On Diabetes, Elite: Dangerous, and Getting Good

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Blows my mind how far we've come. Every doctor, nurse, and medical professional has just been so laid back about it.

Oh, you got this. It'll be hard, but it's hardly the end of the world like it use to be!

LOL. How can they tell, when they can't even go below 70 mg/dL (that's what we use here, not mmol). We both can, but it's not fun. Not even my wife can really grasp how it feels waking up at below 50 at 3 am. It changes your entire life, whatever they may say, and they said similar things to me back then. But it's still your life. It's very much not as bad as your initial assumptions while not as perfect as they tell you. It's different. But hell, life is such a gift!

O7,
🙃
 
Hi. Can you reverse Type 2 diabetes ? I have someone close who was diagnosed with Type 2. Diet and exercise are very important. Especially diet. I love your spirit Phisto and wish you the best in the future. Incidentally, I was hospitalised years ago and it was the darkest time of my life but somehow I got through it and had some great times since. Elite Dangerous really helps me too. Fly safe.

You absolutely can. But it takes patience and effort - a lot of effort, but is doable. Stay healthy,
 
I have Type 2 and I control it solely through diet. While some say it is curable it's not really as it technically isn't a disease but a condition.
If I do the test now I don't get flagged as having it but if I lapse with my diet it will come back in the indicators.

As a condition I'll have it for the rest of my life but I can manage it so that it doesn't affect me negatively with a bit of vigilance.

OP sorry to hear of your diagnosis mate but like you say you'll get a handle on this thing and still live life!
 
Hi there!

Your friendly neighborhood Phisto here with another collection of words. This is gonna be the most personal post I’ve ever made anywhere, so before I dive in I’d like to make a couple points.
  1. However you play Elite is fine. Like I said, personal post is personal.
  2. I really love this community, especially this ridiculously glorious forum, and my brain just won’t let me not write this. I hope it helps someone who perhaps needed edification, whether they knew it or not.
Alright, here we go!

Very recently I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. If you’re not down with the lingo it’s a medical condition where my body doesn’t deal with carbohydrates very well. Runs in my family. I was in danger, there was a hospital stay, and my life has been totally turned upside down. Being relatively young, in supposedly good health, and my spouse having a chronic illness too you can bet there’s been a lot of uncomfortable feelings these past few weeks. This is a raw deal I didn’t ask for and that no one deserves, no bones about it.

Now I’m not looking for any sympathy. If there was a time to get Type 1 Diabetes this is it. I'm in the prime of my life. Modern medicine is ridiculously awesome. Beyond that, my family and friends are an incredible source of support and I’m going to be just fine in every way that matters. However, I’d like to share the following with all of you.

As I lay there the first night in the hospital, going through all kinds of tests and getting poked with more needles than I’d ever had in my life, I knew instinctively what lay ahead. Diabetes didn’t care about my feelings, my life, or who I thought I was. Everything was going to be different now and I had one choice:

Get good at living with my condition or die.

Is this dramatic? Yeah. Is it true? Goddamn right it is. What the heck does this have to do with Elite?

This game is special to me because it’s taught me some very valuable lessons on failure, struggle, and accomplishing your goals despite overwhelming opposition. Whether that’s been PvP, BGS wars, or what have you the imaginary universe we all romp around in doesn’t care about you or your feelings. For me, the lessons have been eerily similar to what I thought in that hospital bed. The stakes aren't the same, obviously, but it's really the same kind of thing.

Get good at playing the game or lose. Get good at living with my condition or die.

And you know what? I’m thankful for that. Maybe it’s not the coolest or most mature way to learn these lessons, but I don’t care. I’ve learned them and will leverage them as hard as I can for what lies ahead. And you know what?

So can you.

The film Captain Marvel has been an enormous amount of comfort and strength to me. As the title character struggles she realizes one very important thing: we’re only human. That ability to get up over and over and over again no matter how many times we get knocked down may be the greatest damn virtue we have as a species.

captain-marvel-all-ages.gif

Time to wrap this up. Fact of the matter is I’ve been living my life with one hand tied behind my back. If I thought I was blazing my own trail before?

Heh. See you out there!
Glad to hear you're alright. :)
 
Phisto:
I've enjoyed reading your posts (well, most of them) since I joined this forum.
Why? Because you strike me as a straight up guy who can give as well as take in a debate without loosing your cool. At the same time willing to offer help to anyone who asks.
Take on this illness like you handle a debate and you'll be fine.
Best to you.
 
About sugar not salt for a change? Not necessarily a bad thing. Type 1 will transform the eveyday routine quite a bit, but it'll be routine soon enough. Someone to look after you will immensily help. Especially when the levels fluctuate.

I myself stopped smoking 4 weeks ago. Took me a cold and a day of coughing after procrastinating for long. It wasn't really hard, when you get your mind set right on it. If I can do it - I'm sure a whole lot of people can do it too, even without waiting out feeling miserable. You don't have to be superman to do it, only determination. And maybe nicotine chewing gums.
 
Yeah, let's get you some new beta cells :)

The problem is the immune system would kill them again. It now thinks those cells are the enemy. Which basically is good, for I believe we won't get things like cancer that easily with these over-aggressive police bots on watch. For Type 1 diabetics, there are 2 lines of hope: intelligent Insuline pumps or genetic engineering, using stem cells and protecting them from being eliminated by a kind of "cage". That would be perfect, as it would completely cure the disease. The other solution are closed-loop pumps. Currently, Insuline pumps are rather dumb, simply following a pre-programmed basal dose curve. Until two or so years ago, it was technically not possible to constantly monitor the blood glucose level. This has changed luckily. Todays, most diabetics now have a sensor in their upper arm that keeps track of everything and can simply be scanned for results, blood-free. Closed loop systems can take that data and use it to regulate the pump's Insuline output. Nowadays, the first models (like the new Medtronic pump) are on the market that switch off the pump at least when the blood glucose level drops below 70. Which effectively means a safety net underneath the tightrope \o/. I'm fairly sure later generations will be able to more or less mimic a beta cell and its incredible ability to monitor glucose levels and regulate it (by hormons). One | each simple cell. Anything beyond Intelligent Design or a Creator behind all this simply exceeds my brain caps, and I had a long time to muse over such questions. But that's not the issue here. BioTech will not cure the disease, but remedy 90+% of its outcomings. Here's hope!

O7,
🙃
 
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Well said, and good luck with managing your diabetes. My Great Aunt had it for years, and not only did she stay on top of it, her son (who is brilliant at cooking) found lots of recipes that were tasty, and suitable for her.
 
I'm always hearing people say, "I didn't sign up for this." Yeah? Well, guess what? I didn't sign up to be born. No one asked me if I wanted to take this ride. But I'm on it so I have to make the best of it. Complaining won't do anyone, least of all me, any good whatsoever. We all start our journey unasked if we want to participate. Hopefully we have good family and make good friends. Looks like you've been blessed there. Don't ever give up and when it's your time, look death straight in the eye and tell him to go fly a kite in a thunderstorm. What's the worst he's going to do? Take you? He's going to do that anyway.
 
I'm always hearing people say, "I didn't sign up for this." Yeah? Well, guess what? I didn't sign up to be born. No one asked me if I wanted to take this ride. But I'm on it so I have to make the best of it. Complaining won't do anyone, least of all me, any good whatsoever. We all start our journey unasked if we want to participate. Hopefully we have good family and make good friends. Looks like you've been blessed there. Don't ever give up and when it's your time, look death straight in the eye and tell him to go fly a kite in a thunderstorm. What's the worst he's going to do? Take you? He's going to do that anyway.

That's more or less what I said and believed until I got 33. Then, I stared | was forced to stare into the Abyss. That changed a lot of things.

Philosophically, the three basic questions are: 1. Why am I here 2. Where did I come from 3. Where do I go?

There are many answers, most of them abstract. But at certain points of your life, you ask for truth. Or simply break down and ask for mercy.

O7,
🙃
 
Hi there!

Your friendly neighborhood Phisto here with another collection of words. This is gonna be the most personal post I’ve ever made anywhere, so before I dive in I’d like to make a couple points.
  1. However you play Elite is fine. Like I said, personal post is personal.
  2. I really love this community, especially this ridiculously glorious forum, and my brain just won’t let me not write this. I hope it helps someone who perhaps needed edification, whether they knew it or not.
Alright, here we go!

Very recently I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. If you’re not down with the lingo it’s a medical condition where my body doesn’t deal with carbohydrates very well. Runs in my family. I was in danger, there was a hospital stay, and my life has been totally turned upside down. Being relatively young, in supposedly good health, and my spouse having a chronic illness too you can bet there’s been a lot of uncomfortable feelings these past few weeks. This is a raw deal I didn’t ask for and that no one deserves, no bones about it.

Now I’m not looking for any sympathy. If there was a time to get Type 1 Diabetes this is it. I'm in the prime of my life. Modern medicine is ridiculously awesome. Beyond that, my family and friends are an incredible source of support and I’m going to be just fine in every way that matters. However, I’d like to share the following with all of you.

As I lay there the first night in the hospital, going through all kinds of tests and getting poked with more needles than I’d ever had in my life, I knew instinctively what lay ahead. Diabetes didn’t care about my feelings, my life, or who I thought I was. Everything was going to be different now and I had one choice:

Get good at living with my condition or die.

Is this dramatic? Yeah. Is it true? Goddamn right it is. What the heck does this have to do with Elite?

This game is special to me because it’s taught me some very valuable lessons on failure, struggle, and accomplishing your goals despite overwhelming opposition. Whether that’s been PvP, BGS wars, or what have you the imaginary universe we all romp around in doesn’t care about you or your feelings. For me, the lessons have been eerily similar to what I thought in that hospital bed. The stakes aren't the same, obviously, but it's really the same kind of thing.

Get good at playing the game or lose. Get good at living with my condition or die.

And you know what? I’m thankful for that. Maybe it’s not the coolest or most mature way to learn these lessons, but I don’t care. I’ve learned them and will leverage them as hard as I can for what lies ahead. And you know what?

So can you.

The film Captain Marvel has been an enormous amount of comfort and strength to me. As the title character struggles she realizes one very important thing: we’re only human. That ability to get up over and over and over again no matter how many times we get knocked down may be the greatest damn virtue we have as a species.

captain-marvel-all-ages.gif

Time to wrap this up. Fact of the matter is I’ve been living my life with one hand tied behind my back. If I thought I was blazing my own trail before?

Heh. See you out there!

Well I got Epilepsy 2 years ago I do not see it as a Disability just another part of me. Yes it could kill me 1 in a 1000 chance every day going to sleep its called sudden death syndrome. Just manage it learn as much as you can about your condition then you won't be scared of it, you will just say to it "yeah off, I am going to get to the end of my book of life" When I tell people I have this they are scared, they think I am going to have an attack. A person in my class at uni had Diabeties he was saying im not well I need sugar everyone in the class freaked out and ignored him. I had polo mints in my pocket and gave him them. he was ok after 15 mins. he thanked me after he got better and we were best friends at uni.
Well do not do a bucket list do a to do list and add to it, I only realised after losing my job that all I was doing was going to work and coming home watching tv, playing video games, drinking, sleeping and then going to work. not doing anything. Now im joining clubs, visiting museums, looking at the beauty of the world each day, doing new stuff each day. Im just glad im still here.
Have a good one o7 see you in the black :)
 
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