Last week, on Melbourne’s 40 plus degrees (Celsius) day, I put on a pair of bathers and went to the beach. Big deal, I hear you all sigh. But it is! I can’t remember the last time that I wore bathers. I’ve written about my body image issues before, but this year, I decided to bite the bullet, buy a gorgeous new pair of togs and wear them to the beach or pool.
So, in my new, stripy bathers, on the beach, I frolicked and splashed in the water with my family. It was gorgeous and the ideal way to cool down from the scorching weather which, at 9.00pm was still sitting around 36 degrees.
I was having a fantastic time and feeling more than a little proud of myself for not being self-conscious and just having fun. The kidlet was having a ball and couldn’t get enough of splashing her parents. Fun. Fun. Fun. And then I have no idea what happened. No idea at all.
The next thing I remember is sitting on the sand with my daughter next to me. She was building a sand castle and smiled at me. ‘Where’s daddy?’ I asked her. ‘He’s gone to the car to get jellybeans. He’ll be back soon.’ ‘Okay,’ I said. I watched her.
‘Where’s daddy?’ I asked her. ‘Mummy! I just told you. He went to the car. He’ll be back soon.’
At that point, Aaron returned with jellybeans. He looked so concerned. ‘I didn’t know if I was doing the right thing. It was so hard to get you out of the water, I thought there was no chance getting you to the car. You were talking to me, so I thought it best if I quickly go’. ‘I don’t remember getting out of the water,’ I said to Aaron. Apparently I walked, but it took some time for me to agree to get back on the sand.
How this happened, I have no idea. I made the decision before I left home to leave my new pump on the kitchen table and pack a syringe and insulin with me for bolus top ups as necessary or if we decided to get an ice-cream. Before I disconnected my pump, the Dexcom was reading (on my pump) 8.2mmol/l with a nice flat arrow and a flat line preceding it. We’d eaten a low-carb meal, so there was only 0.6 units of insulin on board. I figured that I’d check my BGL when we got to the beach to see if I needed to top up. But I forgot to do that.
Most likely, it was a combination of the heat and the activity in the water (but let’s be honest; I was standing there splashing, not swimming against a current) or doing anything that would warrant the 1.5 mmol/l reading I discovered when I finally checked my sugar after downing a bag of jellybeans in record time.
These hypos make me hate diabetes like nothing else. And they make me hate myself for not doing the things that may have helped me avoid the situation. If only I’d checked my BGL before getting out of the car I would have known that I was dropping and dropping fast. If only I hadn’t left my pump at home, the Dexcom would have picked up my plummeting BGL and warned me. If only I’d packed jellybeans in the beach bag. If only my body did what it was meant to. If only I didn’t have diabetes. If only.
I wonder if my body image issues have anything to do with the fact that I feel like my body fails me constantly. Why would I think of my body as anything other than broken and why would I want to show that to anyone? Is that part of it, or is it just a matter of me being plain shallow, needing to get over it?
There will be many more beach days before now and the end of the sweltering season – a heat wave is on its way. I pushed away the thoughts of never putting on my new bathers again and not going to the beach again with my family. I can’t let diabetes dictate what I do. But I guess I must let it dictate how I do it. If only I’d remembered that before I walked onto the sand last week.









7 comments
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January 9, 2013 at 4:28 pm
Elise
hi, can I just ask why you left the pump and dex at home? as I thought both of these were waterproof – the reason I am asking is that I am about to go from MDI to the pump and am looking at the Vibe/dex due to it being waterproof as I spend so much time around water (i live by the beach in Sydney). thanks
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January 9, 2013 at 5:39 pm
Renza
That’s a great question, Elise. I wish I had a great answer. Really – I just decided that I didn’t want to have to worry about the pump on the beach. I’ve been pumping for 12 years and this is the first waterproof pump I’ve used and i guess I was a little nervous about taking it in the water. I didn’t like the thought of leaving it unattended whilst I was in the water and it was too hot to leave it in the car. So, stupidly, I left it at home. The Dexcom sensor was, of course, still in.
So, yesterday, I went to the beach again. Guess who left her pump firmly attached for the whole time – even in the water. And it was fine. Good luck with your new pump. And thanks for reading!
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January 10, 2013 at 4:35 pm
Elise
Thanks for the feedback Renza – glad the second trip to the beach was less eventful than the first!
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January 9, 2013 at 9:17 pm
Fraudster
Re the hypo on the beach: it’s over & you got through it. I always say that when I don’t get hit by the Mary Street bus on my cycles home from school. But geez. I feel your alarm.
Re swimming wearing pump. Yay. As I’ve said, I’ve never tried it again since my incident in Noumea. Maybe I will now you’ve road tested.
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January 10, 2013 at 12:08 am
James
Yes, Hypos are really scary! I am not a pump user, I have been diabetic for 20 years now using pens and meters all the time. Since Humalog & Levimur have been introduced I have been caught out taking Humalog at bedtime and having a terrible hypo and being woken up by paramedics a few times. An easy mistake to make if you are not thinking or half asleep.
I get caught out sometimes too when I open a new pack of insulin & have to adjust my usual dosage regime. The potency seems to be higher on the new. It doesn’t seem to be every-time but it does seem to be stronger.
Now for my question: A Quick/Flex Pen has 100U/mL and 3mL capacity. so it is a standardized potency from the manufacturer. How long does it take to loose this at room temperature and by how much?
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January 10, 2013 at 2:34 am
Scott K. Johnson
Oh Renza, I’m so sorry. What a scary and frustrating thing to have gone through.
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January 10, 2013 at 10:23 am
Fred_Bear
Very Scary, so glad your family was there for you and it all worked out fine. yes, can’t let it run your life just HOW you do it.
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