Sorry I've been a bit absent here, missing it... busy times though.
E got started today on his saline trial, so is now asleep for the first time all connected up. Insulin starts next week.
It was fine. It was a little scary. He was very brave, and did it all himself. We love the bolus wizard, the cleverness of it.
It doesn't hurt as much as an injection, he says, though it does sting a little afterward for a few minutes.
The nifty screw on/screw off connector is mind-blowing: a twist, and you're disconnected for a bath (no tape or cap needed) or even swimming.
We can't believe it. I know it's not the be all and end all, and there's still carb counting and inexplicable numbers... But to be able to dial up fractions of units, to correct even for A BISCUIT eventually. Wow. No wonder numbers are just so much more in reach.
Exams start for him tomorrow. Ten days of them. He goes on insulin right in the middle, and we are testing him three times in the night and every two hours. He's a bright, bright, ambitious and competitive young man. We've warned the school. We had no choice over dates: now or next autumn. But things could be rough. We'll bite the bullet and get through.
Already though, there's a different kind of light about what might be possible. I can see it so much more clearly now. It's kind of amazing.
Feeling very lucky for the first time in a while...
E got started today on his saline trial, so is now asleep for the first time all connected up. Insulin starts next week.
It was fine. It was a little scary. He was very brave, and did it all himself. We love the bolus wizard, the cleverness of it.
It doesn't hurt as much as an injection, he says, though it does sting a little afterward for a few minutes.
The nifty screw on/screw off connector is mind-blowing: a twist, and you're disconnected for a bath (no tape or cap needed) or even swimming.
We can't believe it. I know it's not the be all and end all, and there's still carb counting and inexplicable numbers... But to be able to dial up fractions of units, to correct even for A BISCUIT eventually. Wow. No wonder numbers are just so much more in reach.
Exams start for him tomorrow. Ten days of them. He goes on insulin right in the middle, and we are testing him three times in the night and every two hours. He's a bright, bright, ambitious and competitive young man. We've warned the school. We had no choice over dates: now or next autumn. But things could be rough. We'll bite the bullet and get through.
Already though, there's a different kind of light about what might be possible. I can see it so much more clearly now. It's kind of amazing.
Feeling very lucky for the first time in a while...