Carla Davies
New Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Parent of person with diabetes
Hi! I'm a mum of 2. My eldest, nearly 13, has Type 1 Diabetes (since 2010). Along with a couple of other medical conditions.
Hi Carla, welcome to the forum 🙂 How are they getting along with things, and what insulin regime are they on?Hi! I'm a mum of 2. My eldest, nearly 13, has Type 1 Diabetes (since 2010). Along with a couple of other medical conditions.
Sorry to hear he's strugglingHe's on an insulin pump (since last September ), which uses novarapid. He struggling at the moment. He's fed up with diabetes (amongst other things).
He has ginger hair too! And he is very tall due to a condition call Marfan's Syndrome. (Suffering with chronic pain at the moment) . So it's a super whammy, he had enough of it all.You only have to have ginger hair to be different!
He has ginger hair too! And he is very tall due to a condition call Marfan's Syndrome. (Suffering with chronic pain at the moment) . So it's a super whammy, he had enough of it all.Hopefully when he starts having friends with diabetes, he'll start feeling a bit better. And not so alone.
Well even being thought of by one's peers as 'brainy' can be a problem these days.
A forum friend's daughter had to become a good actress when she was about 12, since she was very bright so also got it sussed quickly - rarely put her hand up in class etc so as not to be noticed - and acted as thick as the others out of class - just did the work and excelled in her exams.
I remember being horrified when she was telling me all about it - her dad was actually furious that she had to do this - but he'd seen how she was when she first went to senior school and was picked on, so they just had to keep cool, and talk to her about what she COULD do, to try and prevent the bullying.
Dreadful.
This was true back in my day (secondary school late 70's, early 80's), and still the same today. Being good academically and getting high marks in tests etc attracts negative comments from peers....so you have to pretend to be dumber than you are and make out you haven't worked/revised at all. Maybe it's part of the culture of this country in valuing brainless celebs like Kim Kardashian and never holding up intelligent people as role models?
And mine, and still is, its the same at work really, although not quite as blatant. We're a strange old bunch aren't we!
Hi! Thanks. Sorry only just seen your message. I didn't have any notifications about it. I'll look into that tall group, sounds good. Especially as he's nearly 13 and already into mens long trousers! He sees a counsellor every week or every other. Not sure if it helps.Poor chap, he must be thoroughly fed up, its hard enough standing out from the crowd when you're that age, but having the diabetes on top must be making him feel very hard done by. I'm a tall red head (well not so red anymore it's faded) and when you just want to blend in its very difficult. I was the super tall, ginger bendy girl at school and blimey that was a challenge, so I feel for him. I don't know if this helps but, in a weird way it actually helped me, by the time I was 18 I'd realised that I'm different (in many ways) and people just had to get over it, but I had some help with that. Do you know about the tall person's club? I used to be a member (lapsed of late) but that's very useful too even if just for practical things like clothes, seats on airplanes etc. I used to go to events and a fair number of attendees at that point had Marfans (I was cleared for Marfans to the surprise of my consultant, but do have Ehler Danlos which is an associated condition, same gene different expression of the mutation I believe). The website has changed but I think it's this http://www.tallclub.co.uk, check it out first though just in case. I think they do Twitter and Flickr and Facebook these days so that might be good for him to check out.
I was a late bloomer for type 1 so I didn't have the diabetes to contend with, but chronic pain on its own is a lot to deal with so the combination of that with the diabetes might mean he needs professional support, he should be able to access that via his diabetes team (psychological support) but you might have to push hard. I hope he finds some support and it gets a bit easier for him when he finds other people who understand how he feels.