We found 10 result(s) that match your search "new years":Search Results
Categories: Type 2 Food Real Life
Tags: blood work change smoking weight
Views: 2194
I found some old blood work results from 2002 and was comparing them to my recent results. In 2002 I was a newlywed and had not had gestational diabetes yet. The only inkling I had of any blood sugar problems was a strong family history of type 2 diabetes and a diagnosis of hypoglycemia when I was 19.
My numbers are exponentially better today. Fasting sugar, cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL; you name it. This got me to thinking about my health and lifestyle today versus 5 years ago. I may be 5 years older but I should be feeling 10 years younger!
The biggest change, health-wise; is that I no longer smoke. 27 years of a pack plus a day are history. I have been smoke free for almost 22 months now, this alone would bring up my HDL levels. I remain very proud of this and it continues to remind me that I can change old ingrained habits. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Emotions Real Life
Tags: LADA latent autoimmune diabetes in adults type 1 type 1.5
Views: 2366
When I opened my e-mail at work this morning, the blood test results that I was planning to e-mail my endo about first thing were already there. This was a series of blood tests my insurance company required before I can go on the pump. The first thing I saw was "A1C - 6.8".
"Kick Ass!" I thought, and saying something more work appropriate outloud. I was down from 7.9 in October, which was down from 9 three months before that. I was definitely doing good, definitely on the right track.
The actual test my insurance required was a C peptide. This measures the amount of insulin my pancreas makes. The less insulin you make, the lower your C peptide level.
For the last three years, I've been living life as a person with type 2 diabetes. My c peptide result of <0.1 shows otherwise. Essentially, I make little--very little--insulin. (READ MORE)
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A month into the new year. And a number of new things to report:
A new job. An amazing new job. I took a position in early January with Rhode Island Public Radio. I am the organization's very first Development Director. It's challenging, it's interesting, it's fun. My goals are aggressive. My new boss is an Emmy Award winning producer who's smart and driven. Rhode Island Public Radio has just gone independent from its parent station at Boston University and is in the midst of wrapping up a Capital Campaign. We're essentially building our programs and our membership and fundraising bases from the ground up. Mostly exciting - a little scary.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Relationships Emotions Real Life
Tags: (none)
Views: 578
In a little over a week, my life is going to take a drastic change. I will be transitioning into something completely new that I really can't wait for even though I'm almost too scared to admit it. I'm excited about this next phase of my life. I'm excited to start a new chapter and feel more balanced. I'm excited that God has had my back from the start and is bringing me into things that I can't even believe.
Next week, I'll start training to be a Casework Supervisor for the Court Appointed Special Advocates (or CASA, for short). It's a full time position coordinating CASA volunteers and cases. My mom has volunteered for them for many years and I'm 100% behind their mission to speak up for abused and neglected children through volunteer work.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Food Highs & Lows Relationships Complications Emotions Real Life
Tags: A1C diabetes life diagnosis five years successes
Views: 1333
This month marks my fifth year of lancing my fingers, injecting or infusing insulin, monitoring carbs, and Having Type-1 Diabetes. In some ways it seems like longer but in others, it seems like this journey is just starting. That beginning trip to the emergency room is still clear in my mind. Mostly I remember the support and attention I got from family and friends, and the uncertainness of what the diagnosis meant. But here I am, through the ups and downs, after the successes and failures, in front of diligent times and moments of negligence, still happy and healthy with a life touched by diabetes.
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Relationships Emotions Real Life
Tags: (none)
Views: 516
I've always been "advanced" for my age. I skipped a grade in middle school. I never found interest in keeping up with the crowds in high school. In college, I never got into the party scene. I was always focused on my work and the next steps.
This portion of my personality that looks ahead, plans for the future, and doesn't always live in the "now" has saved me a lot of trouble over the years. For instance, when I couldn't find a job after college, the planner in me had saved enough money to live on and not stress about where my next meal would come from. But there have also been moments where the planner has caused me grief.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Relationships Real Life
Tags: diabetes introductions new relationships
Views: 1224
The problem with living with diabetes 24/7 is that you forget the details of the disease. It becomes like breathing or eating. You only remember the major moments...the great food you enjoyed or the time you got pulled under by a wave and struggled for the surface and air.
And that's exactly how diabetes is for me. After sixteen plus years of this disease, I can't remember the finger pricks or the insulin shots or any of the in between. It just zooms past my memory because I don't find a need to remember these minute issues (and my brain would constantly be on overload if I tried to remember 6+ finger pricks a day for the past sixteen years).
But today, I'm finding the need to remember these issues. Since I'm back on MDI's for the time being, I've been submerged into the life of insulin injections and many more finger checks. The ups and downs of diabetes are now important. The details are important.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Relationships Real Life
Tags: interview appointments new endocrinologists
Views: 955
After a month of contemplation, phone calls, and hassle, I've finally made an appointment with a new doctor. If you haven't followed along, my old endo wasn't being as cooperative or helpful as I wanted him to be. So I decided to pursue a new endo that might walk me through the next few years of my life as I prepare for the "real world," babies, and possibly even marriage. I called several doctors recommended by my pediatric endo, only to find out that my insurance either will not let me see them or I'd have to go about a massive ordeal just to get an appointment.
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Emotions Real Life
Tags: A1cs doctor's appointments symlin
Views: 2570
I went to my 3-month endo appointment today. (My dad also went for his check up.) Usually, I do fine with my endo, although I've never been thrilled with him. He's mainly there to tell me the blood results and fill prescriptions. Usually, I'm okay with that.
But today was a completely different story.
First, they didn't call me into the office until AFTER my dad was already done with his appointment (apparently, I was forgotten). Then they gave me hassle about doing the A1c. When it was finally done, they informed me that the machine broke in the middle of the test (now I have to wait 3 weeks to get the results from a blood draw.)
(READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Fitness
Tags: disease management Gym Resolutions
Views: 1005
When the new year started, I made a promise to myself that I'd get my butt moving again.
I had, toward the end of 2009, not been to the gym nearly as often as I'd wanted to and I wasn't eating as well as I should have been.
So much had changed in my life between summer and the holidays. I ended a long-term relationship, started seeing someone new, moved into a new house, and thew myself into the job I'd started last January. It was overwhelming and the routine I'd been in of gym visits four times a week and watchful, healthy eating took a backseat to all of the changes.
(READ MORE)
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