I’ve written about the fine line between making people
understand how complex and difficult living with diabetes is, while not letting
them pity me or feel sorry for me. It is a never ending tightrope. I want to
believe that I can do anything, in spite of diabetes. I DO believe that 99.999%
of the time. Sure, there are pesky little things like being a pilot or being in
the military, but I’ve done so many things in my life when diabetes wasn’t a
huge in the “can I or can’t I,” just in the planning of the “I can.”
I’ve had diabetes for 28 years. Many years of living with a
disease that factors into every part of my life. But I rarely let it get me
down. In fact, I HATE when diabetes slows me down. And it does sometimes. As
much as I don’t want to admit it. I will work through d relate sickness, and
headaches, and low blood sugars and high blood sugars. I never bat an eye. Or
if I do, the normal observer would never notice it as such.
The last time I had a time when I had to stop doing
something (form more than a slight pause) or call in sick to work was almost
ten years ago…until last week. In the past 5 months, my life has been turned on
end. Instead of downloading blood sugars and adjusting basal rates for all the
MAJOR changes in my life, I’ve been chasing problems. Fixing lows and highs as
they come. Not the smartest thing to do, but for a while it was…. Working?
Okay, not really working, but I was going okay.
Last week I was fighting yet ANOTHER low blood sugar. I had
a friend over for dinner. I ate, and went low AGAIN. So, instead of testing and
treating and testing again, I just ate. And drank. And ate some more. Needless
to say, by the time bedtime rolled around, I was in the high 200s. I bloused,
plus a little to treat said high. Less than two hours later, I was up again and
I was in the high 300s. I bloused again. By 1:00 in the morning, I was nearly
500. I pulled by infusion site and started over. I tested for ketones (there
were none, thank GOODNESS!). I was up again at 3:30 and had a “rant” on face
book as I was still in the high 400s. I bloused again and went BACK to sleep.
I woke up the next morning sick. I still had no ketones. But
my blood sugar was in the mid-200s. I had the pounding headache and I felt like
someone had taken sandpaper to the back of my throat. And then I did something
I haven’t done in nearly a decade. I called in sick to work. I was already
scheduled to take half a day off as I had an early afternoon appointment with
my endo (ironic, huh??), but the fact that I had to call in sick to work for
something related to diabetes made me angry.
By that afternoon, I was nearly totally recovered. I was
blessed to have an appointment that afternoon. After months of craziness, I
talked with my nurse practitioner (who I see when I don’t see my endo) about
all the changes in my life and about my blood sugars and about the adjustments
that I needed to make to (hopefully) get me back on the right road. We talked
about my lower a1C and about how I hated how I got there (roller-coaster blood
sugars).
I walked out of the office feeling better physically and
mentally. But I was still so angry. And hurt. And upset. And disappointed.
Because I felt (feel?) that calling in sick because of diabetes meant (means?)
that diabetes won. Somewhere in my conscious mind, I know better. But I can’t
help the way I feel. I feel like I let diabetes won. Maybe just for that
morning. But it won. And I hate that more than I hate anything. I hate it more
than the shots, and infusion sites, and finger pricks, and the lows and the
highs. I hate it more than I hate feeling bad because of diabetes. I hate that
diabetes stopped me, even for a little while.
(Totally related note: Anyone who says diabetes affects only
your blood sugar, hasn’t dealt with the mental effects of living with a chronic
illness.)
4 comments:
Sending you a huge hug through the computer!
Xoxo
It so does! The worry, and the mental exhaustion on top of normal sickness and D sucks!!
Sorry you were sick. Blame the diabetes, not yourself. I know, it's a cliche... but in this case, it's true.
Thank you for that post! I've been type one for 16 years now. I don't pump but I use pens and frequent testing (10X daily). I've ended up in the ER only twice, both for misdoses involving the same kind of roller-coaster you described. It sucks, yes. But I'm thankful that I haven't any side effects whatever. Because of my age, now 76), my doc wants me to keep my A1C higher than 6.1. I don't agree that this is a good idea, although I understand his rationale, because I'm healthy otherwise and expect to live another 10 years, at least. I hate the way diabetes has ruled my life. I so wish I didn't have it. But there you are. Sigh.
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