Type 1 diabetes is much more than finger pricks and medication.
It’s changing insulin sites ever 3-6 days. It’s re-calibrating a continuous glucose monitor every 12 hours. It’s making sure you have spare reservoirs, syringes, batteries, insulin, candy at ALL times.
It’s hitting a nerve when you insert a site but not wanting to remove it so you don’t waste it. It’s having a 400 blood sugar after eating a very high carb meal. It’s having a stock pile of supplies in your closet. & it’s poking your finger 4-8 times a day.
Diabetes is hard.
Yesterday I had a pile of garbage after changing my site, my reservoir and my sensor all at once. This morning I woke up with a 400 blood sugar after my pump died in the middle of the night.
Having a high blood sugar feels awful. You have to pee constantly, you have cotton mouth, you have a headache and you feel like you’re going to throw up (& sometimes you do).
Having a low blood sugar isn’t as fun either. You have body shakes, you sweat, your can’t focus and sometimes you don’t remember things.
Diabetes isn’t just hard. It’s scary.
Whether you have a high or low, it’s affecting every part of your body. & it can change into a medical emergency fast.
Going into a coma is a real concern. Not having access to sugar or insulin is a real concern. Not having access to syringes, reservoirs, sites, sensors, batteries, is a real concern.
I’ve been there.
Being in the OR and running out of insulin and not knowing if you have a backup reservoir with you. Being at PT and having a low blood sugar and not having your meter or any candy with you. Or going to get insulin out of the fridge and realizing you used your last vial.
Every day is hard with diabetes.
But having family, friends and coworkers who know what to do is lifesaving.
Be your own advocate. It could save your life.
#diabetes #type1diabetes