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Clinical Swabs

New Member
Relationship to Diabetes
Type 1
So new to the forum but diabetic since 1974 (with reusable syringes stored in meths and boiled weekly, urine tests, beef and then pork insulin, sugar lumps I carried in a plastic box and a condition called sugar diabetes). It’s impossible to express how much better it all is today.
 
Welcome. Things have certainly moved on even over the mere 30 years that I've been T1. My local hospital has a display cabinet with some of the old bits of kit which I always find fascinating.
 
Welcome. Things have certainly moved on even over the mere 30 years that I've been T1. My local hospital has a display cabinet with some of the old bits of kit which I always find fascinating.
You youngsters don't realise how lucky you are - you've never had your sweeties rationed, boiled up a syringe or your pee, nor even yet lived in a shoebox in middle of t'motorway!

Personally I'm extremely pleased we have moved on! :rofl:
 
You youngsters don't realise how lucky you are - you've never had your sweeties rationed, boiled up a syringe or your pee, nor even yet lived in a shoebox in middle of t'motorway!

Personally I'm extremely pleased we have moved on! :rofl:
We lived for 6 months in a paper bag in a septic tank.
Would have been a palace to us.....
 
Welcome. Things have certainly moved on even over the mere 30 years that I've been T1. My local hospital has a display cabinet with some of the old bits of kit which I always find fascinating.
I forgot that I had real trouble doing the injections. So my mum bought me a “gun” (that was a wonderful Christmas). I wish I’d kept it. You loaded the syringe onto it and pulled a trigger and it shot into your leg. I realised it was worse than just doing the thing in the first place and stopped using it pretty quickly. But it was a scary looking thing.
 
I had one of them, a present from a chap who worked for a veterinary supply co and found they had a sample gathering dust so passed it on. As you say - scarier than just getting on with DIY. I later came across it again when we'd migrated to disposable syringes, which it was never engineered to handle. The tip of the needle met the skin and then the whole syringe bounced off it and landed somewhere on the other side of the living room, usually in the corner behind the telly in our house. Good job I had no delicate ornaments in the way !
 
There was a lady on my DAFNE course 3 years ago who was still using that gun contraption and had been for 50 years. She had been suffering with severe nocturnal hypos for many years, even though she was just using tiny amounts of insulin. Turned out the calibration for the dosing had been damaged over the years and it wasn't administering accurate amounts.
Funny how people get so stuck in their ways that they resist change because they trust something they have been using for decades over something new fangled. Thankfully that lady is now on a pump and her Palmer Injector has been consigned to a museum and her BG levels are much improved as is her quality of life and that of her family who had to deal with her becoming unconscious through the night for many years.
 
Of course I should have said.... Hello and welcome to our new member first in that post above. Please excuse my poor manners. 🙄 It is great that you have joined the forum and bring with you so much experience. I look forward to hearing more from you and hopefully learning a thing or two.
 
Welcome to the forum 🙂 Eeee! Those were the days....:D

Diabetic Days of Yore

I won’t forget those wise old words my Daddy said to me
As he sat down in his chair one night and perched me on his knee.
He said, ‘Son, diabetes wasn’t always so much fun,
So let me tell you how it was in 1931!’

Twice a day we’d drive to town, down to the abattoir,
Pick out a bovine pancreas and stow it in the car,
And when we got home Mum and Dad would mash that organ up,
And strain it through a muslin bag into a paper cup…

Then Dad would get some chemicals and boil them in a pan,
Adding bits of this and that with flourish and élan!
And meanwhile I would drink and drink until I had to pee,
And Mum would take a jar away, as swiftly as could be!

She’d add it to the chemicals, and if it turned bright red
Then I would have no supper and be sent off straight to bed.
But if it just turned yellowish, I’d have something to eat
Like carrots mashed in gravy, with sweet pickles for a treat!

I didn’t like the needles though, at least six inches long!
So Mum would jig around the room, distracting me with song!
And when he’d scraped the rust off, Dad would stick it in my butt,
I’d bite down on a leather strap to keep my mouth tight shut!

So, should you whinge and moan about how finger pricking’s bad,
Then pause to contemplate about the progress we have had.
We’ve gone from times when prospects for our future might seem poor,
To looking forward to the day that they announce the cure! 🙂

(c) Northerner, 2010
 
Welcome to the forum @Clinical Swabs
A full history of the horrors that I managed to avoid with my late diagnosis. That gun!!!!

I am pleased to say that I started on those nice injection pens from the start, although I was given 8mm needles at the beginning. Nothing to complain about in comparison, but I was glad to get down to the 4mm ones and the half unit pens.

I look forward to hearing more from you.
 
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