DeusXM i have to say those words are uplifting, i didn't realise that insulin s a fat storer and i to are trying to eat around 50 g carbs per day. I've eaten more protein this last week than I ever have and that is due to knowledge, here with all u guys and trial and error.
I woke with a reading of 2.3 this morning sweating but not shaking and bad head like i have had in the past with severe hypos but i was too tired to go to the kitchen (with recovering from back surgery) to get lucozade so i ate a blue ribband wafer chocolate and i tested again 30 mins later with a reading of 21.2 i was mortified arrrgghh!!!
Careful - don't fall into the trap of assuming that a lower carb diet has to be a high protein diet. Protein can actually be a major problem. Aside from the fact that protein overload will shred your kidneys, as a T1, protein can also be an absolute PITA when it comes to insulin dosing. That's because protein turns into glucose just like carbs - but in a way that's both unpredictable and doesn't match up with the insulins on market. If I have something like just a large steak, I end up playing 'catch up' with my insulin for a good 3-4 hours afterwards.
For a low-carb diet to work, you need to swap out the lost calories with the only thing that doesn't affect your blood sugar - fat.
Atkins is not a high protein diet. Bernstein is not a high protein diet. Low carbing is not a high protein diet. They are all high fat diets.
As I said before, the whole thing that underpins all this is breaking free of the mindset that fat is bad.
Put it this way. I eat pork rinds instead of crisps. I eat nuts. I eat rib-eye steaks with plenty of marbling. I cook most of my food by frying it in real butter. I eat eggs most days a week, with the yolk. Everything I do with my food makes dieticians scream in horror that I'm storing up heart disease. Everyone else is convinced I must be full of cholesterol. Yet my cholesterol is below the average. My LDL/HDL ratio is better than average. My trigycerides, which are widely accepted as being the marker for heart disease, are actually below 'normal', the complete opposite of what you'd expect. Simply put, the only thing that annoys my doctor more than my diet, is my bloodwork, because every single time they want to start a discussion about heart disease but they can't unless they choose to just ignore the actual evidence right in front of them.
But the only reason this works for me is because I eat a lower amount of carbs, a normal amount of protein and a high amount of fat - something like like a 10/30/60 ratio. If you still eat a lot of carbs or protein, this doesn't work.
Still having trouble converting yourself? Think of the 'fatty' foods that make people gain weight - pies, pasties, chips, crisps, cake, chocolate. Then look at the nutritional information for these and find out what is the biggest macronutrient in them.
Because it's not fat. It's not fat at all. And that's the problem. All the assumptions about a high fat diet are actually assumptions about a high fat, high carb diet, which is a very different thing.
And as a final point..if you do cut your carbs in favour of fat, cut your insulin. A lot. Otherwise you will end up on the very low blood sugar situation you found yourself in, and it's not healthy or fun.