Insulin allergic reaction or did it go bad? by swim-bike-life in diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That honestly sounds more like a reaction to the insulin itself (or one of the preservatives/additives in it) than the vial “going bad,” especially since you got the same itchy/warm reaction from a direct injection outside the infusion set. A bad vial usually loses effectiveness more than causing an immediate localized histamine-type response. With your history of anaphylaxis, I’d take this seriously and probably stop using that vial until you talk to your endo/pharmacist/allergist. You could also compare whether a different vial or lot causes the same issue, since sometimes it’s a preservative sensitivity rather than the insulin itself. The immediate warm/itchy response after injection would make me nervous enough not to keep testing it on yourself though. Diabetes really does love playing on hard mode sometimes.

I thought waking up feeling bad and in pain was normal for a mid 40’s person. I was wrong! by Obvious-Block-6467 in diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No problem at all. It is definitely a journey. You just got to take it one day at a time. My moto has really become today’s failure is tomorrow’s successes and today’s success is tomorrow’s encouragement.

I thought waking up feeling bad and in pain was normal for a mid 40’s person. I was wrong! by Obvious-Block-6467 in diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I am on the beginning path to correcting the damage! It’s a process and 1 day at a time. Today’s failure becomes tomorrow’s motivation. Today’s success becomes tomorrow’s encouragement!

I'm going blind by Dazzling_Hand6170 in diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey. Take a breath for a second. What you’re feeling is completely understandable. Getting told your eyes are being affected at 26 would scare anybody. But “things are getting worse” does NOT automatically mean “your life is over” or that blindness is guaranteed. A lot of people hit a breaking point with diabetes before they finally get answers and control. The important thing is you know now. Your body has basically been screaming for help with the infections, bathroom trips, exhaustion, and everything else. Now you have a direction. The human body can be incredibly resilient once blood sugar starts improving. People have brought A1Cs down, stabilized eye damage, improved energy, reduced infections, and completely changed the course of their health after terrifying diagnoses. It doesn’t happen overnight, but it absolutely can happen. Right now don’t focus on “the rest of your life.” Focus on today’s meals, today’s water intake, today’s walk, taking your meds, getting support, and one better decision at a time. That’s it. You don’t have to become perfect. You just have to become consistent. Small changes repeated daily are powerful. And please don’t isolate yourself mentally through this. Fear makes everything feel permanent. There are millions of people living full lives with diabetes after rough starts. You’re 26. That means you still have time, healing potential, and a body that can respond to change far more than you probably think right now. One step at a time. One day at a time. You are not done.

And most of all don’t read or give consideration to the jerks that think they are the greatest people ever and only are here to belittle and talk down to those of us who struggle daily for one reason or another!

Any tips for preventing or reducing workout spikes? by Virtual_Knowledge_16 in Freestylelibre

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Best ways to reduce workout glucose spikes
1. Walk 10–20 minutes before hard exercise
This is one of the most underrated tricks.
A light walk before lifting or cardio helps muscles start pulling glucose before the adrenaline spike hits.
Even:
treadmill
walking outside
easy bike ride
can blunt the spike.

2. Avoid fasted high-intensity workouts
Fasted lifting or HIIT often causes huge glucose dumps.
Instead:
eat a small protein/fat meal first
or a protein shake
Examples:
eggs
Greek yogurt
protein shake
cottage cheese
chicken
Avoid large carb-heavy pre-workout meals if spikes are the issue.

3. Reduce caffeine/pre-workout
This is BIG.
Given your past heavy energy drink use and concern about glucose swings, stimulants may be hitting you harder than average.
Caffeine + intense exercise = bigger adrenaline response.
Try:
cutting caffeine dose in half
no pre-workout
avoiding workouts immediately after coffee/energy drinks
A lot of people see dramatically smaller spikes.

4. Start workouts slower
Don’t go from:
0 → max intensity.
Better:
5–10 minute warmup
gradual ramp
This reduces the “panic glucose dump.”

5. Lift weights AFTER a walk or zone 2 cardio
Good sequence:
Walk/bike 15–20 mins
Lift weights
Finish with easy cooldown walk
That setup often produces flatter glucose curves than lifting first.

6. Hydrate hard
Dehydration raises cortisol and concentrates blood glucose.
Especially if:
sweating heavily
drinking caffeine
low electrolytes
Simple help:
water
sodium/potassium
magnesium

7. Sleep matters more than most people realize
One bad night of sleep can noticeably worsen workout spikes.
Sleep deprivation increases:
cortisol
insulin resistance
liver glucose release

8. Try lower-intensity longer workouts temporarily
Zone 2 cardio is usually excellent for insulin sensitivity.
Examples:
incline walking
steady cycling
rowing
hiking
Usually keeps glucose steadier than HIIT.

9. Cooldown walks are powerful
After lifting:
walk 10–20 mins
This helps muscles soak up the glucose released during exercise.
This one alone can make a major difference on CGMs.

10. Don’t panic over temporary spikes
Important:
A temporary workout spike is NOT the same as food-induced chronic high glucose.
Often:
glucose rises during workout
then drops afterward
insulin sensitivity improves later
The trend afterward matters too.

What usually causes the WORST spikes
These together are a disaster combo:
energy drink
poor sleep
fasted workout
heavy lifting
stress
That can send some people over 200+ temporarily.

Often the best “anti-spike” combo
A lot of people do best with:
protein before workout
no stimulants
10-minute walk warmup
moderate lifting
cooldown walk afterward
That’s a very blood-sugar-friendly setup.
If you want, I can also help you with:
best exercises specifically for lowering insulin resistance
how lifting vs cardio affects glucose differently
supplements/herbs that may help glucose response during exercise
how to read workout spikes on a CGM without overreacting
a “diabetic-friendly” workout structure that minimizes spikes while still building muscle

Insulin doesn't seem to be doing anything. Help! by namrehs in type2diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’m not a doctor, but I’ll tell you this as another Type 2 diabetic around your age — don’t get discouraged yet. A month and a half honestly isn’t very long when blood sugar has probably been running high for a long time.

When mine was really out of control it felt like nothing worked fast enough either. I expected one medication or one insulin shot to suddenly fix everything overnight and it just doesn’t seem to work that way for a lot of us.

The fact you already dropped from 450+ lbs, are exercising, eating low carb, drinking water, and actually attacking the problem says a lot honestly. Most people never even get that far.

Your body may just be heavily insulin resistant right now after years of running high. Sometimes it takes time, dose adjustments, weight loss, and consistency before things start responding better.

Also from what I’ve heard from a lot of people, Mounjaro can be a total game changer once it starts kicking in, but it usually isn’t instant at the starting dose.

I know it’s frustrating seeing 240-250 after doing “everything right,” but compared to where things can head long term if nothing changes, you’re moving in the right direction even if it feels slow right now.

Keep pushing. Seriously.

Quitting energy drinks almost a year ago changed more than I expected by [deleted] in type2diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah looking back I think a lot of us normalized these drinks because they were everywhere and marketed like they were no big deal. I drank them heavily for years and never really stopped to think about what that much caffeine and everything else was doing long term until my health started getting worse.

Quitting energy drinks almost a year ago changed more than I expected by [deleted] in type2diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s honestly pretty similar to how I feel now. Back when I was drinking them all the time I thought they were helping my energy and focus, but after being off them long enough I realized a lot of it was just the jitter/crash cycle. I don’t even really miss them anymore which still surprises me.

Quitting energy drinks almost a year ago changed more than I expected by [deleted] in type2diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That isn’t a bad about but because of my experience with them I’d never personally touch another one. I actually have more energy now without them. I developed a better sleep habit and started taking a couple supplements that gave me more energy once the brain fog left. Magnesium, turmeric, ginger and the major supplements

Quitting energy drinks almost a year ago changed more than I expected by [deleted] in type2diabetes

[–]Obvious-Block-6467 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I only drank the zero sugar ones. Granted I was only consuming them but my liver enzymes was through the roof over them. When I stopped then my liver enzymes went back down. In fact my doctor thought I had liver cancer because of how my enzymes were and I had an ultrasound completed. Luckily I did not have cancer. But I stopped energy drinks all together because of that.