One of the most striking things you can do as someone who's had diabetes for a while is to describe your normal day to someone who doesn't have the condition. You'd be amazed at how much of what we consider completely normal is frankly terrifying and alien to anyone else. In three days most of us will have already had more injections than a regular person would expect to have in a lifetime, and let's face it, the injecting part of diabetes is probably the most 'so what' part of the experience.
We voluntarily stab our hands to make ourselves bleed multiple times a day (blood testing)
Most of us find ourselves in a position where our brains literally stop working properly on a weekly basis (hypos)
At any one point we are potentially less than 48 hours from death (if we decided to stop injecting our insulin)
At some points we could be as little as 15 minutes away from a coma and death (hypos again)
We have to do a maths exam every time we eat and failing it could mean any of the above
When choosing to have another piece of toast or a few extra chips, we're effectively making a choice about whether we want to lose a leg or not (if you take all this to the logical ultimate extreme)
And that's just the day to day stuff. Now, none of the above gets me down at all. But when you take a step back, it is frankly amazing what we think is normal or perfectly doable. Much like the old joke you never realise how weird your family is until you start explaining it to other people, I think none of us quite realise the astonishing things we all do as routine.