@Ian67 Be reassured your diabetes sounds perfectly normal not strange at all
🙂 Lots of Type 1s are sensitive to insulin. Also, during the honeymoon period, it’s very common to be on small doses and to have to deal with some of your own insulin coming in late and randomly and putting your blood sugar down,
Do persist with carb-counting. It can’t ‘not work’ because, put simply, it’s having the right amount of insulin for that meal. That is, you carry on until you’ve got your ratios sorted for breakfast, lunch and evening meal (they’ll probably be different), then you add further adjustments based on what you’re about to eat and your current blood sugar. Often Type 1s find two meals of the same carb amount need slightly different insulin amounts or split boluses.
Your fish and chips is high fat so many people find a split bolus is needed (some insulin before the meal, some a time after). If you’re still in the honeymoon period, you might find you can get away with a smaller bolus and then wait until your own insulin kicks in to deal with the rest.
Your chicken sandwich and crisps is a higher GI meal so that why your blood sugar went up to 13/14. You might need to have your bolus earlier to stop that spike. In addition, some people find bread and/or crisps need slightly more bolus than other foods of the same carb amount. That’s not a problem. All you do is remember or note it down. Then when you have the same meal again, you’ll know how far in advance to bolus and how much insulin to have.
If you find that your own insulin is kicking in between meals, then all you do is have a snack. That’s not unusual during the honeymoon - and it’s to your advantage too as it will help you put on weight. Again, experimentation is everything. You might find you need a 10g carb snack mid-morning but a 20g carb one mid-afternoon. Just to be clear, you eat the snack
without any Humalog.
If you’re thinking this is all sounds a pain - it is. This is what I found hardest to get my head round about Type 1. You don’t take the ‘right dose’ of insulin and you’re sorted - it’s a constant process of balancing and daily work.
I hope that all helps you and reassures you that you don’t have a freaky kind of Type 1. If you keep your blood sugar controlled so that you can properly use the food you eat, and get a feel for how your body is working currently, then you should gradually put on weight. You have to a) eat enough on a consistent daily basis; and b) take enough insulin to keep your blood sugar in range, which is an ongoing process of learning, juggling and balancing.