Nielh123
Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
Newbie here, really pleased I stumbled across this forum whilst trying to research T2 and thought I’d give a bit of background to my situation.
After being pre-diabetic for a few years I was diagnosed in 2019 aged 52. I was told I was only just “in range” and should be OK without medication, that there was no need to worry, just try to lose a bit of weight and get a bit more active and you’ll be fine.
At 25 stones I already knew I could do with losing a couple of pounds (!) so I joined a well-known slimming club and started walking more but thought little else of it as, with a HbA1C of 48, I’d only just “slipped over the threshold” the diabetes nurse had reassured me.
Fast forward a few months and that had gone up to 54, then by the start of 2020, it was 98. Why the dramatic increase after all this time I’ve no idea. I resisted the advice from my GP to start Empagliflozin, saying I wanted to step up my health and lifestyle changes first and give that a go. Started walking more each day – happy dog - and continued losing weight. By last summer my HbA1C was down to 67 and my weight down by 4 stones. GP agreed to give me another few months to continue my efforts but with lockdown and the temporary end of the slimming group, I was less active, demotivated, and the weight loss stopped. Levels went up to 77 then by March this year 88.
During the summer, I suddenly started experiencing problems with my usually superb distance vision. Really blurry, when walking the dog in the woods the trees seemed to merge into one. It would be worse some days, improve, then get worse again. Panicked, I went to the Optician, who said it was likely down to my blood sugar and felt it would get better when the T2 was under control.
Again, I resisted medication. Call it denial, but I was sure I could deal with it with exercise. I’ve spent the last five months doing 2-3 hours of brisk walking every day, joined a gym, lost another stone and feel lots fitter. I had a blood test two days ago and will get the results tomorrow. Unless I see a really dramatic improvement I’ll bow to the inevitable and start the meds.
Well if you’ve made it this far I hope I haven’t bored you too much!
Nielh123
After being pre-diabetic for a few years I was diagnosed in 2019 aged 52. I was told I was only just “in range” and should be OK without medication, that there was no need to worry, just try to lose a bit of weight and get a bit more active and you’ll be fine.
At 25 stones I already knew I could do with losing a couple of pounds (!) so I joined a well-known slimming club and started walking more but thought little else of it as, with a HbA1C of 48, I’d only just “slipped over the threshold” the diabetes nurse had reassured me.
Fast forward a few months and that had gone up to 54, then by the start of 2020, it was 98. Why the dramatic increase after all this time I’ve no idea. I resisted the advice from my GP to start Empagliflozin, saying I wanted to step up my health and lifestyle changes first and give that a go. Started walking more each day – happy dog - and continued losing weight. By last summer my HbA1C was down to 67 and my weight down by 4 stones. GP agreed to give me another few months to continue my efforts but with lockdown and the temporary end of the slimming group, I was less active, demotivated, and the weight loss stopped. Levels went up to 77 then by March this year 88.
During the summer, I suddenly started experiencing problems with my usually superb distance vision. Really blurry, when walking the dog in the woods the trees seemed to merge into one. It would be worse some days, improve, then get worse again. Panicked, I went to the Optician, who said it was likely down to my blood sugar and felt it would get better when the T2 was under control.
Again, I resisted medication. Call it denial, but I was sure I could deal with it with exercise. I’ve spent the last five months doing 2-3 hours of brisk walking every day, joined a gym, lost another stone and feel lots fitter. I had a blood test two days ago and will get the results tomorrow. Unless I see a really dramatic improvement I’ll bow to the inevitable and start the meds.
Well if you’ve made it this far I hope I haven’t bored you too much!
Nielh123