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If you experience pain as a result of your diabetes, what have you found to be the best way to alleviate it?

May 27th, 2012
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On Thursday night, I found myself in an emergency room exam room at 2 am, waiting anxiously and staring up at a picture of a baby cocker spaniel posing cutely in a watering can.


No, don't worry. Charlie is fine. I'm fine too. Whole family is fine. This was an emergency room for pets. But wait, I don't even own a pet.  I'm not even a pet person. I had to get up for work in a few hours. What was I doing?

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I found this post recently in a diabetes forum.
Topic: Juvenile diabetes
A dear friend of mine has an 8 week old that was not thriving. She ruled out heart issues early on, but recently he became seriously ill. Upon further investigation, he was diagnosed as diabetic! Never heard of a baby with diabetes. His eight siblings are all fine. They have also tested for pancreatic insufficiency. He's just plain old diabetic. Thank goodness!
A supportive member of the forum responds:
Oh good grief! So young!
Eight siblings? Sorry, I left out one important detail. It's about a dog; an 8-week-old English Springer puppy.
I'll admit, this post was originally going to have a slightly sarcastic edge to it as it was triggered by recent FDL entries of pet owners who compared their dog or cat's diabetes to human beings living with the disease. (READ MORE)


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I'm going to fight. I want a CGMS and even though the universe may have spoken, I'm still going to fight. (Perhaps I misunderstood what the universe was saying.)

 

I put a lot of emphasis on thinking that the primary benefit of using a CGMS is to detect lows. There was a time when I had some pretty serious hypoglycemia unawareness. I remember taking a walk with the family once and not feeling low until we returned. I was 35. I didn't feel it until I was 35. That's scary stuff.

 

More lately I've been thinking that one of the better benefits of using a CGMS is to ward off highs either between meals or before the two-hour post-prandial check.

 

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Sometimes I wonder what Ben really thinks about when he sees us testing his big brother’s blood sugar or putting Charlie over our laps for torturous site changes. What's going on in that large, shaggy head? Behind those big brown eyes, I wonder?

 

Just to see what he'd say, I have asked Ben why we have the testing supplies. "What is this?" I ask. "What’s it for?"

 

"That’s for Chow Wei," he responds, mispronouncing his brother’s name in a Chinese dialect.

 

I guess at his age he can’t exactly comprehend what’s going on. He just knows that it’s something we do to or for Charlie. He also knows that food usually follows, so he falls in line behind Charlie while we prick his finger.

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If I didn’t have a child with diabetes, what would I be writing about?

 

I suppose I’d go back to writing essays on parenting and family life like I used to. Dead pets; the crises of lost toys; my 4-year-old’s pride in his penis; maybe my wife’s germ phobia and her lifelong dedication to the war against terror (aka ball pits).

 

I guess I’d be writing about my daughter Maeve, who is sad today.

 

I like True Blood - the HBO show about vampires and other supernatural, uh, things.

 

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I disconnected my pump like normal for my nightly shower. I set it on the counter on top of some towels so the vibration wouldn't bother me. Usually this is a safe place for my pump, away from the direct steam of the shower and any immediate water sources.

 

My cat thought this was an ideal place to have a hockey game. I was halfway through my shower and suddenly I heard the pump slide into the sink. My cat made it his very own hockey puck! Visions of a cracked screen or a completely broken pump flashed through my mind as I screamed at the cat.

 

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There was a time I couldn't imagine taking my morning walk without a canine companion.

 

No. 2 was only a month or so old when we got Tanner from a shelter. He was timid and fearful of The Mr. but he and I got along great and he loved a walk. There were times when he'd get out of our fenced yard, but he always came back. Until the day he didn't.

 

Somehow I managed to find a rhythm without Tanner. We had a string of foster and stray dogs after Tanner left and I made sure to walk each of them. None of them as good on the leash as Tanner, though.

 

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I tend not to be as fascinated as many are by those folk who spend an entire work week's worth of time trying to get their groceries for free (or nearly free). The bottom line is, I don't have kids, I don't have pets, and most of the things for which I find coupons are either things I can't use, don't use, or don't need. The food items are almost always in those "center aisles" of the supermarket we, as people with diabetes, are cautioned to Avoid Like The Plague, and many have so much sodium that you'd think they included the entire "corpus" of Lot's wife (after she had been "turned into a pillar of salt"). (READ MORE)


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Robot

 

"Come here Charlie, I need to change your battery," Susanne said.

 

Ben laughed. "Change his battery? Mom, Charlie's not a robot."

 

Meanwhile, Charlie was in the kitchen, making toast with his eye lasers and printing the night's blood sugar log through his sound hole.

 

 

Wraslin'

 

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I am incredibly frustrated with my immune system right now. Sunday night, I began having some symptoms of that upper respiratory infection that took me down over the Christmas holidays. Stuffy nose and pressure in my ears. Monday, that hadn't gotten any better. So I decided to go back on the antibiotics Monday night as well as increase all my vitamin intake like I normally do when fighting something.

 

Today, I am no better. The stuffiness is terrible. My poor nose is beyond raw. I'm coughing thanks to the drainage. And I'm exhausted.

 

I know that a lot of factors play into your immune system. Diabetes is definitely one of them. I've always been a little more susceptible to illnesses but with a good diet and proper supplements, usually I kick things in a few days. This time, I can't even stay well for more than a week. And I really don't have time to be sick.

 

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Carey Potash
Carey PotashCarey is a full-time hater of diabetes. The benefits stink. His 7-year-old son, Charlie, has been giving he and his wife the finger since November of 2003. 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)
George Simmons
George SimmonsGeorge Simmons is a father and husband living with type 1 diabetes. A self proclaimed "born again diabetic," George began blogging as a way to meet other people living with diabetes and learn more about managing his disease. (Read More)
Our Other Bloggers: Lindsey Guerin, Nicole Purcell, Brenda Bell, Michelle Kowalski, MikeDurbin, Megan, Robert Hudson, Julia, Scott Marvel, Kim Doty, Kerri Sparling,