Today marks a milestone for me. It’s my 5000th
day with diabetes. It’s nothing special in itself I suppose – I’m coming
up on 14 years since my diagnosis, and many people have lived with this thing
for a lot long than I have. But 5000 days… that’s worth considering.
Generally, looking back on life, we often find it hard to
believe how naïve we were about a lot of stuff – laughing at our younger selves
for not knowing things that seem so obvious to us now. My relationship
with diabetes is no different.
I remember my diagnosis. It was the start of my
graduate year at university, and I’d been flicking through a magazine when I
happened upon a side-bar that was talking about some symptoms of Type 1
diabetes. Reading through it, I was mentally crossing them off… tired all
the time, drinking a lot (of water!), needing the toilet all the time… This had
been happening to me for over a week. I could never drink enough water to
quench that thirst, no amount of Mars bars would give me energy to stop feeling
lethargic (...seriously). I couldn’t see the notes on the board from the front row of
lectures.
So I went to see the campus GP and told her I’d read a
magazine and I thought I had diabetes. To be fair, I’d have been
sceptical in her position – I suspect it’s the equivalent of Dr Google these
days. But I had a blood test and got a call the next day…
“You’ve got diabetes. I need you to go to the diabetes
centre at the hospital…”
“Er…” *looking at lecture schedule* “I could go
Wednesday afternoon?”
“I need you to go NOW. Right now!”
And that changed my life. There’d been a kid in my
class at primary school who had diabetes. He was insanely resilient – you
never really saw much indication of it at all – he just got on with doing what other 8
year olds do. We all knew he had to have a needle (and this was the 80s
so it was proper needles) but that was it.
Now I was sat in a room in a hospital with my parents who’d
just bombed up it the motorway, with a nurse (Vicky Clancey) who was telling me
I had to inject myself every day (along with a lot of other
information). I think I asked if I could just have a pill or something
not utterly terrifying but to no avail. I came home with a mountain of
papers, booklets and more medical supplies than you can shake a stick at and I
got on with it.
Over the next decade or so I had a complicated relationship
with diabetes. I worked hard some of the time, and saw the benefits of it
on that half yearly report we’re all so familiar with now. Other times I
gave up entirely. I took insulin when I was supposed to, but testing
became a thing of the past – used only to justify eating when I was low (both
blood sugar and emotionally). And I spent time in between those extremes,
giving my health the minimum attention it needed.
I think all that changed about four years ago. The
chance to take part in a clinical trial looking at insulin pumps and education
courses (here’s link to an article
discussing the results) was a huge turning point in my life with
diabetes. It finally allowed me to fill in the huge gaps in my knowledge,
gave me the opportunity to meet people in the same boat as me and let me see
that there was a world of other people that I could talk to. I spoke at
the Diabetes UK Professional Conference earlier this year about how DAFNE
changed my life, and I don’t think I could ever possibly state how much that is
true (you can read/watch more about my relationship with DAFNE on the Diabetes UK Taking Control site).
So I look back at myself now, after 5000 days of counting
carbs, injections, finger-prick tests (sometimes!), set changes and I can’t help but
laugh. I wrote on the very first post on this blog (which started as a
London Marathon training blog) that “Whilst I’ve been diabetic for the last 10
years, I’ve…never let it define who I am”. I don’t think that could be
any further from the truth now – at least in some sense.
I used to be a terrified young adult who’d never really
accepted this… thing… he’d been given. Someone who was scared to ask for
help, didn’t want to hear about complications because I was too young - that stuff will never happen to me right? Someone who felt so low he gave up looking after himself for almost two years
without a thought to the consequences.
Now, it’s different. Diabetes is absolutely a huge
part of my life – it has to be. I feel part of a community that I can ask
for help whenever I need to, and I’ve made some truly amazing friends as a
result of this condition. It’s still not always easy by any means, but it
finally feels like that millstone around my neck has turned into something a
lot more manageable and, dare I say it, more positive than I’d ever expected.
I don’t think you can live with a chronic illness without
experiencing highs and lows (…sorry) but I think it’s about how we emerge from
them that really matters. We all carry battle scars as a result of
diabetes (physically and mentally), but we’re still here, we’re still fighting
and we’re still living, not just surviving.
How I felt back in October 2002 is completely alien compared
with my outlook on diabetes today. You go through a lot over 5000 days
and how you use that life experience is so important. I’ve gone from
being a naïve 21 year old to a 35 year old who understands so much more than I
thought possible (or at least I think I do...).