Another thing I hate about having diabetes

When my grandfather was first diagnosed with diabetes, he had a bloodstick of something like 1200. Yours could have been a lot worse.

I think that she just didn’t like fat people.Or, I suppose it’s possible that she didn’t like anybody.
I didn’t have any instruction at all up to that point - she was the one that was supposed to give it to me - and it made me feel just awful.

Her name wasn’t Dr. Coulter by any chance, was it?

That’s the sort of thing that ensures people will develop an antagonistic relationship with their doctors, and it saps their will to take care of themselves. Great job, lady. I hope someone kicks her in the shins.

Thanks QTM and Excalibre. I’m embarrassed that I’m this ignorant about my own illness. I know, I’ll blame my doctor for not informing me!

Yep. I stupidly avoided dentists for about 20 years because of an asshole like that. When I finally saw one recently (Had to. No choice. Couldn’t chew. Had no teeth.), I was delighted to find out that he was very friendly, helpful, and non-judgemental. Had I had a dentist like him 20 years ago, I wouldn’t look like Cletus today.

Is it true that most people become diabetic to some extent in their old age? I’ve heard that before, but considering all the misconceptions here, I’m going to ask.

Live long enough and you’ll get everything. Well, maybe you won’t get prostate cancer, but you get the idea.

Insulin resistance tends to develop with age, and so we do see it more often in people as they get older. But that doesn’t mean most people will become diabetic.

The lungs eventually deteriorate with age too. Hopefully it happens at a slow enough rate that a person dies of something else before their lungs fail them. But a certain percentage of elderly die due to primary respiratory failure merely from the natural (but in their case more rapid than other folks) decline in lung function.