‘You have brittle diabetes,’ the diabetes educator told me, regret in her voice.
Brittle. It’s such a sharp sounding word – all edges to cut yourself upon.
I first heard the term ‘brittle diabetes’ about three years after I was diagnosed. It was handed to me as a grave diagnosis within a diagnosis. Not just diabetes for me. I had brittle diabetes. I heard it, thought about it, said the words a few time together, jarring at the sound.
I was given this ‘diagnosis’ during a really rough period. My diabetes was all over the place thanks to a totally unrelated stomach issue. There were thoughts it may have been gastroparesis or, for a moment there, thanks to the significant weight loss I was experiencing, an eating disorder.
I became terrified to eat because every time I did, I was in extreme pain. At times I threw up everything I ate, other times I didn’t. My blood sugars were all over the place and the delightful insulin regimen which at the time involved Protophane was incredibly hopeless at doing anything other than send me plummeting low, or sky-rocketing high. It was a very tough few months.
I was seeing doctor after doctor after doctor. And all anyone could think about was my diabetes. My brittle diabetes. I was told: ‘This is what your diabetes is like. Sometimes there are no answers and we can do nothing to better manage things. This is it for you.’ There was an undertone of ‘get used to it, love’.
I wasn’t prepared to just accept it though. I wanted to have a baby and I knew that there was no way that I could even consider going down that path while my health was all over the place.
I finally sacked all the health professionals I was working with and sought out someone – something – else. I refused to believe that this was how I was going to be forever. I knew there were answers; I just didn’t know how to find them.
I found a new endo and when I walked in I told her that I had brittle diabetes. ‘I can’t be fixed, apparently. Give me everything you’ve got!’ I thought silently.
‘I don’t like that term,’ she told me gently. She wasn’t rude about it; she just explained that she thought we could work out why things weren’t going so well. And then, she went about finding answers. And we found them.
It took time and it took a lot of thinking outside of the square. It took putting diabetes to the side and not thinking that it was the only reason for all my health problems. Once I got sorted and my stomach was sorted and I spent some time talking things through, my diabetes was much easier to manage. I know that a big part of getting through was not only addressing the physical side of things. There were mental health issues I needed to address, mostly dealing with the grief I was experiencing about having to let go of my life before diabetes.
I too came to not like the term ‘brittle diabetes’. When I hear it now, I want to ask what else is going on. And I can’t help wonder where I would be now if I had just accepted that as my lot in diabetes.
Want more? Mike Hoskins wrote this interesting post on Diabetes Mine last year.







6 comments
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August 7, 2014 at 12:39 pm
Scott E
I really hate how some doctors are content with the status quo and are unwilling to try to change things… and how then shopping around for another doctor who can give you a better message makes you feel like you’re in denial and looking for someone to tell you what you want to hear rather than the truth (OK, that last part is my own thoughts, not what you said). Just think of all the people who DIDN’T have the courage to switch, and are now leading a so-called “brittle” lifestyle because they never bothered to figure out why their diabetes was so hard to control to begin with. It’s sad.
I’m glad you found someone who not only told you what you wanted to here, but helped to make it a reality.
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August 7, 2014 at 11:39 pm
Alanna (lifeont1)
I hate not being taken seriously. Sometimes I think type one is an easy way to answer harder questions. I am glad you fought for yourself!
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August 8, 2014 at 12:52 am
Leann
First off, I’m so glad you fought for yourself! I love the “get used to it, love” line-that’s exactly how it feels!
I wanted to add, I also had to grieve the loss of the person I used to be and wrote about it : http://www.diabetesdaily.com/voices/2014/05/grieving-the-loss-of-the-person-you-used-to-be-before-diabetes/
Thought I’d share since it sounds like you can relate.
Keep up the courage! Take care
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August 8, 2014 at 1:20 am
StephenS
I’m with Scott… I worry about doctors (and patients) who accept the term “brittle” and give up. Glad you didn’t.
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September 3, 2014 at 12:18 am
Welcome back - August Best of the 'Betes Blogs | Moments of Wonderful
[…] Post by a Type 1: It’s a post by Renza about brittle diabetes, but it is also a post about never giving up and pursing your questions with your doctors until you […]
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January 5, 2015 at 4:08 am
The Best 'Betes Blogs of 2014 | Moments of Wonderful
[…] Living With Diabetes ~”. Finally, in August, Renza recounts her transition to being described as “Brittle” to finding health care professionals who helped her find other ways to manage her […]
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