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December 1st, 2008
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Today was not an ideal day diabetes-wise. With a 261 mg/dl in the middle of the night, a 39 mg/dl upon waking and three completely unexplained bloodsugars higher than 340 mg/dl this afternoon, diabetes kicked my butt with a vengeance. I am thankful that days like these are few and far between, but man, the rollercoaster is not fun and I feel like hell tonight.

Although having low bloodsugars is by no means a walk in the park, I have to say - I would prefer a day filled with lows to a day spent in two-hundred plus land. My mouth feeling like a desert in the middle of a sandstorm, my eyes aching, my legs alternating between cramping and stinging, and my stomach lurching and turning. But the absolute worst part of having repeated high bloodsugars is the emotional upheaval and the fear.

As my body calls desperately for more insulin, kicking my thirst into high gear and forcing into my breath the smell of fruit, it is as if I can feel the cellular destruction that's happening in my body. The symptoms drawing a clear picture of the breakdown of the blood vessels in my eyes and the nerves in my feet and my hands and the cells in my heart. I can see it all, the slow demolition of my body, when they come one after another - those numbers above 200. And the more upset, the more afraid I get, the higher the numbers climb. Insulin seems a slow and clumsy weapon against an enemy that's made its home inside of me and that has an arsenal of sneak-attack weapons and spot-on snipers.

I was once advised, that I should think of diabetes not as an enemy soldier, but as a puzzlemaster. "The Ultimate Riddler" that serves up repeated challenges and constantly forces us to think on our feet. It is tremendously difficult to keep that in mind, when you are in the middle of one of those mazes that the disease has laid out for you. When your mind is consumed by what feels like a vicious battle. But it is sound advice. For me, anyway. Because, if I focus on the solution, if I react in the moment - and then plan to prevent the next or make notes to deal better when another surprise is thrown my way - I am less inclined to think about what this disease could or will do to me - and more inclined to think about how I can remain in control of this disease.

And in the end, that is what will matter the most. Not so much how fierce I can be, how angry - but how agile and smart I am, how cool I can stay in the face of a challenge, and how determined I am to be the ultimate puzzle-solver.



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Great post Nicole. Good luck getting back on track soon :) -andy


Sorry about the rough day. At least it gave you fodder for a really great post. I like that insulin is a slow and clumsy weapon. So true.


Excellent post. I'm with you on this one. I'm trying more to be a problem solver, puzzlemaster, diabetes coordinator...whatever you wanna call it these days. But you have to admit, the Riddler has a good laugh, and diabetes does not.


Nicole

Sorry to hear you had a rollercoaster day. I hope you recover before too long has passed. It's worse than those traffic snarlups that appear on the highway and you can never figure out what caused them. I just hate these days.


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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)

Latest Posts: Family Onslaught | You Can't Always Lose... | From the Shore

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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