Welcome to the forum
@MillyMollyMandy44
Great to hear your determination to tackle this head-on
🙂
Possibly the first thing is to take a breath. Getting a diagnosis with diabetes can be quite discombobulating, and you might be hit with a whole whirlwind of emotions.
One of the biggest questions when trying to get to grips with your diabetes is often ‘what can I eat’ and while there are obvious things like cakes, biscuits, sweets and sugary drinks that you will want to cut out straight away, you might be surprised how much *all* carbohydrate affects your BG levels, including rice, pasta, potatoes, bread, pastry, grains, cereals and many fruits.
It’s not that you have to avoid all these things completely (that wouldn’t be particularly wise, even if it were possible - even lettuce has some traces of carbohydrate in it!). But reducing portion sizes can really help your metabolism cope better with your overall menu.
Many new members find it can be really helpful to keep a brutally honest food diary for a week or two. Note down everything you eat and drink, along with a reasonable estimate of the total carbohydrate content in your meals and snacks (not just ‘of which sugars). It might sound like a bit of a faff, and will involve weighing portions, squinting at the fine print on packaging, and possibly looking up things on the internet, but it will give you a really good idea of which foods are the main sources of carbs in your menu.
Once you can see which meals or snacks are your ‘big hitters’, and where carbs might be unexpectedly lurking, the process might also suggest some likely candidates for swaps, portion reductions, or using lower carb alternatives (eg celeriac or swede mash, or cauli ‘rice’).
If you would like a good overview of T2 diabetes, to add to the knowledge you’ve already picked up, members here frequently recommend
Maggie Davey’s Letter and Gretchen Becker’s book
T2 Diabetes, the first year, which you can work through gradually and will give you a solid starting point.
Members here very much recommend Diabetes UK’s
Learning Zone too. The orange tab in the main menu. It is packed full of bite-sized modules that you can work through at your own pace.
Good luck, and let us know how you get on
🙂