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Goodbye 2009, HELLO 2010

So, 2009 will officially come to an end at 12:01 am Friday morning, and I for one, am happy to say goodbye.

Not that 2009 hasn’t been a little slice of heaven, because parts absolutely have been.

And some parts have definitely resembled Dante’s 7 layers of hell.

I don’t want to take this time to look back, because right now I’m really concentrating on looking (and moving) forward in my life.

Bottom line: I’m ready to welcome 2010 with open arms.

My wishes for 2010 are simple and matter of fact.

I want 2010 to be filled with good health, positive vibes, much love, happiness, laughter and success for myself and everyone I love, and that includes you dear Diabetesaliciousness reader.

I love you all VERY much and couldn’t have made it through this year without you!

My New Years Resolutions are not incredibly outlandish and I think they are doable.

I will remain healthy

I will do everything in life better with 1 good eye then I ever did with 2

I will get my A1C down to 6.5

I will find a job in the diabetes arena where I can help others own their diabetes

I will take Diabetesaliciousness to the next level- even though I have no ideal what the next level is or means, or how to get there

I will take Archery lessons and become a kick-ass Diazon with a bow & arrow

I will find someone who loves an accepts me for me and vice versa - and have fun in the process

2010 will be fiscally better than 2009

I will continue to learn, grow and become.

I hope your New Year's is fantastical in every way, and I hope that 2010 brings all your dreams to reality!

Ringing in 2011

Ringing in 2011
Tonight we ring in 2011 and all of our hopes and dreams in the process.
I hope that 2011 brings all of you much love; luck, happiness, good health, Blood Sugar Nirvana, bolus worthy foods and more laughter than tears!

Life brings us lots of challenges - diabetes and otherwise, but hope does indeed float and the with the DOC on our side, we can do and survive anything!

My goals for 2011 are simple and challenging all at the same time.
To get my diabetes ass in gear and get my A1c Back between 6.5 & 6.9.

To send my diabetes burnout packing - Tune in on Monday for more details.

To take my diabetes professional life to the next level. I've booked some more speaking gigs, started consulting, and I'm working on several freelance articles.
My greatest weakness (my broken pancreas) has now become my greatest strength and biggest passion and I want to make my passion my FULL TIME career!

To participate in more D Meet-ups - LOVE THEM!

Find that someone who knocks my socks off!
And finally, I want to continue living my life laughing, being grateful and filled with hope while keeping my snarky skills razor sharp & my Diabetes Bitch Switch in working order!

HAPPY 2011 & I LOVE YOU GUYS SO MUCH!

It's The Last Day of 2007 - BLAH, BLAH, BLAH

So this is the last day of 2007
I'm ready for 2008 and refuse to do the whole year end review.

Instead, I want to look to the New Year and continue with all the positives in my life.

In 2008

I will continue to work hard

I will continue to work on my Diabetic Comedy, spreading diabetes validation through education and laughter

I will continue to take care of my health

I will continue to educate myself and learn from my mistakes

I will continue to be a good friend and never take for granted my good friends

I will continue to laugh from my belly until my whole body shakes, no matter how silly my niece and nephew think it looks

I will continue to gravitate towards the positive people and things in my life and cut ties with those forces that are negative

I will continue to be thankful for all that is good in my life because there's a hell of a lot to be thankful for.

Bumping Pumps- It Ain't Nothing But A D-Thing

Bumping Pumps- It Ain't Nothing But A D-Thing

So I stopped by my sisters house a few weeks ago and had dinner with her family- which was fabulous and entertaining, as always.

Anyway, my 17-year-old nephew Anton (Longboard Skateboard officiando & man about town) had his friend Nick over for dinner. Nick is slightly older, also a longboard Skateboard officiando/man about town, and a type 1 PWD.

We chatted about skateboarding and the likes there of, dined on a fantastic Jewish Apple Cake (it was like a foot thick and SUPER DELICIOUS) courtesy of the Kibitz Room, and discussed our hopes for 2010.

Then Nick noticed my pump and said: I see you have an insulin pump. Cool, I have one to!

He removed his black Animas Ping from his pocket and held it up in the air for me to see.

Then I unclipped my Minimed 512 from my belt and held it up in the air.

And there we sat, our pumps hanging midair, discussing the Ping’s options (I’m seriously considering a Ping and had lots of questions) and Nick told me how much he liked his Ping. “It actually talks to my glucometer,” said Nick all proud and happy.

Then instantaneously, we each reached out (over the table and the plate of SUPER DELICIOUS Jewish Apple cake) with our insulin pumps and bumped pumps in mid air.

Anton chimed in without missing a beat: OK, I feel like I’ve just witnessed the secret handshake to a Dungeons and Dragons Diabetes meeting! You guys are total geeks.

Me: Anton, it's ain't nothing but a D-thing - pure and simple.

And it absolutely was.

SIGN, SIGNS,...EVERYWHERE A SIGN

SIGN, SIGNS,...EVERYWHERE A SIGN
Cool stuff a head in 2008!

Virtua Hospital in South Jersey offers Diabetic Teens a Support Group...And So Much More

Virtua Hospital in South Jersey offers Diabetic Teens a Support Group...And So Much More
A few months ago, I had the honor of speaking to a group of diabetic teens at Virtua Hospital in Voorhees New Jersey and boy, was I impressed!

It all started last April, when Robin Stout, an RN & CDE from Virtua Hospital called my cell. She’d heard about me from Cheryl Marco, a CDE over at Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia.

Robin wanted to know if I'd be interested in speaking to her teens about my life with the Big D, and crack a few jokes in the process. She’d read my blog and wanted to know if:

A) I’d be interested in speaking to her kids
B) Could I keep it clean?

I said yes to both and put the October date in my Calendar.

Cut to this past October, work was crazy, DRI was looming, and a standing date with Virtua was on the books in big red letters.

Robin is an amazing person. She’s not only managed to provide the teens in Burlington, Camden, and Glouster counties with a Diabetes Support Group, but she’s also managed to create a social network in which the kids can talk about everything that’s on their minds and learn about diabetes in the process.

The groups meets @ the Virtua Hospital campus in Voorhees every six weeks during the school year. The students are bused in from their schools and are provided breakfast, interesting speakers, nifty raffles, and a safe place to vent!

The breakfast was tasty breakfast burritos with the carb count clearly stated – I didn’t have any until after the fact because I knew that my blood sugar gets a bit crazy whenever I get on stage.

The group consisted of 20 teens and I was a little nervous. Robin introduced me to the group; I took a deep breath and did my spiel. I talked about owning diabetes and pointed out the positives that diabetes has given me. I mentioned the funny things like tubing and doorknobs and people thinking I was a Rocket Scientist because I could operate the buttons on my pump sans the Operators Manual.

But my main goal was to get the kids to dialogue about diabetes…and dialogue about diabetes they did! Before I knew it, the group was talking about EVERYTHING.

We talked about the way diabetes is handled today, verses the way it was handled previously. They found it so hard to believe that back in the good old days of urine testing, EVERYTHING was off limits. Today, as long as you take your blood sugars and count carbs, the world is our schmorgasboard!

I introduced “The Diabetes Police” concept to them - they had encountered them, but have never heard the the term. The students shared their own encounters with the D Police, and we agreed that they were a global force to be reckoned with. As a group, it was unanimous; the D Police had many miss conceptions regarding the disease - Some made us laugh, and others made us very angry. But by talking about the D-polices actions as a group, it was much easier to see the funny!

When I asked the kids to give me some diabetes positives, one of the kids said something that blew me away. He raised his hand and said, "When I graduate college and find the job that I want, I’m going to tell the person who interviews me that I’m not just smart on paper. I’m also extremely responsible because I’ve been dealing with my diabetes since I was seven, and they wouldn’t have to worry about me being irresponsible.”

I WAS FLOORED at his response – and I told him so. Let's be honest, when most of us were coming up, we were told NEVER to tell a prospective employer about our diabetes – no matter what.

Today, kids are using their diabetes to get jobs – “HALLALLUAH – TIMES ARE A CHANGING!”


Things are so different from when I was teen – ON SO MANY LEVELS,
but especially regarding diabetes.

In grade school – there was one other diabetic kid in my town.
I remember hanging out with him, his brother and this girl Marie – I was probably in the fourth grade. All of us had our faces pressed up against the window of this mecca of sugar in our town called “The Chocolate Shoppe.” All of us watched as the Choclatiers made the caramels. “Diabetic Dude” and I walked away with our heads down low– we just couldn’t stand looking anymore.

In High School, there were three of us with the “beets” among the 1100 who attended my alma mater.
We were in different grades and I never had classes with the other two.
We each knew the others existed, and we nodded to one another in the halls, but we really never spoke about the Big D in any great detail. Why bring it up? High School sucked enough without pointing out the obvious. We were different, and not like a John Hughes film type of different. Yes, we’d continue to march to our own drum, but we wouldn’t necessarily like it. And acceptance would take years.

The one support group I attended was with my parents was held at the local IHOP.
Once I saw the pancake buffet and peaches drenched in syrupy sweetness – I grabbed a fork and started to eat. However, my father grabbed my hand and yanked me out of there. He felt waxing poetic about diabetes while over-dosing on pancakes was probably not the way to get a grip on things.

But enough about my walk down Memory Lane. The kids at Virtua I met that day in late October were smart, funny, articulate, and they knew all about the latest and greatest in diabetes accoutrement.

Collectively, they had over 100 years of diabetes experience among them and nearly two-thirds of them were on, or were about to go on the pump. They shared freely and it was obvious that they had a great individual and group relationship with Robin.

We continued talking until the school busses started to arrive, and then we talked some more.

Robin told me after that she’d seen the kids so chatty – which of course made me feel like I’d done OK.

I left feeling happy. Happy that the students liked me and laughed in all the right places, happy that such a group existed for teens, and happy attitudes regarding diabetes among diabetic teens has changed for the better.

If you know a New Jersey diabetic teen in the Camden, Glouster, or Burlington County areas, tell them about the “Teens with Diabetes Support Group Meetings” at Virtua, and be sure to give them the following info.

Teens with Diabetes Support Group
Virtua Hospital
Barry D. Brown Health Education Center
106 Carnie Boulevard
Voorhees, NJ 08403

Facilitator: Robin Stout, RN, CDE
856.325.3521

Or call: 1888-847-8823

The next meeting is scheduled 1/28/08
Additional meetings will be held on
3/18/2009
4/22/2009

Diabetesalicious Recap: I Tried To Keep It Short & Sweet - And I Failed!

Diabetesalicious Recap: I Tried To Keep It Short & Sweet - And I Failed!

So, now that 2010 is all but over and everyone is all about recapping and the likes there of, I figured I’d link to some of Diabetesalicousness posts/terms that were well received - or not.

I couldn’t stick to the top 10, no matter how hard I tried - I've never been very good at editing and my apologies in advance.

So here are more than 12, but less than 19 links that you might remember – or not!

12/7/10: Go Ahead, Flip Your Diabetes Bitch/Wit Switch - This was so well received that Joanne over at Death Of A Pancreas actually used it as the basis of her diabetes animation.

11/10/10: The Onion BLOWS! Not only does The Onion blow chucks, but they totally missed their golden chance to make things right with the Diabetes Community- both on-line and off!

11/5/10: Pitching MythBusters & The DISCOVERY Channel an episode on diabetes myth busting!!

10/28/10: There But For The Grace Of Diabetes Go I - Bottom line, we all need a helping hand!

9/29/10: Scared, Cynical, And The Diabetes Holy Grail - Don’t pitch me your latest book and honestly, I don't care that your married to a doctor - that's not important to me. If your going to tweet the term cure around in the same sentence as your book and NOT expect me to call you on it, guess again. Because I take the term Diabetes Cure to heart - as does every, single person living with diabetes (or who has a loved one with diabetes) and I don't like it when people the term diabetes cure lightly. I actually find it incredibly hurtful and offensive~

9/21/10: Diabetes Moments of WTF – Daily occurrences in our Diabetes Life~

8/10: Symlin Sticker Shock It takes a lot of money to be a PWD & Insurance Companies Love $$!

8/9/10: Conversations With A PowerPuff GirlKids ALWAYS amaze me!

8/5/10: HFCS, We're Not Confused, YOU ARE! – And I think HFCS is full of shit!

7/8/10: Life Lessons Courtesy of Diabetes Tee Shirts & Bumper Stickers available shortly! ;)

6/14/10: Diabetes Bible Cure MY ASS!

5/18/10: Your chance to tell Diabetes Healthcare Professionals what you want from them!

4/22/10: Shout Out To The Lurkers!

3//10: Meters Are Our GPS System

2/18/10: If Diabetes Was An Olympic Sport - We’d All Get The Gold

2/5/10: Dear Oprah & Dr. Oz – Your Diabetes Show Was A MAJOR FAIL!

1/25/10: Grown Up CWDs And Today’s Parents Of CWDs, What About CWDs participating in their disease?

1/19/10: Dear Drs. Banting & Best I LOVE YOU