A couple of days ago, I woke up at 5am low and stayed that way until about 12pm when I decided to have a sushi roll for lunch. My thinking was that if white rice didn’t solve this low, nothing would! I’d already thrown a lot at it – juice, black tea with sugar, jelly beans – sitting there watching my CGM trace stay in the red area apart from very occasional and very small rises before dropping back below that comfort line.
The rice did the trick. And then some. I watched the spike as the evil rice did its thing and sent me into the mid-teens. Thanks rice; thanks you very much. (I know, I know…we’re not supposed to think of food as good and bad, but rice is the freaking devil.)
I then watched the spike change direction and start to plummet. I’d done everything ‘right’… dosed at the right time, calculated the carbs, delivered the correct amount of insulin… Rice is my food nemesis. I’ve tried everything and just can’t get it to work which is why I rarely, if ever, eat it. But I was getting nervous at the non-budging CGM lows and knew that rice was a sure-fire way of getting me out of low-zone.

Rice: evil little grains of misery.
Everything fell back into place by the afternoon and then that night, dinner consisted of a low carb meal. The roasted cauliflower, warm salad of broccoli and green beans, avocado and cucumber salad with pepitas, and roast beef barely caused a blip on my CGM graph for the rest of the evening. The tiny bolus that accompanied the meal did its trick and the line stayed in-range and mostly flat. The dark chocolate and cup of tea I had before bed had no effect either.
Before I started using CGM, I had no idea just how different foods truly impacted my glucose levels. Carb counting can be pretty hit-and-miss, but I wasn’t too horrid at it – at least for most of the time.
Doing the recommended four or five checks a day hid most of the truth about what was going on for most of the time. Sure, my glucose levels may have been not too horrid when I checked before meals or before bed, but in between those random checks, there was A LOT happening to which I was completely oblivious.
CGM doesn’t necessarily need to translate to being more limited (or more boring) about food choices. But it does arm us with a lot of information about how our glucose levels react to certain things, which means that we can make more-informed choices about what we eat, and how we eat it.
Using CGM means that I can be much smarter about timings of boluses (and the types of bolus), and even the times I choose to eat different things. I know I am more insulin resistant in the mornings, so it’s a lot more difficult to manage with high carb foods at that time of day. I learnt that delaying my morning milky-sugar-added coffee by just half an hour results in less of a spike.
Of course, we need to remember that food is not the only factor that impacts our glucose levels. CGM has offered great insight into hormonal changes, effects of stress and different meds and eating a certain way cannot guarantee a flat CGM trace.
For the record, THIS is one of the main reasons I use CGM. I get a little tired of the constant focus there is on the technology ‘saving lives’. Do I honestly believe that my CGM has saved my life? Sure, it makes me feel safer – especially when travelling on my own – but for me, the real reason I use it, and its real benefit, is to be armed with information about how to best deal with diabetes.
DISCLOSURE
I probably just should mention that I generally self-fund all my own CGM costs. This includes the $540 I just spent on a new transmitter! When I’ve been given product while participating in trials, or in exchange for speaking gigs, I’ve always disclosed on this blog.
I also have some very generous friends in the US who have most kindly given me sensors when they’ve had spares. They are wonderful, wonderful people and I am so grateful for their generosity!
10 comments
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April 21, 2017 at 3:50 pm
Ashley
“Evil little grains of misery” haha! Best description for rice.
Do you find that different types of rice affect your sugars differently? I can’t handle proper sushi rice and risotto will be the death of me but small portions of basmati seems doable for me.
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April 21, 2017 at 4:14 pm
RenzaS
I love rice and have tried ALL kinds and it makes little difference. (Even basmati which a dietitian promised me would be fine. It wasn’t…)
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April 23, 2017 at 12:09 am
Blood Sugar Trampoline
I found a brown basmati rice that seems to have a low impact on my glucose levels. And I also prefer the taste of it. CGM’s are my godsend ☺️
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April 21, 2017 at 5:08 pm
mumoftype1
Thanks for writing this. I have forwarded it to my son as I really think you explain well what the advantages of a CGM are. At the moment, when teens are expected to make a decision about why they should (or shouldn’t ) choose a CGM, I’m find it really hard to source info written in a way that makes sense to a young person trying to make this big decision.
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April 21, 2017 at 10:57 pm
RenzaS
Thank you for your lovely comment. Deciding to have a medical device strapped to your body is a really big decision, and I imagine even bigger for a teen…
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April 21, 2017 at 10:18 pm
Ming
Another great piece. Whilst CGM is often used by HCPs to look at changes in BGLs, it really helps the user learn how their body responds to food. Everyone is different. I wish it was less costly. This can also be useful in people with T2DM. Thinking more widely, it may also educate people that do not have diabetes!
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April 21, 2017 at 10:58 pm
RenzaS
Thanks for reading and for your comment. I am constantly surprised at how different things affect my glucose levels. CGM provides such great insight. I wish it was less costly too – especially after just forking over for a new transmitter. Ouch!!
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April 23, 2017 at 11:27 am
Rick Phillips
I now dream about eating rice. I dream or brown and white rice. The best part of the story? I don’t even like rice. Rather I did not like it before I could no longer have it, without destroying my blood sugar.
Of course, before I had the CGM, who knew, or cared for that matter. Now, my blood sugar rises if I even see rice. Oh, and in case your wondering? Yes, I do have a little 1/4 cup of white lime rice about once a week. It is the little sacrifice I make for greater scientific investigation about this devil carbohydrate.
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April 24, 2017 at 11:48 pm
Annabelle Leve
Interesting reading this from my South East Asian context (Laos). Of course rice is a staple here, and I don’t seem to suffer any ill-effects from eating it. Since being here (7 months now) in fact my insulin requirements have plummeted and insulin resistance changed enormously (for the better). I don’t have access to CGM and maybe I’m a little pleased about that, although I take your point about understanding better how food impacts, and testing before meals and bed doesn’t give the whole story.
I recently spoke to a local doctor and asked him about treatment for children (in Thailand). He couldn’t believe when I told him I test up to 5 times a day, in fact he said that was wrong and I was not helping myself by doing this! Glucose testing strips are hugely expensive here and I wonder how much that has to do with it? He was very interested in my pump (he’d never seen one before) but seemed pretty blase about the lack of options available for children here.
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May 9, 2017 at 2:14 pm
Jay
Hello,
Yes I agree rice is a demon, a devil in
disguise.
I have found basamati rice ( lower g.i.)
to be good but in smaller amounts.
Try not to eat at dinner, unless exercising
after e.g a long walk around your
neighbour.
The key to good blood sugar control
is lower amount of carbs, regular exercise,
and trying to control work and family
stresses. I know a very difficult task most of
the time.
Also have your ocassional
sweet treat, I did the other night in
Mt Lawley. I found a wonderful gelato
cafe where they make the gelato
at cafe, and use nitrogen to freeze the
icecream. I had caramel gelato with
caramel popcorn and a syringe of caramel
sauce ( really looking after the feelings of the
diabetic community, sugar in a syringe) lol😂
They literally put a small syringe with caramel
sauce into the gelato.
Just had a small serve and coffee, sugar
spiked to 20.0 on the cgm. Oh well, you have to
bloody live life.
Jay Kennedy
Diabetes Type I,
34 years duration, this June 2017
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