I have been Diabetic with Type 1 now for over 17 years. I can remember sitting around playing computer games for most of my pre diabetic days. Incredibly lazy, bored with life... Then when I found out my condition I seemed to have like a new energy source. Booom :-D , started surfing and bodyboaridng, started to get more involved with sports. I still think the discovery was one of the best things that has happened to me. Also if you can imagine having the condition for many years and not knowing - the long term side affects could have been worse still.
Sitting at around 32 Years of age now. Still Strong happy and healthy. Had eye scans, kidney and everything else - which is all perfect. :) My a1c results are still sitting out of range - been trying to get this in range with the help of doctors for quite sometime. +9 o.O
I can attribute one of the most important factors which has already been mentioned to Regular exercise. I have been surfing and bodyboarding whenever the opportunity presented itself to me for the last 17 years too. I've ridden the biggest and heaviest waves around the whole world. At one stage I thought that my life was just on a downward spiral because of my condition, also being worried about blindness, kidney failure, possible amputations etc... the list is endless.
I often thought it would actually wouldn't be that bad if I just died riding big waves, and what I loved doing rather then suffering the complications of my condition. So I threw myself into whatever hectic and heavy situation was available. I'm still here, had the best experiences of my life. Almost drowned 5 times, had close calls with Shark attacks in Mozambique, Transkei and Jeffreys Bay, travelled to over 20 different countries around the world, really lived life to the full.
I look around and many of my friends have passed away from accidents, cancer, heart attacks @ 35 years of age (non diabetic related) - fit and healthy individuals. Current world stats indicate more people dying of Heart attacks due to bad eating conditions and their lifestyles than anything else. We are all not immortal, and yes maybe if you are diabetic your life expectancy might be lower you will have complications but you know what so will everyone else.
The fact is our condition should force you into having a better lifestyle, eating right and being more active then you were before.
There are rumours of a cure for Type 1 with Stem Research in the medical field expected in the next 5-10 years. So keep good control and hopefully there are options for us in the next few years.
Make the most of your life, take the cards and lemons you've been dealt and go and win a hand or make some lemonade it is really all up to you.
in most situations there are way more people that are worse off that you!!!
Rockon
thank you for your information. My son was diagnosed yesterday with type 1 at the age of 8. I'm a firefighter and go to calls all the time for diabetes and I'm really scared and the ignorant comments on here have not helped.
I'm hoping you could maybe write my son Liam a letter of encouragement, letting him know of your success and great life. I've always been an athlete and my son has been like my mini me. I coach his lacrosse, hockey and soccer and he wants to be like dad.
Your story is inspiring.
I'm spending 10hrs a day for the next 3 days in hospital in a "diabetes camp" learning and I want my son to blow the diabetes stories away.
Regards,
Jeff
My standard way to treat it is to beat it into submission. :). By that, I mean I exercise for an hour or more ~5 times a week. I'm actually not a jock, but now at 55, I am stronger and healthier than 90% of my peers... and I watch my food, but am by no means anal about it. I now take my insulin in front of all my friends and in restaurants - its very easy to bend over, pinch a bit of skin on your side, inject, and act naturally. This is much less intrusive than, say, breast feeding - and, in fact, it is life affirming, as far as I'm concerned.
The bottom line is that you have one life. You really shouldn't waste it worrying about everything that can happen. You can, and should, do as much as you can to control the disease... but you own your body and your life, not the disease.
None of us is getting out of this life alive, but I'm going to enjoy what I have here.
Quote:
I'd like to thank every single person that has posted on this topic. I see the last posted was months ago. But,
I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes 3 years ago when I was 12, I am now 15. I went to google and google'd my life expectancy, and this popped up. I took a look and read all of these responses, and I am relieved and quite scared still to say the least. As of late, I have not been keeping very good track of my blood counts, (I'm Canadian, and we use a different scale. My regular level is around 15.0, and your "supposed" to be around 4-7. Anywere under 4 is considered a low.) I was just wondering, if anyone is still around, if there is a way to combat this memory loss, as almost everyone has said it. And as I said, I honestly have had around a year of mistreatment, and after reading this today I will be sure to stay on top of it, but I am wondering will there be any of these long term consequences because of this recent mis-treatment?
There is some evidence, found recently, that some people have genetic disposition to not suffer the consequences. At a minimum, everyone responds differently. I posted before... I'm the guy who jumped out of an airplane. At 55, after 43 years with diabetes, I still bike, ski, play adult ice hockey, hike, work 10 hour days, and have a wife and 2 daughters who don't know me any other way. I think my daughters think of me more for my wacky humor than for being defined by diabetes...
My standard way to treat it is to beat it into submission. :). By that, I mean I exercise for an hour or more ~5 times a week. I'm actually not a jock, but now at 55, I am stronger and healthier than 90% of my peers... and I watch my food, but am by no means anal about it. I now take my insulin in front of all my friends and in restaurants - its very easy to bend over, pinch a bit of skin on your side, inject, and act naturally. This is much less intrusive than, say, breast feeding - and, in fact, it is life affirming, as far as I'm concerned.
The bottom line is that you have one life. You really shouldn't waste it worrying about everything that can happen. You can, and should, do as much as you can to control the disease... but you own your body and your life, not the disease.
None of us is getting out of this life alive, but I'm going to enjoy what I have here.
its very reasuring to have all these responses:) I too have had very high blood sugars recently (I also have the same scale) and my blood sugars, as well, have been about 15mmol on average. I have even been over 32 before! the best thing to do is exercise, i felt better after just 2 days of horseriding; trust me it feels good! i'm on a no sugar diet and still my levels are sky high. Life is too short to be fretting about everything but it is essiental to not be completly careless:)