Warren Grynberg
New Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
I have been a T1 on insulin for 48 years. Control has been good over many years. although my consultant constantly tells me not to worry with reasonable HBA1c's last was 7.3 I am getting depressed because I cannot seem to keep my blood sugars under control. They won't put me on a pump because my control is 'too good'. Not sure if I want a pump to follow me around for 24/7. Whatever the professionals tell you they do not suffer from diabetes. I am finding that if I put my arm up in the air too fast, walk in the wrong direction, breath the wrong air etc etc etc it has an effect on my control. You realise of course that I am exagerating but the medics only know diabetes from their textbooks and from the medical point of view not from the psychological aspects. Although I see a diabetes psychologist and when I wrote to her she wrote back saying 'I know how you feel'. Well she b-----y well does not know how I feel because she is not cursed with this horrible disease. I think about it when I wake up, first thing I do is a blood test. Have my breakfast I have to work out my carbs. go to work and do blood tests, get into the car and do blood tests. Lunch time more blood tests and maybe a correction dose, lunch. After work get back in the car more blood tests, home and what I do in the morning repeats itself until bed time. Happens the same the next day. Low bloods = jelly babies, glucose etc. more things to think about. Anyone got neuropathy = more worries, eyes ok = more worries and no one understands unless they've got it. I have only just realised that I don't know anyone else to talk to in depth who has T1. I am not going to the local diabetic club where most have T2 and discuss the latest jumble sale or trip out to the seaside even though they do raise a lot of money for Diabetes UK. So what to do? I live in the East London, Gants Hill, Ilford area. If anyone out there has the same or similar problems we could form a small group of 6 or 8 people to meet and discuss and reasure ourselves.