
Overdosed on all the carbs!
By the time I walked into the office yesterday, I was ready for the day to be over. Horrendous low on my way in (seriously, I hate the two-hour warm up phase when I put in a new or restart a Dex sensor) and the frenzied, gluttonous consumption of as much glucose as was in my car. (For the record – two juice boxes and large packet of jelly beans.)
A morning mountain of sugar does not start the day at all well with the overdose of glucose pulsing through my veins turning my muscles to lead and my brain to pulp. And it continued throughout the day, with reminders of the rotten start peppering my day, all the way to bedtime when I found four rogue blood glucose strips stuck to my body. They fluttered like butterflies to the ground when I took off my bra. (That sounds a lot prettier and more delicate than it actually was.)
Hypo mornings are the worst. Especially when they involve the guzzling of the equivalent of my body weight in glucose.
I arrived at work 15 minutes late for a meeting, covered in sweat, hair plastered to my head and my sunglasses skewwhiff on my head. Nothing says ‘I’m-ready-for-the-week-and-to-be-a-smart-sassy-expert-contributor-to-an-important-meeting-with-important-people-and-yes-of-course-I-know-what-I-am-talking-about’ like post-hypo glow.
These days start badly. And don’t end well. I take a ‘begin as I mean to go on, and go on as I began’ approach literally, and figure that if beginning with a carb load suitable for an Olympic marathon runner the day before race day, then I may as well keep it up and compete in my own little Olympic challenge: the carb race.
I mean, why not eat a doughnut or two for breakfast next, right? Or waffles with jam AND syrup AND whipped cream?
And of course, I’ll have morning tea. ‘Biscuits,’ you say? ‘I’ll take six…teen,’ I respond.
Sushi rolls for lunch, because today is not the day to work out how to bolus for white rice and who cares anyway?!
It would be rude to say no to the brownies on the counter of the café next door to the office that I am visiting for the fifth time because caffeine is the only thing that is making me remain upright and remember how to string two words together that actually make sense. (So: ‘Yes, another milky coffee please. And sure, add sugar! All the sugar!’)
Pasta for dinner with more pasta and then add some pasta on the side because carbs, carbs, carbs. And the chocolate chip cookies that the kidlet made over the weekend as treats for her school day lunchbox make excellent treats after dinner for carb-mummy.
And while this is all going on, I am bolusing, bolusing, bolusing; insulin stacking, insulin stacking, insulin stacking. And chasing my tail because of course I end up low and then high and then low.
I know, I know. I didn’t need to keep the high carb day going after my breakfast hypo. But sometimes, when the days starts off going to hell in a handbasket, sometimes, I can’t work out the way (or be bothered) to salvage it. And I wonder what is the point of limiting my carb intake for the rest of the day if the floodgates were jammed open before 9am.
I climbed into bed last night exhausted. Exhausted from the low that started the day, the sluggishness of so much glucose still in my system and a day of peak-and-trough glucose levels that always make me feel listless. I said a silent prayer to the diabetes angels to please, please, please let me sleep through the night and not be up all night weeing out the sugar due to the glucose overdose, or needing to treat a low due to the likely insulin overdose. I pleaded for balance and flat-lines and an absence of alarms.
I woke this morning with the slight hangover the comes from too much sugar and a day on a rollercoaster. Waves of nausea wash lightly over me occasionally, reminding me of the day before. Delicately, I am stepping through the day. Watching my CGM trace, reacting gently, eating cautiously, dosing warily. And cursing diabetes. Completely and utterly inelegantly.
9 comments
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August 9, 2016 at 1:16 pm
Annabelle Leve
Wow. I think that what reading your blogs does to me is to help me realise the level of denial I have as I live my diabetic life the best way that I can. That I have these days too, but go on ‘as normal’ with my invisible affliction because I don’t allow myself to make excuses or blame my diabetes. No, I just blame myself for not doing well enough, for not achieving that dream of a straight line for one day and the next. Never admitting, even to myself, how much of my days are spent trying to keep those bsl’s as close to ‘normal’ as possible. And then there are actually the challenges of life itself that need to be worked on.
This opportunity to share these days and these feelings, even if just between ourselves, through this type of forum is a relief! It is no longer just me struggling through it on my own! Doesn’t mean I’ll stop, give up or get lazy, or even feel sorry for myself (too much or too often), but I/we can feel proud at how amazing we are against the odds! As always Renza, thanks for sharing!
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August 9, 2016 at 1:20 pm
RenzaS
I love everything about this comment so much, Annabelle! This diabetes palaver we try to manage is tough. Having people along for the ride who understand is more helpful than we will ever know. Thank you for reading and for sharing on your blog, too.
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August 9, 2016 at 10:31 pm
Annabelle Leve
You talk my language Renza! x
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August 9, 2016 at 1:16 pm
pam oka
Yep, yep and yep. Starting the day with a low (which invariably means broken sleep) always ends badly for me too. I never quite manage to get back on an even keel and feel headachy and wasted until I wearily climb back into bed after see sawing throughout the day.
Once again.Thanks for telling it like it is. Comforting to know we are not alone!
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August 9, 2016 at 1:20 pm
RenzaS
We are completely not alone! Thanks for reading, Pam.
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August 9, 2016 at 1:18 pm
Annabelle Leve
Reblogged this on abelspace and commented:
Welcome to a day of my life! #T1D
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August 9, 2016 at 8:06 pm
Coll
Awesome post Renza, telling it like it is, i can so relate as well! Xo
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August 10, 2016 at 1:19 pm
Rick Phillips
I agree I have had the same situation. Yet we get up and go at it again tomorrow. Pulling through, what else can we do?
I referred your blog to the TUDiabetes.org blog page for the week of August 8, 2016.
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August 17, 2016 at 11:25 pm
Kayleigh Tanner
This really resonates with me! I do the same sometimes. If I wake up hypo, I’ll loads up on carbs all through the day and tell myself it’s just as a precaution. As a relatively new diabetic (not quite four years) I still haven’t quite shaken off the fear of god the nurses instilled into me regarding hypos when I was hospitalised and diagnosed. If I wake up low, I treat it, then I feel like I have to keep it up all day just in case. Argh. I’ll get there!
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