There have been a number of times here on this blog and in other online platforms that I have been critical about the low carb community. Actually, let me be more specific. I have been critical of the response from certain corners of that community, particularly the corners that are free with their fat shaming, and accusing people with diabetes who choose not to eat low carb as not caring about their health, and attacking others for daring to suggest that there could possibly be more than one way to eat. This has come from a long list of incidents I’ve either seen or have been involved in, such as the time I was fat shamed for saying that intermittent fasting is great for some, but not for everyone, and the time that people in the LC community got angry at the idea of saving the lives of children with diabetes from developing countries.
I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised really at what happened earlier this week just before I published a post on diabetes and menopause. As I often do, I look to the community for others’ experiences. And so, I tweeted (and shared on Facebook) this:
The responses were many and great. One aspect of the generosity of the DOC is the willingness and openness to share not only experiences, but to offer tips and tricks for what has worked for them. I’ve always found that so amazing, especially when addressing issues that are considered a little taboo. Menopause is one of those issues. But even so, there were so many replies from people who have either gone through menopause, or started to think about it.
And then, out of the blue, came a reply from a nutritionist. A nutritionist I have never encountered before. I don’t follow him on Twitter, I have no idea who he is. Which is all fine. My Twitter is public and if I ask a question everyone is free to offer their input. Here is his reply:
I replied that I am not a healthcare professional. And then came this:
Followed by this from me:
(I’m not going to share anymore of the tweets in what turned out to be a rather long back and forward thread, but if you click on any of the tweets above you will be able to find the whole mess.)
He kept going, demanding to know why I am critical of low carb diets and health professionals who promote them (which he apparently had deduced from reading through my Twitter feed). I’m not. Which is what I repeatedly tweeted to him in responses to his continued demands that I explain my stance on diets and diabetes, and, as a healthcare professional, I must stop giving ‘personality-driven healthcare advice’. I reminded him that, a) I am not a HCP (which I had already stated), and, b) I share my experiences, not give advice. He helpfully suggested that my blog posts read that way.
I had asked about menopause. I asked people with diabetes who had either been through menopause, were going through it now, or thinking about going through it. I asked whether it had been a topic of conversation with their HCPs.
This bloke – who doesn’t have diabetes and has never experienced menopause – had nothing to offer, other than attacking me for my choices. And my choice is that I believe in choice.
It’s not okay for a healthcare professional to enter into a discussion with a person with diabetes seeking peer support, and telling them what it is that they do and don’t do in that community. I am so over this sort of paternalism in healthcare. I’m over HCPs bullying their way into our community and trying to shape it into what they want.
I’d also add that a man hijacking a conversation started by a woman about menopause is pretty shitty behaviour. I’m also over misogyny and the way male healthcare professionals centre themselves in discussions that are not about them. It happens all the time. It happened on Monday.
A tweet about menopause. And not even about food and menopause! It sounds somewhat ridiculous really. I don’t look for this sort of reaction, and I certainly have never baited anyone from the LC community. I don’t post photos of high carb meals accompanied by a ‘dare you to say something’ comment. (But I should say, that even if people are doing that, there is still no valid reason to criticise what another person is eating** or criticise the way they choose to eat.)
I understand that there will always be difficult people in any community. Unfortunately, it is people like this who are often the most seen from the LC community. And it’s why I am critical. But be clear – I am not critical for the advice they are giving, or the eating plan they are following. I am critical of, and will continue to call out, this sort of behaviour.
**Okay, I know that I said that there is no valid reason to criticise what another person is eating. But I am adding a caveat to that because I do (and probably will continue to) criticise anyone who wants to drink flavoured coffee. Or instant coffee. Or coffee from a bag. I fully acknowledge and accept my status as a Melbourne coffee snob and will not be entering into any discussions that caramel, pumpkin spice or unicorn flavourings are okay. They are not. Don’t @ me.
3 comments
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May 21, 2021 at 5:13 pm
Catherine Forbes
So glad I read right to the end. That section in italics is GOLD (and NOT Nescafe GOLD – ick)
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May 22, 2021 at 10:41 am
Rick Phillips
Well I am delighted I spoke my truth – my life got better post menopause. It is true, my life got better, I am only saying that a life partner of a person who experienced it, my life got better Oh an for the record, it was not bad before.
As for low carb? I do not eat low carb. But i do not beat people up who do. So I figure we need a truce. I will not speak against low carbers, lets not criticize me for not being a low carber.
In other words, you won. But so did I.
Win, Win
Woo Who !!!
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May 23, 2021 at 3:07 am
Colleen Goos
Wow, someone certainly felt threatened by you. Obviously you posted something about which as a man without menopause on the horizon or diabetes could only understand vicariously, if at all. Clearly he doesn’t. He wanted your attention for some strange reason literally screaming “look at me!! I’m a d*ck!”.
It’s nobody else’s business how I choose to eat, or rather not eat. I am not part of the LC community, but by nature my body doesn’t need much and I’ve been this way since I was born basically. It’s not my business how anyone else eats either. To each her own.
I tend to shy away from food discussions mainly because it’s tied up to very early childhood sexual abuse trauma prior to T1D onset. I have certain foods that I won’t eat because of it and people do not understand that I see forced food, or even making a big deal about what I like or don’t like, as a form of rape. No food was not used in the assaults, but somehow it got tied up in my head. I refused to force my child to eat food she didn’t like, sure I had her try it out, but if she said she didn’t like it I found something else for her. As I’ve gotten closer to that menopause stage, the food issues seem to be even more pronounced, much like it was as I reached my first period and through my teens. I am lucky I have a good endo and nutritionist who are very much like you in terms of dietary choices.
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