It really does.
I’ve been diabetic — officially diagosed — over 4 years now. I’ve done it a bunch of different ways.
When I was first diagnosed I was on oral meds. It drove me nuts. Nothing I did really affected my blood sugar. And I couldn’t get my blood sugar down fast enough to suit me. You have to know that I went from almost normal blood sugars, to really screwed up blood sugars in the space of literally hours (for those who are new to me and the blog, I was pre-diabetes for years, but didn’t get diagnosed until I “flunked” a glucose tolerance test. I suspect that I had been doing a pretty fair job at controlling things through diet and exercise, up until the test.
I switched to MDI pretty quickly and tried that route for almost a year, but kept gaining weight. I also had a problem with rollar coasting blood sugars.
My life has really changed for the better because of the pump. It allows a lot of flexibility — and I don’t even utilize everything that makes it good. For example, ever since the recall, I have not been using the Food list, and I should. Lately I’ve been slowly working on customizing mine.
I also don’t use the temporary basal enough. I’m trying to use it more though.
I really think that more Type 2’s should consider pumping. It really DOES make a difference.
However, diabetes still sucks.
I’ve gone low with no explaination, I’ve gone high with no explaination. The only way to deal with it, is test often, and fix whatever goes wrong when it goes wrong.
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