Hi, Consu, beautiful.
As far as I am in 26 years of evolution and now I have 38. I had the bad luck that none of my endocrine in all this time (there were 3 since my diagnosis on August 17, 1984) I would talk about carbohydrates, carbohydrates,or what to do before hypoglycemia, or about the exercise with more than 250 mg, or of many other fundamental things that should have taught myself taking into account that I was 11 years old when I "met" this "companion" and that it was going to belifelong.I am surprised that with the "great" age that I had to learn the basics and fundamental of my illness, nobody told me anything in almost 30 years and I, ignorant, did not even know that these factors existed.
I have come to have hemoglobins up to 9 and my endocrine so quiet.I asked me: "How are you?", "Well", "I replied," and she replied: "Of course, diabetes does not hurt."I do not share that statement.Sometimes diabetes hurts a lot.In the soul, basically.
I puncture 5 times a day.Now I have a 6.7 hemoglobin.In a month I lowered it from 6.9 to 6.7.It seems almost miraculous that I have no complications taking into account my lousy or non -existent diabetes education, but no problem - I spend my fingers - for the moment.
Luckily, I told my endocrine of a lifetime one day that I wanted to get pregnant and that my gynecologist needed a report of it in which I said whether or not my diabetes was in "conditions."Milagroooooooooooo!As I have very oscillating levels, a lot of glycemic variability, my endocrine referred me to the hospital for the theme of the bomb.It seemed incredible.
In the Diabetes Diabetes Hospital, nurses and the doctor are m a r a v i l l o s or S. I have discovered that in the fruit there are carbohydrates, :)) Now it makes me funny, but nobody ever told me.
In short, not to extend much: with the education they have given me in the hospital my levels have improved, now I control the hypoglycemia and I am having less, the hemoglobin continues to go down, in January they will already put the bomb and, if everything goesWell, I'll be a mom.
I apologize for having written so much but it is also a good way to relieve the load that weighs many times on us.They overwhelm the punctures, whether insulin or for the glucometer, overwhelms the impotence of the sensation of hypoglycemia, etc.But, well, you have to always try to see something positive no matter how difficult it is.
Anyway, Consu and everyone who reads me, thanks for sharing your words, always.
Kisses.