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December 2nd, 2008
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While waiting for Olivia to take her swim test at Clara Barton last week, I was eavesdropping on a couple of girls standing in front of me. They scared the crap out of me.

They were both talking about how they hated having to take insulin because insulin makes you fat. "It's true," one girl said, "I read it on the internet." The other girl was amazed, but believed her readily.

Then they started discussing how they both let themselves run high - so high that their meters just say HI - in order to maintain or even lose some weight. They both said that they rarely checked themselves, maybe checked a couple of times a week, lied to their parents about the frequency of their checks and made up bg readings. At this point, my eyebrows were practically at my hairline and I was trying to unobtrusively move a little closer so I could continue to listen.

They talked about boys for a little bit (was I ever like that? Don't answer.) and what actors they liked. Then they turned back to diabetes talk. One girl mentioned how she'd been in the hospital four times that year because of DKA. The other one said she'd managed to avoid that, although she'd been sick a lot. She thought it was because of her high blood sugars, but she convinced her parents that it was the flu. They both mentioned having A1cs over 10.

I was horrified listening to these two girls. Horrified that they had such a cavalier attitude about their health, although that was understandable, given their age. I was more horrified at the apparent lack of involvement by their parents. Weren't their parents logging? Didn't they go to endo appointments with them? Didn't they get those A1c results?

I often struggle with Olivia's blood sugars, trying to get her to eat better, eat less, exercise more frequently, but I stay on top of things. I adjust basal rates on a regular basis as her insulin needs increase or decrease. I don't know the living situation of those two girls. Maybe the parents don't have the tools or the know-how to do this. Maybe the girls are defiant and the parents have given up. I don't know.

I just hope that camp got them to see that this was no way to live, that running so high in order to be thin is not going to prevent the complications that can arise from running high for so long. Skinny won't bring back your eyesight. Thin won't save your kidneys.



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What really scares me about this is the message these girls get from socity about needing to be thin, and how being the right size is all that matters. We really need to do a better job in creating confident, content girls who will become confident, powerful women, diabetic or not.


I was one of those teenage girls barely 10 years ago. I lied about my bgs all the time to ym family, my A1C got all the way up to the 10s somewhere... a lot of it stemmed from my parents going thru a divorce, and with society and wanting to lose weight I became bolemic. Thats when ym aprents finally stepped in, bc I had never had an A1C that high.... but now 22, my A1C has skyrocketed again that high... it's kind of a wake-up-call... but if parents arent involved its so hard bc then they must learn the consequences on their own.


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Julia
Julia lives behind the Tofu Curtain, in the Pioneer Valley, in Western Massachusetts. It's a nice place. She likes it there. Her eldest daughter, Olivia, has type 1 diabetes. She's also 13. It's a real toss-up as to which is more difficult -- the diabetes or the teen-age drama. (Read More)

Latest Posts: Random Stuff | Insurance-less | Freakin' Health Insurance

Nicole Purcell
Nicole has lived successfully with type 1 diabetes for 25 years. She hopes that by writing about her experiences, she can help others to face diabetes - and its challenges - head on.(Read More)

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