Yeah – and there you go! “Physician, heal thyself! (I’m NOT a doctor, but you get the idea!) Guy, what have YOU DONE to get healthier, maybe survive your diabetes to an old age???? I mean besides taking your meds – ANYONE can do that! What’s so special about YOU, ya doofus!”
So, here I am to say, “There’s NOTHING special about me and what I do to try and control my diabetes.”
You give me a weird look and say, “So, why are you even WRITING this blog? You’re no better than ME!”
I’d have to say, “You’re right. I’m no better than you.”
Even so, here’s what I HAVE CHANGED:
1) I RECORD on a paper chart blood pressure, glucose, weight, and how many steps I take a day, then I convert it to miles – 1865 steps = 1 mile on MY devices. WHY: Lately my glucose has been low high (my target is 170; lately in the 180s to 200. I want to know what behaviors and foods have the greatest glycemic impact for me. Also, what kind of impact does exercise have? I have a four day cycle: bike (I normally bike on our nearby trail system: short ride (4 miles); long ride (5.5-8 miles); day off; short ride (4 miles).
2) I’ve have been STRUGGLING to not eat anything at all after 7 pm each evening. Success is highly variable. I HAVE discovered what NOT to eat after 7 and that my blood sugars are MUCH happier when I don’t eat anything at all after 7.
3) I’ve learned to relax when I take my BP – the difference between a “slap the sleeve on, take the BP, and record it” gives me higher (sometimes substantially higher!) numbers than if I take time to meditate/recite a Bible verse in my head a few times and ponder it.
4) I’m HORRIBLE at remembering to take my evening pills (2 metformin, 1 cholesterol). My family never even took vitamins, so this pill thing for anything but antibiotics and pain relievers is an entirely new idea for me…my sixty-some years habit of NOT taking pills has proven hard to break.
5) I’m forcing myself to be mindful of what I eat. Example: this afternoon, I had 2 whole wheat tortillas, cubed chicken breast, liberal kimchi (kimchi is considered a probiotic. I’ve also been experimenting with kombucha) (see https://breastcancerreaper.blogspot.com/2023/08/guys-gotta-talk-aboutdiabetes-13.html) But watching what I eat isn’t easy.
6) I’ve been blogging my life changes. That’s been important for me – not so much for your entertainment, but to gather my own thoughts together and begin to see trends and habits of thinking – all the better for me to remain reasonably healthy.
7) Blogging also allows me to keep up with the current research on Type 2 diabetes; and that’s a good thing intellectually. Oftentimes I don’t only read the “popular” articles on the BBC News or in magazines, but I go online and delve into the original papers in as many medical journals that I can access for free. That takes time and thought to figure out what they’re trying to say – which is where my articles on Breast Cancer, Alzheimer’s and Type 2 Diabetes have come from: reading beyond the popular expression of some “miracle breakthrough!”
8) THE NASTIEST ONE FOR ME??? Drinking plain water…I NEED to drink up to two liters a day – when I forget both my blood pressure and my blood sugars go up. It also makes it harder for me to donate blood plasma…
9) Which is the 9th thing I’ve changed. Plasma, while you DO get paid for this liquid that your red blood cells are suspended in, the product is also LIFE SAVING in at least two important ways. First is the plasma is broken up into products that, when used with an individual – like my wife’s brother – who was born lacking blood clotting factors…it’s called hemophilia. As well, plasma is used for ambulance accident victims. Having the red blood cells removed means that the liquid has no “type”. Plasma is used with victims who have lost blood and NEED to have their blood fluids increased so that their body can maintain a blood pressure high enough to keep them alive.
So, there you go! While I am neither a physician nor am I healing myself, I AM making changes in my lifestyle to keep me living long enough to see all three of my grandchildren get married (or whatever a commitment ceremony will look like in the future)!
Image: https://www.hcd.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/living-well-with-diabetes.jpg
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