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I Just Can't Seem To Get It Right Today......And I'm blaming Scotty J

I Just Can't Seem To Get It Right Today......And I'm blaming Scotty J
I just can't seem to get it right today, Blood Sugar Nirvana was just not happening.

For the record, I blame Scott Johnson for my high blood sugar. Why? Because very soon after I read his High Blood Sugar post, my own went off the charts. Coincidence or fact? YOU BE THE JUDGE.

Thanks Scotty, I owe you one.

Seriously though, I woke up low, like really low, like 42. My lips were numb and my limbs felt strangely detached from my body. I hate when this happens and really try and avoid the lows ALL COSTS.
Not only do I feel as if I've lost all control, but my life depends on getting said numbers back to normal.
I drank my juice and downed a bowl of the forbidden fruit - Special K cereal with strawberries. I even had a spoonful (or two) of peanut butter with honey and a swig of soy milk.

Over treating of course led to a mid day high.

I didn't eat lunch because at 292, lunch was just not an option and my head hurt something fierce. Ah...The joys of the blood sugar high and the headache and sluggishness off the chart numbers bring. Still, I had to plow through projects and focus on work.

I pushed through the day and drank some tea.
The stubborn B.S. lingered around 210 all afternoon, which caused my anxiety rise,
big time.

I changed my infusion set once, and increased my basal rate, TWICE.

I drank four 16 oz bottles of water and peed like a race horse.

Ketones were negative, so....I had that going for me.

At 4:25, I was 179 and at dinner I was 103.
Things looked and felt like everything was back to normal, FINALLY.

I must admit, dinner was pretty damn delicious. Partly due to my fabulous culinary skills that created a magnificent broccoli and Cheddar quiche, and party due to my non existent lunch, I was famished!

Current blood sugar 1.5 hours after my meal, 160.

Finally, all is right with my world.

Shit happens, and so does diabetes. Sometimes highs occur and the more we worry, the higher our blood sugar goes.
Sometimes there's a reason, and sometimes there isn't. Regardless of the cause, we have to monitor it and wait for our numbers to drop. The world doesn't stop just because our blood sugars decide to mess with our day. Clocks continue ticking, work needs to be finished, and deadlines must be met.

We have to regain control over our diabetes, no matter how long it takes.

Diabetes teaches us patience, whether we want to learn it or not.

Embrace The Daffodils

Daffy-down-dilly came up in the cold,
Through the brown mould
Although the March breeze blew keen on her face,
Although the white snow lay in many a place.
Anne Bartlett Warner- Daffy-Down -Dilly

in time of daffodils (who know the goal of living is to grow)
forgetting why,remember how.
e.e. cummings In time of Daffodils~


Daffodils make me happy for a multitude of reasons.

They’re sunny and bright, strong and sturdy, and to be honest, every single time I see daffodils, I smile and feel all types of glad.

Daffodils give me hope, they always have- since I was a little girl. During the horrific winter that was 2010, I felt hope when I saw daffodils starting to peak out through the snow. These gorgeous flowers that seem so delicate, are deceptively strong and incredibly resilient.

They refuse to shrink back when times get tough. They make their tenacity known regardless of the elements and remind us on the dankest of days that spring is just around the corner.

Daffodils don’t disappoint- that return every single season. Some seasons are more successful than others- just like life. Some years the bulbs flower like crazy, while other years there are more stalks than actual flowers (due to the fact that the bulbs are getting crowded & need to regroup, just like us) but they always return.

I think that PWDs (people with diabetes) are like daffodils.

Some folks think that we are delicate, but we are deceptively strong.

We have a tough interior and an amazingly beautiful exterior.


And like daffodils, PWDs make me smile….and give me hope.

So I say, embrace the daffodil ~

Homeopathy in Northern Ireland

Homeopathy in Northern Ireland
There was a health project undertaken in Northern Ireland during 2007 and 2008 that allowed GPs to refer patients for a range of CAM treatments, including homeopathy. It was an unmitigated success!

* there was a reduction in expenditure on drugs
62% reported suffering less pain, and 55% reported taking less painkillers. Patients using medication reduced from 75% to 61% after treatment.
* there was an alleviation of GP and hospital workload
50% of GPs said the scheme had reduced their workload, and used secondary care services less; and 17% reported a financial saving for their practice.
* there were savings accruing from reduced sickness absence

Those patients receiving homeopathic treatment reported an average 54% improvement in their health and wellbeing - more than any other CAM therapy used in the project. Referring GPs confirmed these figures.

The project demonstrated that patients liked it, that doctors liked it, and with a significant reduction in expenditure, the Department of Health should have liked it too. Indeed, so positive were the outcomes, the project could have been extended in both time, and in coverage. The fact that it was not demonstrates the controlling power of the Big Pharma companies, and the monopolistic arrangements within the NHS-ConMed Establishment.

Indeed, the whole episode demonstrates that health provision is dominated by corporate profit rather patient health. And this is why it is so difficult for people to get access to homeopathy on the NHS.

For the full report on this project, see http://www.dhsspsni.gov.uk/final_report_from_smr_on_the_cam_pilot_project_-_may_2008.pdf

Breast milk bad, vaccines good!

Breast milk bad, vaccines good!
How little do medical experts really know about health! I had to look at the date of this article to see whether it an April Fool's joke? It isn't!

There is a new piece of 'scientific' research that has been published, entitled 'Inhibitory Effect of Breast Milk on Infectivity of Live Rotavirus Vaccines'. It advises nursing mothers to delay breast-feeding until after vaccinations - because breastfeeding lowers the efficiency of vaccines!

As the website, Vaccine Truth says - "Just when we thought the world could not get any more insane. It does!"
http://vactruth.com/2011/04/05/experts-recommend-delaying-breastfeeding-until-vaccinations-have-taken-effect/

This is not a paper written by cranks. The long list of 'experts' listed are associated with organisations such as the National Centres for Immunization and Respiratory Disease, The National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, and many others.


Young babies do not have a fully developed immune system, and breast milk from their mother is what protects them until their immune systems develop, and begin to function automatically.


But these 'experts' were concerned about the fact that live oral rotavirus vaccines were not effective. So who was to blame? Was it the vaccine that was no damn good? No, of course not. It is mum's who are to blame. They are stopping these nice vaccines working!


There is only one good thing about this piece of 'science'. It shows the absurdity of conventional medical science, and its subservience to the needs and interests of the big Pharmaceutical Companies. It shows that nothing good has come, is coming, or will ever come from mainstream medicine.


Safe and effective medicine can only come from alternative medical therapies, such as homeopathy; holistic therapies that work with the body, and its natural immunity, and not against it.

New Eye Doctor, New Experience & Play That Funky Music White GIrl.

New Eye Doctor, New Experience & Play That Funky Music White GIrl.

And so the story continues............


Part 1: You Keep Going - Even When You Think You Can't

It’s really hard to be strong sometimes, even when everyone thinks your some hard ass Jersey born girl. Even when being strong for others comes easy to you, it doesn't mean that it's easy for you to be strong for yourself. It’s hard to walk into your Eye Specialist’s office after experiencing a 1 in a million thing that was NOT diabetes related and get all types of tests done to prove that yes, it really was a 1 in a million fact.

It’s hard accepting all that 1 in a million means. But you do it anyway because your survival mode kicks into high gear and you know yourself well enough to realize that if you don't accept it almost immediately after it happens, you never will. And you tell yourself, fuck having to drag an anchor like that around your neck for the rest of your life!

And there was no way in hell that you are going to live your life filled with anger over something that can never be undone! In this 1 in a million case, anger would not be a great motivator.

So you move forward with gusto, find the funny, and joke about it 9 times out of 10 times with your friends, except when you don’t.

You continue on with your life, with work and you strive to live a better life with your 1 in a million status than you did before, and you're happy that you are.

But then your Dr. dies and that's really hard because you miss him and how safe & blameless he made you feel.

It’s hard having a schmuck named Dr. Dick take his place and it’s hard speaking up for yourself and calling Dr. Dick’s practice & ratting out his shitty behavior.

But it’s gratifying when your eye specialist's office understands your feelings and hook you up with a NEW Dr. A Dr. that I will be referred to for the rest of this story as Dr. S. You're told that Dr. S has as much smarts as Dr. Dick and 100 times the amount of empathy.

But even knowing that your voice had been heard and a new Specialist has been found, it’s still really tough going back to said office for all types of reasons.

To be quite honest, you really dread it. It’s an emotional roller coaster that hits you in your gut. You get anxious, you get nervous & you get scared.

But you still go, even when all you want to do is hide under the covers and make it go away.

Even when you wake up late and rush to your appointment and get pulled over by a cop because you had no idea that you were going 50 in a 25. Of course, you call the Dr’s office hoping that just maybe they’d tell you to reschedule, but they don't.

They are nothing but kind and tell you to take your time driving over and not to get any more tickets on the way.

Your heart pounds when you walk in the door and your was greeted with a smile and a hello.

You pay your outrageous co-pay and are taken back behind door number 1 for the first round of Q & A.

Part 2: And now, for the Question & Answer Part Of Our Show ~

Q&A1: What was your #bg this morning Me: 107

Q&A1: AWESOME. What was your last A1C?

Me: 7 Q&A1: YAY, it went down! Has your vision changed in your right eye since the last time you were here?

Me: Nope

And the questions kept coming...

Q&A1: How bout floaters in your left?

Me: Not much, every once in a while there’s a few, but that’s it.

Q&A1: So, nothing to write home about then. Me: Nope.

Q&A1: GREAT, Ok, let’s take you back then.

But I stop her and thank her for being so kind, and for understanding why I no longer wanted to deal with Dr. Dick, and she got where I was coming from on every level and apologized for his behavior.

Me: It’s just that Dr. Mac was SO GREAT and SO KIND. And it was hard enough dealing with what happened, but I did and I have. But losing him was really tough! Thanks for listening to a patient’s complaint and doing something to make right.And she hugged me, and led me down the hall and past exam rooms, and at the very end of the hallway, was a picture of my late Dr., Dr. Mac

And I just about lost it - But I didn’t. I swallowed the lump in my throat and walked into the exam room.

Where Q&A2 lady started putting me through the vision tests - Nothing had changed in that department.

She made small talk and told me that the pressure in my eyes was great – and I was happy to hear that.

She put in the dilating drops and made more small talk – and then told me I could sit in the hall while my eyes dilated. And once again, I thanked my clinician for being nice and understanding my wants and fears as a patient re: Dr. Dick.

Q&A2: Oh, we all heard about it - And your right, his bedside manner is…lacking.

And then she smiled and left me to sit in the hall while my pupils to get all types of funky.

I stood right back up after she left, took out my iphone, and took a picture of Dr. Mac's portrait .

The patient sitting next to me said something like: Ahhh, you want to prove you were here, huh.

And then I said something along the lines of: No, I want to remember him. And I want to remember how he looked when he smiled because he's not here anymore and I miss him.

And then I sat down,avoided eye contact, tweeted a few tweets and just tried to breathe.

I was called into Dr. S’s office and was told to sit down and wait.

So I did. And continued breathing.

And in walked Dr. S, as nice as pie and as chatty as possible.

The questions he asked made it obvious that he had read my file and the pre patient questions that I had answered a ½ hour earlier.

He looked in my eyes through that ocular thing they have at eye Dr’s offices, except this one had a whitish blue neon circular light that shined right in my eye. I barely felt it in the right, but it damn near blinded my good eye.

Than he did a series of tests with a hand held light and went right into every corner of each of my eyes. He took his time and it lasted about 4 minutes. And then he sat down, wheeled his chair up close, and looked me right in the eyes and said:

OK, Kelly, here’s what I see. Things look pretty good, in fact really good. Your right eye has healed nicely and it looks good.

Your left eye looks good…

Me: Except for those 2 pinholes which cause the slight bleeding.

Dr S: Yes, you do have two slight pinholes – 2 tiny hemorrhages with very slight leakages. BUT there’s absolutely no swelling in the optic nerve, which makes me very happy. If you continue with what you’re doing, I believe your eyes will continue to be healthy for a long time.

ME: SO, your telling me that nothing has changed in my left eye?

Dr. S: No

Me: So on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the worst re: the optic nerve, what am I?

Dr. S: On a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the worst, I’d say you’re a 0.5.

Me: REALLY?

Dr. S: YEP

Me: Yeah, Ok because that’s my good eye- we have to keep on top of it. Dr. S: I agree.

Me: And there’s no swelling or pinholes in my right eye?

Dr S. No, that eye’s just fine.

And at that point I looked at him, threw my hands up in the air and gave him my, “are you fucking kidding me” look & we both started to laugh.

Me: So like, there’s no way I could switch those pinholes to my right eye then? You know, keep all the craptacular confined to the right eye?

Dr. S: No Kell, as of now, I don’t have those super powers.

And that made me smile.

And then I thanked him for being a great doctor, and for taking the time to talk with me and read my file and understand my fears.

Me: Look, your partner Dr. Dick has no bedside manner – and that could really cost patients their good health. Here’s the thing, if a patient refuses to come back because of the way they were treated, it might hurt your practice financially, but nothing your practice could handle.

The real damage is done to your patient. Some won't come back to your office, or any eye specialists office for that matter! And by not coming back, the damage that will be done is permanent – they’re the ones who will get hurt! I’m a Diabetes Advocate, I write about living with diabetes and I’ve spoken to a room full of clinicians on what we as patients go through. You guys need to set some ground rules with your clinicians, including your doctors on how they MUST interact with their patients.

Dr. S whole-heartedly agreed with me – on both Dr. Dick and setting ground rules with the staff on patient interactions.

And then he told me to come back in August and to keep up the good work!

We shook hands and said our goodbyes. I scheduled my appointment and walked towards my car. It was the first time in a long time I hadn't cried as I walked out those doors.

Part Three: Happy + Sad = Embracing Your Inner Lady Gaga

It was weird, I was happy because it had been a much better appointment than my last and I'd received good news, but I still felt sad. And as long as we're being all honest and touchy feely, I think that will always be the case whenever I have an eye appointment – and that’s OK.

Eye appointments will always bring up all sorts of emotions erupting from my very core. Because let's face it, how could they not?

I kept thinking about how Dr. S said that if I continued with what I was doing, and continued to do all the diabetes work I was doing, he believed my eyes would continue to be healthy for a long time. And then I thought about what that would entail on my end and I cursed my one in a million status for just a second..... And then I snapped back into reality when I heard familiar words that I normally love to sing about "shooting stars" on the radio, followed by:

“I could really use a wish right now (wish right now, wish right now)”

That would be the very point when the tears started to pour down my face and I wished out loud for continued good health and a happy life.

And then I switched the station because I didn't want to cry - I was grateful and I wanted to be happy, damn it! Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way” was on another station and I immediately started singing the lyrics as loud as I could.

I WAS BORN TO SURVIVE


NO MATTER BLACK, WHITE OR BEIGE


CHOLA OR ORIENT MADE

I'M ON THE RIGHT TRACK BABY

I WAS BORN TO BE BRAVE

And at that very moment, I believed every single word to be true ~