Non-Prescription Supply Program

ACT1 is one of the few organizations in the U.S. that provide a non-prescription supply exchange program for diabetics in need.

To find out more information and see how you can help ACT1's effort in serving the community click here!

Secure Supplies: Test Strips Save Lives – Tell Roche Pharmaceuticals To Expand Their Patient Assistance Programs!

Join our campaign and sign the petition that tells Roche Pharmaceuticals that test strips save lives!

DiabetesMine Patient Voices Contest 2012!

Submit your videos to the DiabetesMine Patient Voices Contest. Voice your opinion on current diabetes technology and tell the world what new advances you would like to see! Click Here for More Information!

Upcoming Events

Just Some Thoughts

This blog is by Tina – read her bio here!

My blog this week will be a quick potpourri. There are so many exciting, tiring and stressful things going on.

First, for anyone who didn’t know, the ladies of ACT1 ( well the lucky ones at least) had a table at the ADA Expo on Saturday. They had a lot of good feedback. We all worked hard to get the pamphlets and whatnot ready as quickly as we could. I am told all went well. I am sure pics are up on the website, if not I am positive it will be done soon. I heard some sad and happy things happened to the girls. I however will not tell you any of it, since their three blogs are soon to follow.

I was not able to make it on Saturday because of a prior commitment. I went to montauk with Greg. His firehouse does a  Montauk Weekend once a year. We are free for all on Friday and come together on the beach for a bonfire later in the night. Then Saturday the guys cook us the most wonderful meal. It actually isn’t that carb heavy (lots of seafood). Which is nice since I make hostess cupcake knock offs which are much better than anything Hostess ever dreamed of making. Every year I am both fascinated and horrified to see how many cupcakes a drinking person can eat.

We end Saturday with a bonfire too.  This year it was quite cold but still lots of fun. I found myself at some point in the night sitting in front of the fire picking people at random and trying to imagine what I would have to bolus to eat and drink what they were. It actually scared me to realize how frustrating drinking with this disease must be.

I have drank in the last fifteen years, just very rarely. One main reason is the math gives me a headache. Bolus for food, deduct for that drink, bolus for beer… It’s just too confusing. Has anyone ever kept their sugars in range after drinking all the night before? I find the process to just not be worth the booze.

There is a new baby due in greg’s family in January which is both exciting and painful for me. Still I plan to love this baby a lot, so I will get over it quickly enough.

There is so much more going on but I don’t want to bore you. Besides I am typing this on my phone and I am going crosseyed.

3 comments to Just Some Thoughts

  • Stacey

    Really wish you could have joined us at the expo but thank you so much for all your hard work! It sounds like you had a nice weekend and I hope that you did :)

  • Katie in SF, CA

    I always have a hard time drinking and staying on track. I actually find that when I drink (no matter what I drink) it makes my sugars drop and I generally go low at night when I do. It's stopped me from drinking like I did in college. Now I have 2-3, maybe 4 if I am feeling bold, drinks in 1 night. And I don't do it very often. But I did it this weekend (3 beers Saturday night) and went low while I was sleeping. That's never fun. I always eat before bed to bring my sugar up, but I go low anyway. I feel you girl, it is SUCH a pain!

  • Rebecca

    I normally can drink light beer and red wine without needing to bolus or worry. If I drink something heavier, I shoot up and down.

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>