So if this is your first meal and then you are not hungry till the evening, when do you have this meal? I will have a salad at lunchtime but woud need a breakfast first thing which is normally an omelette.Ouch - yes - all high carb choices - An added disadvantage is that the insulin reduces your blood glucose down to levels where you are feeling hungry again very soon after eating.
Do you have a protein source you could add to a big salad perhaps? In this hot weather my first meal is a bag of salad, coleslaw, radishes cucumber celery tomato (I just go through the fridge and tip things in) cress needs to be snipped off, walnuts, sweet pepper, oil and vinegar dressing, a sprinkle of various herbs, I just select one at random for variety - then I would add boiled eggs and cheese, or meat or fish.
Once I have eaten that I am not hungry until evening, though I often have coffee with cream - but coconut oil is also an option as a sort of 'keto energy drink'.
I don't think I would last if I just had salad with my brekkie omelette. How do you stay full without some sort of bread/Ryvita/potato etc?Hi and welcome from me too.
The omelette is a great choice for breakfast and probably buch better than shredded wheat or Weetabix. Try adding cheese to it with your veg as that is more filling and instead of the Ryvita, try having a plate of mixed salad leaves with a couple of cherry tomatoes, cucumber and avocado is also great for adding healthy fat and fibre. The salad takes some chewing and eating which helps you to feel like you have had a substantial meal without the need for carbs.... many people are quite insulin resistant in the morning so it makes sense to avoid carbs at that time of day.
Make sure to take the Metformin with a substantial meal (like your omelette) and I find that eating most of the meal and then taking the tablet and then finishing the meal helps prevent the upset stomach side effects or at least reduces them. They usually subside after a few weeks but I will still get an "explosive" day every once in a while when I "splatter the porcelain" 😳There is sometimes a beneficial side effect to the Metformin in that it can act as an appetite suppressant.
When I have my big plate of omelette and salad for breakfast, I usually manage on a few nuts/olives and a chunk of cheese for lunch and then have a proper dinner in the evening with meat or fish and lots of leafy veg and 2-3 pieces of potato or a small portion of wholemeal pasta and that is my main portion of carbs for the day. Creamy Greek yoghurt with berries like raspberries makes a nice dessert. Lidl do the lowest carb yoghurt I have found at 3.2g/100g and it comes in a 1kg bucket. Big 200g bags of unsalted nuts at Lidl are also very reasonable. I like the brazils which again are the lowest carbs of the nut varieties I have seen but they also do a 200g bag of mixed nuts if you prefer variety.
Many of us have had that horrible teary feeling of being overwhelmed every now and again, so it is perfectly normal to suffer that following your diagnosis even without all the other ailments you have to deal with. When you are feeling like that, come on here and have a good rant or ask for support.... that is what we are here for... to support each other through the difficult times and rejoice in each other's successes! It is a bit of a roller coaster ride in the beginning, but it does get easier as you figure out what to buy in your weekly shop and how to cook to cater for your new dietary needs. And be prepared to experiment with new foods.... it is an excellent opportunity to expand your palette to find new favourite foods..... for instance, I just discovered that I like blue cheese having hated it for the first 55 years of my life!
Good luck with figuring it out. I could happily eat 4 slices of wholemeal bread and butter with a whole tin of baked beans for lunch and a box of Cadbury's cream eggs without pausing for breath prior to diagnosis. Now I don't eat beans or bread and very occasionally a tiny square of dark chocolate and I really don't miss all those carbs.... and I was only struck with the D label in February, so it has been quite a radical transformation and I feel so much better for it. Most of us are happy with our new diet once we get our head around it but these first few months are difficult. We are here to support you through it. Sending hugs to you!
I don't know a number. This is where my usual advice, to self test, comes in. It would show you what affect any of your meals have on your BG, as well as any changes you make. Keep a food diary, along with a record of your levels. After a couple of weeks you should be able to start seeing a pattern.I have swapped rice krispies and cornflakes (which I used to think were the plainest) for Bitesize Shredded wheat and Weetabix,
but looking in the book they are still looking high in carbs to me! Just how many carbs per meal is a good number?
I don't think I would last if I just had salad with my brekkie omelette. How do you stay full without some sort of bread/Ryvita/potato etc?
I would normally have the weetabix at tea time (5pm ish). Omelette for brekkie, salad at lunchtime, cereals at tea/dinner time.
Missed that. Sorry.and I understand that being vegetarian makes things a little more difficult
Have you got a reference you can point me to please.
Yes - that is my first meal when I get up. It is a large salad - today with a couple of eggs and mozzarella cheese.So if this is your first meal and then you are not hungry till the evening, when do you have this meal? I will have a salad at lunchtime but woud need a breakfast first thing which is normally an omelette.
I was told you had to have 3 meals a day and I know I couldn't last right till the evening with just a salad.
I've heard it said that our bodys think we need some glucose in our blood in the morning to help us start doing things; so it dumps a load into our blood stream. And that if we eat something, our body thinks it can stop.Once I gave up on the tablets I was testing my blood glucose and found that not eating in the morning was elevating my levels,
Just to say, T2 doesn't become T1. And needing to inject insulin doesn't make you T1 (even though T1s need to inject insulin).I think if I ever got to Type 1 and had to inject etc,
It happens to plenty of us.Yesterday was a bad day and I crashed out. Couldn't cope. Couldn't remember anything I had been told.
Just a complete brain shut down.
Could be several things or a combination. If you get your BG down that certainly may help.All I know is that when I eat, I then fall asleep.