Welcome to the forum
@Angreen
If you are hoping to manage your diabetes without medication, then taking a careful look at what you are eating is a really good step.
A helpful first step can be simply to keep a (brutally honest!) food diary for a week to keep a note of everything you are eating. And keeping a note, or estimate of the carbohydrate content of the meals.
While there are obvious things like cakes, biscuits, sweets and sugary drinks that you will be wanting to cut out straight away, you might be surprised how much *all* carbohydrate affects your BG levels, including rice, pasta, bread, pastry, grains, cereals and many fruits.
The really tricky thing is that blood glucose responses to various foods are highly individual, and it can be impossible to say which types and amounts of carbohydrate will ‘spike’ your BG without checking for yourself.
Many members here find checking before and 2hrs after eating with a BG meter is a great way to see how different amounts amd types of carbs are affecting their BG. Initially in a way the numbers themselves matter less than the differences between them, but aiming for a ‘meal rise’ of only 2-3mmol/L will allow your overall levels to come down gently.
Once you can see how your BG responds to different meals, you can begin experimenting with reducing amounts of carbs and trying different types (sometimes just having things at a different time of day makes a difference). Gradually tweaking and tailoring your menu to find one that suits your tastebuds, your waistline and your BG levels
🙂
If you are interested in this approach you may find
test-review-adjust by Alan S a helpful framework.
If you need to self fund your BG meter, the most affordable meters members here have found are the
SD Gluco Navii or the
Spirit Tee2 - which both have test strips at around £8 for 50
Let us know how you get on
🙂