Guest guest Posted June 23, 2004 Report Share Posted June 23, 2004 In a message dated 6/23/2004 12:19:41 PM Eastern Daylight Time, vhoste@... writes: I was diagnosed about a month ago and I'm trying to figure it all out. Hi Virginia, A good website is the Joslin Diabetes Center. They have a wealth of information about diabetes. http://www.joslin.org/education/beginnerguide.shtml hugs Eunice Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2004 Report Share Posted June 23, 2004 Hi Virginia, Sorry you got the news but, you have found a great list. I also have problems with my feet and hands. Since my numbers have came down a lot it has got much better. I test 4 to 6 times a day. That is the best way to find out what foods bother your bg the most and to keep good control. I am on 2000 mg's metforman (S) it took about 4 months on the med's with diet and exercise to see the difference but I am seeing results now and can hold off on the insulin the Doctor had planned to add :-) My name is and I was told in February. I took diabetes education classes that I found helpful. Go to your local library they should have some good books on diabetes. I found that helped also. BJ What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us. I'm new here > Hello Everyone > > I'm new to the list and new to being a diabetic. I was diagnosed about a month ago and I'm trying to figure it all out. Talk about a new way of thinking and living. I've been having problems with neuropathy in my feet for a few years now and I'm wondering if my sugars have been high for longer than I realized. I'm trying to keep my levels under control with diet and exercise with varying success rates. It's a lot of trial and error at this point. > Anyway, I've been enjoying reading everyone's posts and learning a lot and I hope to be an active member of the list. > > Virginia > vhoste@... > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2004 Report Share Posted June 23, 2004 Welcome! Yes, I would say that it is not unlikely that you had diabetes long before you were diagnosed; it is not uncommon. If you haven't already, get a copy of DR. BERNSTEIN'S DIABETES SOLUTION and one of DIABETES FOR DUMMIES; between them, the two books should answer most of your questions. I'm new here Hello Everyone I'm new to the list and new to being a diabetic. I was diagnosed about a month ago and I'm trying to figure it all out. Talk about a new way of thinking and living. I've been having problems with neuropathy in my feet for a few years now and I'm wondering if my sugars have been high for longer than I realized. I'm trying to keep my levels under control with diet and exercise with varying success rates. It's a lot of trial and error at this point. Anyway, I've been enjoying reading everyone's posts and learning a lot and I hope to be an active member of the list. Virginia vhoste@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2004 Report Share Posted June 23, 2004 Hi Virigina! I am also a newbie here on the board as well as with the diagnosis! My Ins co paid for diabetes management classes so I have spent the last two days filling my brain with all kinds of information but the best part was being able to spend some one on one time with a dietician who helped me map out a healthier eating plan which will hopefully put all this into a better and more normal glucose readings (is there such a thing as normal anymore I wonder??). There is so much to digest and figure out but I am like you and hope to be able to get it all down to a science along with adding in an exercise plan as well! This board is really great and VERY informative! Dana (Southern Gal in GA) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2007 Report Share Posted July 10, 2007 Welcome ! I am Debbie from Texas. You are very good at researching the fibro. Most likely you do have it. Hope you find a good doctor soon. My pain isn't as severe as others here but I do have my share of bad days. warm hugs, Debbie J > > Hello. My name is and I am a 25 year old girl from Finland. I decided to join this > yhoo group because I am 99 % sure that I have fibromyalgia. I found as much as 2 books > in the library about the subject!? > > Okay, thanks for reading this. If there are any young people here in the FSG, please > contact me. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2007 Report Share Posted July 10, 2007 Welcome, . I hate this disease and feel it's quite unfair. But when I hear people talking about having it when they are or were as young as you I realize how lucky I am that mine didn't start any sooner. Everything is relative. But, it's just not fair that you've got it at such a young age! As far as the tender points go, you shouldn't have to press too hard. It was when a woman in a class I was taking who had Fibro lightly poked me in the arm and I yelped rather loudly. I had been suspecting Fibro for quite sometime when this happened. It still took me a while to finally get it checked and diagnosed. When you have a sore spot where there shouldn't be any soreness, you know it's a tender point. It hurts like crazy when you press it where other places on your body react 'normally.' I hope this helps. I've found a lot more on Fibro than you have but the best information I've gotten has been right here. Hugs, Jane *********************************************************** Hello. My name is and I am a 25 year old girl from Finland. I decided to join this yhoo group because I am 99 % sure that I have fibromyalgia. I found as much as 2 books in the library about the subject! I read them and I the books could have been written about me. I kept nodding and saying " yes, I have that symptom and that symptom and that symptom... " I googled the disease and found some great sites and they too could have been written about me. I have not been diagnosed by a doctor. I do have at least 12 tender points, but of course it's a little difficult finding the spots just by looking at a picture and not knowing how hard to press. I have had these symptoms since I was 15-17 years old, I don't really remember. It seems like ages. I went to school nurses and school doctors. They took blood samples and said that there was nothing wrong with me. In the university I went to yet another doctor, in the university health care. She wanted me to go to a reumathologist and I went there, no results as usual. I don't have reumathism, which I knew even before I went there. Now I've stopped going to doctors. They don't listen to me and they just say that I am normal and healthy, just a little tired, but go earlier to bed and spend some more time in the sun! I asked the doctor in the uni health care if she thought it was normal to have so much pain in your legs that you couldn't sleep at night. But she didn't answer me. My symptoms comes and goes. Sometimes I have pretty bad pain every day. Sometimes the pain is almost gone. Sometimes I have periods of days or weeks when I am exhausted and sometimes I feel pretty okay. Right now the tiredness is pretty bad. I am exhausted when I get back from work and when I am home I Just want to sleep. From what I have understood, some people can hardly get out of bed because of the pain and some people can live normal lives. I have been blessed (?) by not having too much pain. Yes, the pain is there every day (almost), but usually I don't take any pills. I just endure it. It's not that bad. I have more problems dealing with the tiredness. I have been thinking about fibromyalgia for at least 5 years, after having read an article in a magazine. But just recently I read the two books in the library. Before, when I read the magazine, I thought fibromyalgia ment pain in the arms/legs and being tired. Now I realise that all the other symptoms that I have is because of this illness. It all became so clear. It was like having a jigsaw puzzle where you couldn't guess what the picture was. But then one by one the pieces fitted together and the picture was clear. So, how did it start for me? Why did I get it? I read that there are different ways into the disease. I have grown up being bullied, I have no good friends (only one that I meet a few times a month), no real relationship with my mum (whom I still live with; dad died of cancer in January 2002 and for me it was just a man living in the same house). My family have had financial problems for as long as I can remember. So I suppose that's how it started for me. I graduated from university in November 2006. I studied Finnish, Swedish and English. I was unemployed a few months and in February I started practising in a library. The employment agency arranged a 6 month contract. I am still considered unemployed according to the laws, even though I work 6 hours per day, five days per week. I will be in the library until the middle of August. After that I have no idea what I am going to do. It is midnight here in Finland now. I will go to bed soon. I am too tired. But I had to write this long e-mail first. I have read books that say it helps to write the problems on a paper or online. And the book was right. I feel better now, mentally I mean. I have not told mum, my brother, my sister, my friend nor anyone else about my disease. Mum thinks I only sometimes have pain in my legs and she doesn't know how tired I really am. My friend doesn't know anything and nor do the other librarians. I don't know if I should tell the people around me or not. Any suggestions? Okay, thanks for reading this. If there are any young people here in the FSG, please contact me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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