Every day of our life we live with diabetes, with the ups and downs of sugar, with the bittersweet smell of insulin, that smell so characteristic and that you will never forget, we live with the punctures of the needles, those punctures that sometimes hurt a barbarity(especially in the soul).And every day of our life we make sure that diabetes will not stop us to achieve the things we want to achieve.
But there are days, there are days that diabetes burns us ... those days when living with diabetes fucks us a barbarity.
I personally, I am tired.Yes, I'm very tired, I want my life to be normal again, normal?But now that I think ... the doctor told my parents that it would have a normal life!Although I don't know very well what he calls normal.To the dizziness, to the blurred vision equivalent to a hypoglycemia, or to the infinite thirst, tiredness, headache equivalent to hyperglycemia.It may be normal to count all carbohydrates, click insulin (eye !! Watch do not click on public that there are people who can feel offended to click on them, nor that it was drugs!) Ojú!What normal life has touched us.
Ah!I already know, the normal ones are the bruises those that come out in our arms, the abdomen and some in the legs.Sometimes we click and inmedy we catch a vein and ready!We already have a Moraton.
As diabetes burns a few days, especially when we chain a hypo and sudden>, when we see our parents suffer due to diabetes (oh, what I would give for not seeing them suffer for diabetes).
As diabetes burns the days we live in the hell of diabetes, which I would give for not having diabetes, for healing.For healing you all.
We better open a window to run the air a little and between the light.To be able to re-find our eyes and see ourselves, ourselves being a little better = D&G
The truth is that diabetes never got worse, but quite the opposite, it has offered us an opportunity for change, teaching, to feel grateful for everything we have either health, education, insulin ... I hope everyone could accessTo insulin freely, hopefully it was a right for all and not a privilege.
He has taught us to live with diabetes is a real challenge and that is because we have to think about doing certain things that others never care.
We grind a lot!