@ajr9393 as others have said I would give yourself a few weeks of rest.
As with most things with diabetes it is trial and error. It is best to keep trying and giving it ago until you work it out.
It will be still possible to have an active life with exercise as you did before it will just take some time to work out how it works for your body now. You will find our what works for you.
It's been a few years since I ran but I did do it 3/4 times a week at one point. One thing I learnt is for me it is about what level I start at when I go out. If lower than 5.5 I would need some glucose / a snack otherwise I would go low.
I would say have a few weeks rest, speak with your medical team, and then give it another go. Eat what is a steady meal for you that you know keeps you level and then go out. I always found morning the worst time personally for a run due to the old liver dump. Even now I prefer after breakfast with some carbs and fast acting insulin.
Give yourself time, patience and some space for learning. You can do this, will just take some tweaking.
I always thought I had been told don't exercise at 13 or over, but actually DAFNE advise is 15, based on the below, from a recent DAFNE course I attended in Dec 2024. It also then talks about reducing background insulin for the type and duration of exercise.
When to delay your exercise
- If you have had a severe hypo in the last 24 hours (your liver and muscle stores of glucose will be reduced).
- If your Glucose is more than 15.0 mmol/L before the exercise and your blood ketones are 1.5 mmol/L. Follow illness and sick day rules if you have a positive ketone check.
Note: The presence of ketones indicates that the amount of insulin you have on board is low; exercising in this condition will increase your risk of developing diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). Wait until your Glucose is less than 15.0 mmol/L and your ketones are negative before exercising.