come even after 2 years. I'm confident it's never going to come at this point.
For me, there was immediate acceptance that this was now a part of my life, and there was nothing I could do to change that.
HahahaHi @DiabeticDadUK . Absolute legend. I was very lucky, diagnosed 1991 at a time when research was a big thing at the Royal Infirmary. Got to spend a good 5 hrs or so on a one to one lesson in diabetes.
Also worth mentioning that after the skirt lift I had to drop my jeans and inject into my thigh, we must have looked a right pair.
Eh, I doubt it, but I suppose I can't completely discount that thought until I'm 55-60 years old. Don't get me wrong, I have my frustrating days, but I'd argue that there plenty in life that can be frustrating and that's not exclusive to T1D.Oh buddy, some of us have gone through diabetes for 25-30 YEARS with only the penny dropping. Diabetes has nasty habit of messing with your emotions and mental health but sneakily!! Good luck, you might find you need it
Eh, I doubt it, but I suppose I can't completely discount that thought until I'm 55-60 years old. Don't get me wrong, I have my frustrating days, but I'd argue that there plenty in life that can be frustrating and that's not exclusive to T1D.
Now, if I were diagnosed 25-30 years ago that would be an entirely different story. The technology available today makes it tremendously easier to live with this disease than it was even 10 years ago.
I had a few years in my early twenties when my career took priority to my health, but again that's an issue with age/maturity rather than T1D. Consequently, I can easily see how someone diagnosed very young in life might not come to terms with the disease until they're in their 30s. Many people (T1D or not) do a lot of growing up around that time and become more aware of their mortality.
The penny dropped for me when I had to inform the DVLA. I was diagnosed about a week earlier and not dealing too badly with the injections. Until I read the DVLA form, I was describing diabetes as a "condition". The form described it as a "disease". Until that point the worst illness I had ever had was tonsilitis which meant a week off school. I had never had a "disease". That sounded more scary and serious than "diabetes".
At the age of 12 in hospital for two weeks. According to mother, a neighbour sent me flowers, which I flung across the ward announcing I can't eat those! I think I was a bit of a handful.
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