No need to worry, you'll meet a girl who won't mind your condition and will in fact, even embrace it. By then, you'll know that she's a keeperThank you everyone for your responses both on the forum and on the facebook group they were all very supportive, bar the odd nutter but you always get those. The amount of people that seem to think I should hide away in the toilets has surprised me a little. I understand if some people chose to but not the people that seem to think its the only place it should be done when out. Although looking on facebook a majority seemed to be a lot older most retires and judging by there facebooks people that make a hobby out of complaining so not to bothered
Yikes I feel for you, however hiding away in a loo to inject is not the right answer. There always going to be squeamish people around and/or drama queens who get a little over excited. I was once very shy about injecting in public, but now I dont even bother mentioning it to anyone around me and just crack in with it under the table, in restaurants, meetings, whenever I need to do it and just carry on talking whilst injecting.
Don't let this affect or influence what you do in future, the right girl won't care about what you do, she will care that your ok and your looking after yourself so injecting will have very little impact on your relationship
Some friendships are pretty selfish, and you don't appreicate how so until something tests it. I had the same thing happen to my wife when her dad got cancer. Some of her closest friends that she'd helped through and been there for during their own crisis suddenly became unavailable and distant. It made me so angry for her.Yep! She started leaving me out - not inviting me to nights out and when others questioned it she said I wouldn't want to go as I couldn't drink and then things got awkward and we drifted apart. Not what I expected at all. I thought she'd be the one to support me and serve dinner with the carbs calculated! Oh well ...
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I think I told my husband the first time we went on a date which involved eating. I said I was going to inject and asked if he was scared of needles, which he wasn't. Most of my friends found out the same way. I've been diabetic so long that it's just a part of life, and it doesn't occur to me to tell people about it unless there's a specific reason.
If someone was needle-phobic, I would warn them before I got the needle out so they could look the other way or excuse themselves. Unless it was a child or someone who couldn't move away, I would expect them to take action to make themselves comfortable, rather than expect me to slink off to the toilets to take life saving medication.
I was on a date the other month with a guy that I've been friends with for a couple of years and had dated at the start of our friendship. I'd only been diagnosed for 5 months, it was my first date since diagnosis and I wasn't sure what to do. I thought sod it I'm not skulking to the toilet to hide myself like there's something wrong with me, he knows about it and I trust him. I discretely injected after my meal and his response was 'EEUURGH YOU FREAK.' Initially I was so shocked and embarrassed and wanted the earth to swallow me up but then I thought hold on a minute how dare you speak to me like that! God forbid one day out of the blue your pancreas should stop working and you have to deal with the daily **** that we have to. So I gave him a telling off and embarrassed him for his behaviour- he apologised... But now wonders why I keep declining his other offers of a date! Haha
I then dated a guy a little while later and felt very self conscious of injecting in front of him. I didn't want to be labeled a freak again so I would always turn away or leave the room. He noticed and asked me why, and told me not to be embarrassed or hide it from him. He'd often ask if my bloods were okay out of the blue and make sure I had my stuff with me. Unfortunately it didn't work out but what I'm trying to say is this is the sort of person you want, someone who cares and not someone who will judge you or belittle you. You are lucky that she showed her true colours so soon before you developed feelings for her... Saved you a lot of heart ache
I'm now 8months into diagnosis and went on another first date tonight. I've not told him I'm diabetic yet... At what point do you tell a person? Who knows how he will react but I take comfort in the thought that if he doesn't except me for me then he is not worth my time in the first place and one day I will find someone who is.
Chin up, I'm sure there are plenty of girls who would love to date you... If anything you now have the perfect devise to screen out all the bad ones so you have more time to concentrate on the good ones! Have fun xxxx
You make a good point about people with phobias. I don't think most diabetics are 'rub their injection in your face' people. Most are hyper-discreet, many absent themselves in order to inject, - perhaps because they'd like privacy, or because they don't want to alarm needle-phobics. I understand your concern about your son's reaction to seeing needles. I have known children with other phobias who can't control their reactions and I know how upsetting it can be for them and their families, and hard to deal with.Whilst I think her reaction was daft I do have to say that for all the people waving the "I'm a diabetic and proud" flag I think they forget there are a lot of needle phobic people out there and this should be taken into account too. Common decency means that if you can't inject discreetly (especially when people are eating) then pop to the loo. I would never dream of grabbing a needle and injecting in front of a new date. That was a privilege saved for further down the line when I trusted someone.
My first serious boyfriend was needle phobic and so I never injected in front of him. We managed a happy relationship for 5 years because I never pushed my injecting onto him. I am now the proud mum of a 5 year old boy who has special needs. In his short life he has been to hospital many times and due to all the tests is petrified of needles. What would these "rub your injection in their face" people say to my son if he saw them inject and burst into tears and screaming through fear? That he should just lump it?
Acceptance is what we all crave but it goes both ways and people should remember that.
I honestly haven't had an experience like that in my 9 years as T1, in my case, I decide during the date whether I want to tell them or not, if they recommend a very high carb meal then I'll probably do tell them, trying to mention it in a funny way so it doesn't make them feel uncomfortable or sad for me (since it is a part of who I am, just like the clothes I wear or the way I speak), however, I always go to the restroom to inject my insulin before/after a meal when I am out with a date or friends.
You have to understand that people who have no connection with a T1 are not used to seeing someone injecting insulin or checking their blood next to the table and it can be weird, although not to the point of running away disgusted, that's just very immature. It is not that I am ashamed of doing it in public, it's just about my own private moments that I like to keep to myself in public places. And so far so good.
I am similar to you, it's often down to our personality really. I have Type 1 but just don't SHOUT about it
Some very good points lidsla, thank you
RRB
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