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November 21st, 2008
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"Yeah, I'll do it," Maeve said, quickly unzipping the black diabetes bag and removing the contents onto her lap.

"You sure?"

"Yeah."

She was a little too eager to get her hands on a sharp foreign object and take blood from her little brother. Maeve cracked open an alcohol wipe and rubbed Charlie's fingertip then loaded the meter with a test strip, deftly juggling the instruments. She had never done it before, but she's witnessed it , (one sec whilst I do a little math) , about 17,500 times. It's an unusual thing for an 8-year-old to do. Not your normal car trip activity such as I Spy or the license plate game.

"Just put the striped part into the ..."

"Uh huh. I know."

Sitting in slow-moving traffic on the Belt Parkway in New York, Maeve appeared to be my only option. I didn't want to ask her, but there was no safe place to pull over. Charlie had fallen asleep and the swirling voices were beginning to worry me.

We were returning from yet another funeral. Susanne's godmother, known as Bina to the kids, left us, one month after her sister did. Two cute little old ladies with so much sparkle in their eyes lived for 99 and 96 years, and just like that, now they're both gone.

Susanne and I drove separately as she went to the wake a day earlier with her brother.

I kept one eyeball on the braking taillights and the other in the rear-view mirror, coaching Maeve as she gingerly put the pricker against her brother's middle finger. She tried several times but was unsuccessful, just barely breaking the surface of Charlie's skin and squeezing out a tiny drop of blood.

"I can't get the blood out," she said, dejected, dropping the meter and pricker down like a crushed surgeon unable to save her patient.

"It's OK, honey, thanks for trying. It's not easy." I marveled in the fact that she was fine with the blood.

When Charlie awoke from his nap, I was relieved. Coherence is a good sign, I thought.

"Hey Charlie, while you were sleeping, Maeve tried to test you."

He rubbed the fog from his eyes.

"Are you OK with that?"

"No," he said.



I'm curious. Did your siblings test you? If so, at what age? How about parents? Have your other kids tested your child with diabetes?

I just want to get a feel for the appropriate age. I'm thinking with a little training, we can work Maeve - my rookie reliever - into the 2 am testing rotation by Christmas. Maybe get the 2-year-old in there by April.



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Not testing - but once I went really low while sleeping and didn't wake up the next morning, was just unconscious. So my dad came into my room to check if I was ok, saw me and panicked. He ran to get my Glucogon injection and in his rush and state of panic forgot to dissolve the glucose powder, and shot me up with pure water!! haha, funny stuff, at least now it is ;). Eventually he got me to the doctor who sorted me out pretty quick.


My 3 kids knew how to test at the age of two (Brendon was diagnosed around that age) just so I can see if they could do it. I like experimenting with them to see how smart they are.

Anyway, I feel like each member of the family should be able to test Brendon because when they're older and out together and something happens, I don't want anyone feeling helpless.

I like the idea of having the kids do the nightime checks. Especially Jake. If he's up at 1 a.m. crawling into our bed, he might as well make himself useful and test his brother before he gets too comfortable.


Sorry, I was diagnosed at 21 and my brother was 23. We didn't live in the same house :D
He did, however, say he wanted to test himself then it took him about 15 minutes to get up the courage to use the lancet "will it hurt? What does it feel like?" - wimp!


There is 11 years difference between Holden and Riley so Holden started testing fairly early on (He was 14 when Riley was diagnosed.)

I think Maeve can handle the 2 AM checks with a little training. And, Riley started testing himself when he was 3, so there's no excuse for Ben not to start helping out at night soon too;-)


All of my kids know how to test, give shots and count carbs. Taylor learned with us at diagnosis but she was already 13. Daniel had to learn by default and it was his idea that Sarah learn, he taught her to give shots when he was on injections (not draw it up, just inject it) and test him. Sarah is 6 now but was 4 or 5 when he taught her.


My twin sister, who was t1, used to let me give her her shots so I could practice on her (since I was diagnosed after her and afraid to give myself shots).

I wanted people to test me for fun, but they were scared.


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Carey Potash
Carey is a full-time hater of diabetes. The benefits stink. His 6-year-old son, Charlie, was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when he was 22 months old. Carey's parenting humor has appeared in various websites and print magazines. He resides in the suburbs of Philadelphia with his wife and three children. (Read More)

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Kim Doty
Kim Doty has had Gestational and/or Type 2 diabetes since 2003. She lives in Colorado with her husband and children. She blogs about her world at On Line On Life On Insulin.(Read More)

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