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September 5th, 2008
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I should have known that there would be frustration. I guess I thought that since I wasn't new to basal/bolus therapy that my transition from MDI to the pump would be smooth. And it mostly has, but the last two days I have been running higher than usual with no explanation. Enter frustration.

So when Mom called last night to see how Toohey and I were getting along, I was telling her about all the things that could be making me high:

*basal rate set too low
*active insulin time set too long
*were my jeans too tight today?
*I think I'm ovulating
*or maybe my period is going to start soon
*does my infusion set need to be changed?
*when I was on Lantus, I took it at night; do I need a higher overnight basal rate?
*is all this stress about my high numbers making things worse?

I think I exhausted her with all these possibilities! I took it all in stride yesterday, but today--not so much.

While one of my first thoughts yesterday when I had been over 150 most of the day was that I needed to change my set. But with being only on my second full day of the set and having it not itch or be red, I decided to give it a little longer to see if something else wasn't the issue.

So I emailed my endo and my pump trainer/former diabetes educator this morning after my second day of a 200+ breakfast post-prandial. "What do I do?" I asked. It sucks to feel suddenly clueless after several years of getting it right.



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Oh, Michelle! Hang in there! Toohey is getting used to you too, ya know. Folks I've talked to say it takes a few weeks to get it just right because we go from long and short acting to just short acting. They are different in my body for sure. I get nuts when I mess up my basal....and I have to take it twice a day on a GOOD day! I'm also higher around those 'special' times of the month for no reason! UGGHHH.....

A few days of higher numbers won't hurt us....that's what they told me during my Byetta disaster this summer. 200 or more all the time. I'm preaching to the choir because I know my numbers will be awful tomorrow with no insulin.......whaaaa
Mouse
Mouse


I know you have probably heard this a million times (half of them probably from me) but do you have a copy of Pumping Insulin by John Walsh?
It is almost like the pumpers bible and taught me a TON about perfecting my settings three years into pumping!


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Michelle Kowalski
Michelle Kowalski, a writer, editor and photography hobbiest living in Phoenix, has had type 2 diabetes since February 2005. In January 2008, as part of her quest to start on an insulin pump, Michelle learned that she actually has type 1 diabetes. (Read More)

Latest Posts: Censored for the Non-D People in My Life | Keeping It To Myself -- Sort Of | My Kidneys Are Screaming

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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