wallycorker
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
Hi shelleyknees,
People seem to keep mistaking what I say about my diet - I'm certainly not on what people consider to be a low-carb diet because I'm eating around 100g to 200g per day of carbohydrate. However, I eat hardly any starchy carbohydrate whatsoever - i.e. cereals, bread, potatoes, pasta, rice, pizza etc. These days almost all of the carbohydrate that I eat comes from fruit and vegetables. Certainly, I don't "cut out carbs altogether" as you say. I'd say that I'm on a low-fat and a very-much-reduced starchy carbohydrate diet - with a low alcohol intake also.
It does sound as though the symptoms that you describe may be hypo' symptoms - either real or false. If you do go low then have a snack - my snacks are almost always a small piece of fruit. I carry fruit with me wherever I go. If you aren't going low then the symptoms could be false and happening because your blood glucose levels are dropping sharply from previous highs. I don't experience any such symptoms even when my blood glucose levels drop below 4 - I occasionally experience readings below 4 and as low as 3.2 on one occasion recently.
I don't really have any special menus other than things that I've described in my original post - I simply choose non-starchy carbohydrate options from what food is available to me at any particular time - i.e. it's more about what I don't eat rather than what I do eat. For example, tomorrow my wife may prepare a typical Sunday roast joint lunch to cater for the entire family - i.e. about 8 to 10 of us including two vegetarians. If she does then I'd likely eat everything except the potatoes - i.e. I'd eat the meat or fish and all of the vegetables. Quite simply, I'd not eat the potatoes and perhaps the Yorkshire puddings.
Today for example, instead of my usual grilled breakfast, I had low-fat natural yoghurt with bluberries plus two teaspoons (i.e. 10g) of Lizi's granola. I was in a pub situation for lunch and chose ham and eggs - i.e. the least starchy carbohydrate option available - however, on this occasion, I had a few chips too. With my lunch I drank a couple of glasses of red wine - i.e. the low-carb option compared with drinking the beer and lager that my friends drank. For snacks I have eaten a pear, an apple and two satsumas and a small cereal bar. I didn't have an evening meal tonight but I'm thinking about having a tin of sardines for supper with salad items and various pickles for supper.
No - I haven't tried butterbean mash - and maybe I will. However, I must say that I'm not desperately looking around for new things to eat because - in my opinion - I have absolutely loads of very suitable foods to choose from. I'm finding it quite easy to make my food choices these days now I have learnt what foods I need to avoid. I was on holiday last week and eating in pubs and restaurants most of the time. However, I must say - that really isn't a problem to me. I just tend to choose different things to those that my non-diabetic wife might choose.
Ask away, if there is anything else you'd like to know.
Best wishes - John
People seem to keep mistaking what I say about my diet - I'm certainly not on what people consider to be a low-carb diet because I'm eating around 100g to 200g per day of carbohydrate. However, I eat hardly any starchy carbohydrate whatsoever - i.e. cereals, bread, potatoes, pasta, rice, pizza etc. These days almost all of the carbohydrate that I eat comes from fruit and vegetables. Certainly, I don't "cut out carbs altogether" as you say. I'd say that I'm on a low-fat and a very-much-reduced starchy carbohydrate diet - with a low alcohol intake also.
It does sound as though the symptoms that you describe may be hypo' symptoms - either real or false. If you do go low then have a snack - my snacks are almost always a small piece of fruit. I carry fruit with me wherever I go. If you aren't going low then the symptoms could be false and happening because your blood glucose levels are dropping sharply from previous highs. I don't experience any such symptoms even when my blood glucose levels drop below 4 - I occasionally experience readings below 4 and as low as 3.2 on one occasion recently.
I don't really have any special menus other than things that I've described in my original post - I simply choose non-starchy carbohydrate options from what food is available to me at any particular time - i.e. it's more about what I don't eat rather than what I do eat. For example, tomorrow my wife may prepare a typical Sunday roast joint lunch to cater for the entire family - i.e. about 8 to 10 of us including two vegetarians. If she does then I'd likely eat everything except the potatoes - i.e. I'd eat the meat or fish and all of the vegetables. Quite simply, I'd not eat the potatoes and perhaps the Yorkshire puddings.
Today for example, instead of my usual grilled breakfast, I had low-fat natural yoghurt with bluberries plus two teaspoons (i.e. 10g) of Lizi's granola. I was in a pub situation for lunch and chose ham and eggs - i.e. the least starchy carbohydrate option available - however, on this occasion, I had a few chips too. With my lunch I drank a couple of glasses of red wine - i.e. the low-carb option compared with drinking the beer and lager that my friends drank. For snacks I have eaten a pear, an apple and two satsumas and a small cereal bar. I didn't have an evening meal tonight but I'm thinking about having a tin of sardines for supper with salad items and various pickles for supper.
No - I haven't tried butterbean mash - and maybe I will. However, I must say that I'm not desperately looking around for new things to eat because - in my opinion - I have absolutely loads of very suitable foods to choose from. I'm finding it quite easy to make my food choices these days now I have learnt what foods I need to avoid. I was on holiday last week and eating in pubs and restaurants most of the time. However, I must say - that really isn't a problem to me. I just tend to choose different things to those that my non-diabetic wife might choose.
Ask away, if there is anything else you'd like to know.
Best wishes - John
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