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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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stinky_harriet

I've been under 100 for half of the last ten blood sugar checks. My lows are mostly in the seventies and eighties now. Only three below 60 in the past week. My averages are steady at 133, with certain times of day at 110 while others average at 158.

 

I'm certainly not complaining about good numbers and amazing averages. It's taken years of blood, sweat, and tears to get my diabetes where I want it to be. I actually feel like jumping up and down for joy at the moment. I can see the future ahead of me, not tainted by complicated pregnancies or kidney disease.

 

Yet these numbers are so unbelievable to me. While waiting in traffic, I suddenly thought, "What if my meter is lying to me?" Technology often fails and I'm terrible about checking with the control solution. Plus I use the same meter for every test. It's quite possible that my meter is giving me great numbers that aren't even real.

 

I can imagine sitting in the doctor's office, patiently waiting to hear my latest A1c is back under seven, when he tells me "You're above 10." I can imagine the joy suddenly sinking and the panic striking me. It's possible, but is it probable?

 

After fifteen years of diabetes, I've lost the ability to rely on my symptoms. I checked my blood sugar today out of habit and saw 74 blink back at me, only to realize that I felt fine. Or sometimes I check my blood sugar fearing a high because of the telling thirst that I have, only to find that I'm completely in range. Symptoms are not something that I can rely on anymore.

 

I never expected to fear that my meter's results were too good to be true. I've always bounced from one extreme to the other. I've never been able to obtain perfect results so consistently. I never even imagined that I could, especially at nineteen years old and in the throes of stress.

 

I'm scared to check my meter with the control solution, for fear that I'll find my 98 is really 298. Granted, if my readings were that off, I'm sure I'd have a multitude of ketone symptoms. But if I can't rely on my machine, can I really rely on my body?




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I get a 10mg/dl variance between different fingers.


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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)
Nicole Purcell
Nicole PurcellNicole Purcell lists having type 1 diabetes last when she's asked to provide information about herself - because that's where it belongs.

(Read More)
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