- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
- Pronouns
- He/Him
Really sorry to hear what you are going through as a family @Mel W 
Unfortunately Cherry hasnt visited the forum since Feb so may not pick up your response, but I just wanted to thank you for sharing your story, and hope the forum can help you and your partner work through this.
I have been where your partner is, living with and normalising far too much hypoglycaemia, including severe hypos. Looking back I am utterly ashamed of what I put my late wife through for probably 5-10 years of our marriage.
But I couldn’t see it at the time. I had normalised my experience, and had no contact with others living with T1 to act as a benchmark. Being hypo like that blanks your memory - he won’t remember them all like you do because he’s not really there. So his estimation of frequency will be a fraction of yours. I would guess he dips below 4 most days. Possibly several times a day. Then has whole days running in double figures, gets frustrated and overreacts. If he’s anything like me he probably knows he’s always preferred to run on the low side (lows are faster to ‘fix’ and invilve eating something tasty). He probably thinks it will help avoiding long-term complications... But what it took me years to realise is that Impaired Awareness of Hypoglycaemia IS a long term complication of T1 - and it’s a devastating one every bit as much as eye, heart or kidney problems.
It sounds like your partner is willing to try, and has access to some great tools... but that there is a genuine challenge around his thinking about hypos and their impact in those around him. There are specific courses and resources that can help, including an ongoing clinical trial that I am involved in called HARPdoc, which could provide exactly the support your partner needs once the trial concludes.
Change is possible. He can reset the way he approaches his diabetes management. For me the catalyst was having to go to A&E for the first time ever in my ‘diabetes life’. But now, approx 10 years later I haven’t had a severe hypo for about 8-9 years.
Jane wrote this about a year after I’d started rethinking my diabetes:
www.everydayupsanddowns.co.uk
Alas she never got to be the ‘happy pensioner’ she had always wanted to become.
Unfortunately Cherry hasnt visited the forum since Feb so may not pick up your response, but I just wanted to thank you for sharing your story, and hope the forum can help you and your partner work through this.
I have been where your partner is, living with and normalising far too much hypoglycaemia, including severe hypos. Looking back I am utterly ashamed of what I put my late wife through for probably 5-10 years of our marriage.
But I couldn’t see it at the time. I had normalised my experience, and had no contact with others living with T1 to act as a benchmark. Being hypo like that blanks your memory - he won’t remember them all like you do because he’s not really there. So his estimation of frequency will be a fraction of yours. I would guess he dips below 4 most days. Possibly several times a day. Then has whole days running in double figures, gets frustrated and overreacts. If he’s anything like me he probably knows he’s always preferred to run on the low side (lows are faster to ‘fix’ and invilve eating something tasty). He probably thinks it will help avoiding long-term complications... But what it took me years to realise is that Impaired Awareness of Hypoglycaemia IS a long term complication of T1 - and it’s a devastating one every bit as much as eye, heart or kidney problems.
It sounds like your partner is willing to try, and has access to some great tools... but that there is a genuine challenge around his thinking about hypos and their impact in those around him. There are specific courses and resources that can help, including an ongoing clinical trial that I am involved in called HARPdoc, which could provide exactly the support your partner needs once the trial concludes.
Change is possible. He can reset the way he approaches his diabetes management. For me the catalyst was having to go to A&E for the first time ever in my ‘diabetes life’. But now, approx 10 years later I haven’t had a severe hypo for about 8-9 years.
Jane wrote this about a year after I’d started rethinking my diabetes:
At the risk of sounding like Grandma Walton
Because no two days with type 1 diabetes are the same. Except when they are. The ups and downs of life with T1D.
Alas she never got to be the ‘happy pensioner’ she had always wanted to become.
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