#1844 Valyrian Steel

Suzanne discusses her 34-year journey with Type 1 diabetes , navigating chronic fatigue syndrome , and the challenges of caring for her 85-year-old mother who also has T1D.

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Simplify Lifewith Omnipod
Omnipod
DexcomG7 15 Day Sensor
Dexcom
Save 20%Save 20% with offer code: JUICEBOX
Cozy Earth
US MEDGet your Diabetes Supplies
US MED
ContourEasy to Use and Highly Accurate
Contour Next
MiniMedMake everyday a better day
Minimed
TandemControl-IQ+ with AutoBolus
Tandem
CommunitySupport Touched By Type 1
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Key Takeaways

  • Stress Directly Impacts A1C: High-stress situations, such as difficult relationships, can significantly alter blood sugar control and visibly impact A1C levels, highlighting the profound mind-body connection in diabetes management.
  • Chronic Fatigue vs. Diabetes Burnout: While Type 1 Diabetes is a heavy burden, the predictability of its management differs greatly from the unpredictable, exhausting nature of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (MECFS), requiring intensive pacing and rest.
  • Investigate Underlying Thyroid Issues: Unexplained fatigue, brain fog, and muscle weakness are classic symptoms of thyroid conditions like Hashimoto's. Medication sizing is crucial; overly high starting doses can cause anxiety and heart racing.
  • Caregiving Complexities with T1D: Caring for an aging parent who also has Type 1 Diabetes introduces unique challenges, particularly when cognitive or dexterity issues prevent them from managing their own insulin pumps or CGMs.
  • Dementia Symptoms Can Be Medically Induced: Apparent cognitive decline or dementia in the elderly can sometimes be the result of overmedication (e.g., stacked blood pressure drugs or statins). Reevaluating prescriptions can sometimes reverse these symptoms entirely.

Resources Mentioned

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Sponsors and Announcements

Scott Benner (0:00) Here we are back together again, friends, for another episode of the Juice Box podcast.

Suzanne (0:15) Hi, I'm Suzanne. (0:17) I've had type one for probably thirty four years. (0:21) I've had chronic fatigue syndrome for twenty four years. (0:25) I'm a musician, and I take care of my mother who also has type one, and she's been living with me for about seventeen months.

Scott Benner (0:34) If you're looking for community around type one diabetes, check out the Juice Box Podcast private Facebook group, Juice Box Podcast, type one diabetes. (0:43) But everybody is welcome. (0:44) Type one, type two, gestational, loved ones, it doesn't matter to me. (0:49) If you're impacted by diabetes and you're looking for support, comfort, or community, check out Juice Box podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook. (0:59) Alright.

Scott Benner (0:59) Let's get down to it. (1:00) You want the management stuff from the podcast. (1:03) You don't care about all this chitting and chatting with other people. (1:06) Juiceboxpodcast.com/lists. (1:09) They are downloadable, easy to read, every series, every episode.

Scott Benner (1:14) They're all numbered. (1:16) Makes it super simple for you to go right into that search feature in your audio app. (1:19) Type juice box one seven nine five to find episode 1795. (1:25) Juiceboxpodcast.com/lists. (1:30) Nothing you hear on the juice box podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise.

Scott Benner (1:36) Always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan. (1:46) This episode of the juice box podcast is sponsored by US Med, u s med dot com slash juice box, or call (888) 721-1514. (1:57) Get your supplies the same way we do from US Med. (2:01) Today's episode is also sponsored by Omnipod. (2:05) Check out the Omnipod five now with my link, omnipod.com/juicebox.

Scott Benner (2:11) You may be eligible for a free starter kit, a free Omnipod five starter kit at my link. (2:18) Go check it out. (2:19) Omnipod.com/juicebox. (2:22) Terms and conditions apply. (2:23) Full terms and conditions can be found at omnipod.com/juicebox.

Diagnoses & Family History

Suzanne (2:28) Hi. (2:29) I'm Suzanne. (2:30) I've had type one for probably thirty four years. (2:34) I've had chronic fatigue syndrome for twenty four years. (2:38) I'm a musician, and I take care of my mother who also has type one, and she's been living with me for about seventeen months.

Scott Benner (2:46) Oh, I am excited to talk to you.

Suzanne (2:49) Great.

Scott Benner (2:50) Also, do you know that Suzanne is the name of the orangutan in the Jay and Silent Bob movies?

Suzanne (2:55) In the what movies?

Scott Benner (2:56) Yeah. (2:57) I didn't think you would know. (2:58) It's okay, Suzanne.

Suzanne (2:58) No. (2:59) I did not know.

Scott Benner (3:00) Yeah. (3:00) The people listening are the who know are like, oh, no kidding. (3:02) He's right. (3:03) Okay. (3:04) But the rest of you are going, I don't know what he's saying.

Scott Benner (3:07) Anyway, let's figure out who you are. (3:10) How old are you?

Suzanne (3:11) Okay. (3:12) I'm 62.

Scott Benner (3:13) Oh, you have a young voice.

Suzanne (3:16) Yeah. (3:16) You know, I I do. (3:17) I I think I've worked with kids a lot in my life, but I never had kids on my own, so it keeps me young.

Scott Benner (3:23) I have to tell you. (3:24) I'm gonna take a I'm gonna take a page out of your book today. (3:26) I swear I thought you were in your thirties when you started talking.

Suzanne (3:30) Oh, great. (3:31) Great.

Scott Benner (3:32) I'm going

Suzanne (3:32) with that. (3:32) Some days I feel like I'm in my nineties, so there you go. (3:35) Yeah. (3:35) We'll we'll get to that as well.

Scott Benner (3:37) So Okay. (3:37) You're 62. (3:39) And when were you diagnosed with type one? (3:40) At what age?

Suzanne (3:41) I was 28.

Scott Benner (3:44) That's thirty four years ago.

Suzanne (3:46) Yeah.

Scott Benner (3:46) Okay.

Suzanne (3:47) Yeah.

Scott Benner (3:47) And you say your mom has type one?

Suzanne (3:49) She does. (3:50) Well, I mean, she when she was diagnosed, she was diagnosed as type two, and then she began to need insulin.

Scott Benner (3:58) Okay. (3:58) What age was that for her?

Suzanne (4:00) She was in her fifties, I believe.

Scott Benner (4:03) Okay.

Suzanne (4:04) Yeah. (4:05) It it wasn't too long. (4:06) It was probably within a decade after I was diagnosed. (4:09) Well, how old is she now? (4:11) She's 85.

Scott Benner (4:13) Damn. (4:13) Alright.

Suzanne (4:14) Yeah. (4:14) Well, good for her. (4:15) She's got a fascinating story too.

Scott Benner (4:17) So I think we're gonna pick through the whole thing, Suzanne. (4:20) Don't worry.

Suzanne (4:20) Okay.

Scott Benner (4:20) Okay. (4:21) So you're diagnosed thirty four years ago as an adult out of nowhere. (4:25) Did it feel Yes. (4:26) Yeah?

Suzanne (4:27) Yeah. (4:27) It like, I have some distant relatives that had it, but it wasn't something we talked about in our family.

Scott Benner (4:33) Mhmm.

Suzanne (4:33) I was a complete textbook case, but I had no idea. (4:37) And I was diagnosed in December, and I wasn't feeling well since the spring. (4:43) And I was a I'm a singer. (4:46) And the first thing was I lost my vocal range. (4:49) I had a range of about five notes, and I have a huge range.

Suzanne (4:53) But so that was one thing, and then there was just all these little weird clues along the way. (4:57) And then it was a big surprise, finally.

Scott Benner (5:00) You said distant relatives had type one, like aunts, uncles, second cousins, like

Suzanne (5:05) Great great grandfather maybe and my grandfather's sister or something like that.

Scott Benner (5:12) Okay. (5:12) So no nobody who you even were around any frequency. (5:16) Okay.

Suzanne (5:17) Right.

Scott Benner (5:17) How about other autoimmune stuff in your extended family?

Suzanne (5:21) Not that I No? (5:24) Really know of. (5:25) That's okay. (5:25) Yeah.

Scott Benner (5:26) How about your mom? (5:26) Does your mom have anything besides the diabetes?

Suzanne (5:29) She's got some eczema, and she's got she's got fatty liver disease, but I don't I don't think that's autoimmune. (5:36) But the eczema probably definitely is.

Scott Benner (5:38) Yeah. (5:39) Is she overweight?

Suzanne (5:40) She was. (5:41) Now she's very thin.

Scott Benner (5:43) Through the process of the end of her life? (5:45) Is that what's doing it, or do you think they're leaving her blood sugar?

Suzanne (5:48) It probably could be. (5:51) We thought she had dementia when she moved in with me, but it turns out she doesn't. (5:55) But that's a whole another story in itself.

Scott Benner (5:57) Oh, we're gonna get to how you misunderstood that your mom had dementia. (6:01) That's gonna be good too. (6:02) You Yeah. (6:03) You're gonna be a fount of conversation. (6:04) This is excellent.

Scott Benner (6:05) Yeah.

Suzanne (6:06) Know. (6:06) I'm like, I I hope we can like, hope I can get everything. (6:08) Yeah.

Scott Benner (6:08) Yeah. (6:09) Everyone settle in. (6:10) I feel good about this. (6:11) Okay. (6:11) So you're Yeah.

Dating and Stress Impacts on A1C

Scott Benner (6:12) You're you're single person. (6:13) Now you said you're not married, but have you ever been?

Suzanne (6:15) No. (6:16) I I've never been married. (6:17) A few near misses, but no. (6:20) Yeah.

Scott Benner (6:21) Do you mean that sadly or happily?

Suzanne (6:23) Both. (6:27) You're like, oh, I got away with it a couple of times. (6:29) Scott, I almost got hooked up to a real dud. (6:32) But but, you know you know what? (6:34) I have an anecdote that you might be interested.

Suzanne (6:36) First of all, three guesses who was my I I I live in Iowa, but I lived most of my adult life, and I was diagnosed living in Boston. (6:44) Okay. (6:45) So three guesses who one of my doctors was for a number of years.

Scott Benner (6:49) God. (6:50) Just tell me.

Suzanne (6:51) Doctor Handy was my doctor.

Scott Benner (6:53) Really?

Suzanne (6:54) Yeah. (6:55) Yeah. (6:55) I I he was great.

Scott Benner (6:56) You heard him on the podcast. (6:57) You're like, that guy used

Suzanne (6:58) to be my doctor. (6:59) Yeah. (6:59) I'm not I'm like, oh, doctor Handy. (7:01) Yeah. (7:02) And and it's funny because I didn't even know he was a weight expert because my weight was fine then.

Suzanne (7:07) He was meant to tell me

Scott Benner (7:08) Yeah. (7:08) Yeah.

Suzanne (7:09) He he used to tell me my weight was perfect. (7:11) I mean, who doesn't need a guy in their life telling them that their weight is perfect?

Scott Benner (7:15) Could use that, by the way.

Suzanne (7:16) But, anyway, so I was I was yeah. (7:18) Anyway, I was trying to make a relationship work with somebody, and it was really affecting I I didn't really realize it until, of course, you know, I'd ended everything. (7:32) But it was really obvious from my a one c, and I told him, you know, I was trying to make a this relationship work. (7:39) Like, my a one c came way down after all of the stress. (7:42) And then, I'm not saying all relationships are that stressful. (7:46) This was a definitely a I've been in other relationships before that were not that stressful.

Scott Benner (7:51) Can you explain to me? (7:52) This is after you're diagnosed?

Suzanne (7:54) Yes. (7:54) And

Scott Benner (7:54) Yeah. (7:55) And you're working through it's it's tough dating as an adult, isn't it?

Suzanne (7:58) Yeah.

Scott Benner (7:59) Yeah. (7:59) Yeah. (8:00) You don't get to grow with the person. (8:01) You get, like, the fully formed person, then you have to see if you can make it fit, I would imagine. (8:05) Yeah.

Scott Benner (8:05) Yeah. (8:06) Yeah. (8:06) You're dating someone. (8:07) It's going what you think is well enough to put effort into it, but it was stressful?

Suzanne (8:12) Very stressful. (8:13) And and it was very obvious, the difference between my a one c when I was trying to make the relationship work and when I had ended it. (8:21) Wait. (8:22) Because of, like, adrenaline, cortisol, etcetera, or because you just weren't

Scott Benner (8:25) focusing as well on yourself at that point?

Suzanne (8:28) No. (8:28) I think it was just yeah. (8:29) I think it was just this this was a really, really stressful situation.

Scott Benner (8:33) Oh, I didn't know that could happen. (8:35) I'm probably killing my wife and not realizing it. (8:38) Oh, well, if you hear this, Kelly, I'm sorry. (8:41) Yeah. (8:41) And

Suzanne (8:43) No. (8:44) No. (8:44) It was just super stressful, and and and it was very obvious in the difference of my a one c. (8:49) And I I I mentioned that to doctor Hamdi. (8:51) So the next time I came to see the him, he's like, so what's going on with the boyfriend?

Suzanne (8:56) And, you know, so

Scott Benner (8:58) Did doctor Hamdi make you break up with him? (9:00) Is that what happened?

Suzanne (9:00) No. (9:00) No. (9:01) No. (9:01) No. (9:01) No.

Suzanne (9:01) And I and I I don't even think I'd mentioned him until, like, I saw, like, wow. (9:06) This is pretty this is pretty intense. (9:08) And he he wasn't like, oh, that couldn't be. (9:10) He was like, no. (9:10) Yeah.

Suzanne (9:11) This happens.

Scott Benner (9:11) No kidding. (9:12) I get I should probably tell people just because everyone doesn't listen to every episode of the podcast, much to my chagrin. (9:19) But Hamdi is in episode it would be nice if spell checker didn't change what I typed. (9:29) Fourteen eleven GLP essentials with doctor Hamdi. (9:33) He was really excellent.

Scott Benner (9:35) Like, I got a lot of a lot of good feedback about him being on the podcast, actually.

Suzanne (9:39) Yeah. (9:39) No. (9:39) I wish I I wish he was still my doctor right now.

Scott Benner (9:42) Yeah. (9:42) So you moved away from him? (9:43) You broke up with him and the guy?

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Suzanne (9:44) No. (9:45) No. (9:45) I moved back to Iowa. (9:47) I I, moved back to Iowa because I had I ten years into diabetes, I got chronic fatigue syndrome. (9:53) Oh, okay.

Suzanne (9:55) I was I was really having a hard time just, you know, making life. (9:59) Very expensive to live in Boston for one thing.

Scott Benner (10:02) Yeah. (10:02) But And cold. (10:03) I don't like the idea of how cold it is.

Suzanne (10:05) You know, it's kinda the same here. (10:06) It's it's it's not always at the same time, but it's it's pretty much the same weather.

Scott Benner (10:11) The same thing. (10:11) So would you you move home to be with your mom or to be around family?

Suzanne (10:15) Yeah. (10:15) I I moved to to be with my mom, and I I lived with her for three years, and then I got my own apartment.

Scott Benner (10:20) Wow. (10:21) It took you three years to get on your feet after that? (10:23) Was that was that financial or medical?

Suzanne (10:26) Financial for one. (10:28) Yeah. (10:28) And I was I was able I was trying to get on disability when I was in Boston because I I loved being in Boston. (10:34) I got denied, and then I moved here. (10:37) And I I wasn't even gonna apply again.

Suzanne (10:40) I was so frustrated, and I applied, and I got on right away. (10:44) And so then I I was able to get my own place after that.

Scott Benner (10:49) What year was this?

Suzanne (10:50) This was I moved at the 2014.

Scott Benner (10:54) 2014. (10:54) Okay.

Suzanne (10:55) And then I I think I got my own place at the 2018.

Scott Benner (11:00) And how did that impact diabetes, the chronic fatigue?

Suzanne (11:04) It's hard to say, but I I will say one thing. (11:06) The difference between chronic fatigue and diabetes. (11:09) So diabetes, you know, I'm feeling sick. (11:13) I finally go to the doctor. (11:16) He sends me to the ER.

Suzanne (11:17) I'm in DKA. (11:19) I spend a week there. (11:21) I was in intensive care for the first three or four days. (11:24) I was a mess. (11:25) My doctor didn't think I was gonna he was surprised to see me the next day.

Suzanne (11:28) But I'm there. (11:30) I come out, and then I live my life. (11:32) I have to check my blood sugar. (11:34) I have to take insulin, but I'm living my life. (11:37) With chronic fatigue, you feel sick.

Suzanne (11:39) You go to lots of doctors, and they don't have any answers. (11:43) And, you know, and you don't get your life back. (11:46) So

Scott Benner (11:48) Has anything helped over the years?

Suzanne (11:50) Yeah. (11:51) I'm sure lots of little things that I don't even realize that if I stop doing, it's just a lot of pacing and having to yeah. (11:58) It it Sounds like long COVID. (12:00) Yeah. (12:01) It it it a lot of people say it's pretty much the same thing.

Suzanne (12:04) And I I even had my doctor, like, go on a a doctor had me go on a protocol, and I was lot of supplements, and I was just too sensitive to a lot of the supplements to

Scott Benner (12:16) Have you ever had in the past, like, Epstein Barr? (12:19) Or

Suzanne (12:19) I don't know. (12:20) Like, it's like, the tests I've had for that are kind of what's the word? (12:25) Either equivocal or unequivocal or like like like, probably.

Scott Benner (12:30) Said, I don't know. (12:31) Is that right?

Suzanne (12:31) Yeah. (12:32) Yeah. (12:32) Yeah. (12:32) Yeah. (12:32) And I've I've had one virus called h h v six.

Suzanne (12:37) That's a virus that I have had, and I've I've I I was gonna treat for it, and then I decided not to. (12:44) I you know, it's kind of a six of one half dozen of the other dealing with side effects and all that. (12:50) So I mean, I've tried so many different things. (12:52) I've recently done like an adrenal program and I've worked with the same doctor previously when I was first diagnosed, but it's still yeah. (13:03) I feel like I'm getting worse lately, like, my fatigue.

Suzanne (13:05) And and I feel like I'm having new issues now, and I'm just like, okay.

Scott Benner (13:11) I'm I'm doing some picking while you're talking. (13:14) Viruses linked to the onset, Epstein Barr virus is just mono HHV six influenza, SARS viruses that are COVID relatives, but, you know, it was 2014. (13:25) Not that you couldn't have gotten a different virus previous to that. (13:29) It often goes hand they don't call it autoimmune, but there's doctors who talk about it like it is.

Omnipod and US Med Promos

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Hashimoto's and Thyroid Symptoms

Suzanne (16:01) Yeah. (16:02) Do you

Scott Benner (16:02) have Hashimoto's?

Suzanne (16:03) When okay. (16:03) When I was first getting the, dealing with the fatigue, I went to a naturopath, and she took some tests and I had a lot of antibodies for my thyroid. (16:14) I've never been able to take thyroid medication. (16:16) I have a doctor that tests my thyroid on the regular. (16:19) With diet and such, I was able to get all my antibodies to go away, but I feel like I probably should be tested again.

Scott Benner (16:26) Yeah. (16:26) I mean, do you remember how long ago was it that you were tested the last time you got a full thyroid panel?

Suzanne (16:31) A full thyroid panel. (16:33) Probably probably within the year.

Scott Benner (16:35) Do know what your TSH was then?

Suzanne (16:37) It's always super normal. (16:39) Like, it's You know what that TSH what?

Scott Benner (16:43) Numbers. (16:43) What does that mean? (16:44) Numbers?

Suzanne (16:44) Ugh. (16:45) I forget.

Scott Benner (16:45) Because I say I'm super normal, but then people meet me and they don't say the same thing.

Suzanne (16:49) So Okay. (16:50) I can I can look it up while we're chatting?

Scott Benner (16:51) Would probable.

Suzanne (16:53) Yeah. (16:53) Yeah. (16:53) Absolutely. (16:54) Okay. (16:54) Absolutely.

Scott Benner (16:54) Thank you. (16:55) I wanna keep talking about this for a half a second.

Suzanne (16:57) Sure.

Nicotine Patches and Long COVID

Scott Benner (16:58) You're describing feeling like, you know, my wife talks about long COVID. (17:04) We we, like, zapped her out of long COVID with nicotine patches.

Suzanne (17:09) Wow.

Scott Benner (17:10) And so if you haven't heard that, it's, like, at the end of an episode somewhere. (17:14) So I'll I'll go back over it with you for a second, and I have no idea if these two things, like, will interact. (17:21) But while I'm talking to our overlords and you're speaking, I said, can nicotine help with this? (17:27) And it says some people think nicotine might help. (17:29) But right now, the evidence is very weak and mostly theoretical.

Scott Benner (17:33) Nicotine affects several systems that appear abnormal in MECFS, nervous system, brain alertness, inflammation, etcetera, anti inflammatory pathways. (17:42) Nicotine can activate something called the, oh my god, cholinergic anti inflammatory pathway, which may reduce inflammatory signaling from the immune system. (17:52) So I'm gonna ask it in COVID in long COVID patients. (17:58) The nicotine spike protein idea. (18:00) Some research proposes that SARS CoV two spike protein interacts with nicotine receptors.

Scott Benner (18:06) These receptors are involved in automatic nervous system regulation, inflammation control, brain signaling, muscle function. (18:13) The theory suggests the spike protein might interfere with these receptors, which could contribute to symptoms seen in long COVID, POTS, severe fatigue, and brain fog. (18:23) So nicotine binds to those same receptors. (18:26) So the idea is is that nicotine might compete with the spike protein at the receptor and restore the signaling. (18:32) And I will tell you that, you know, my wife was sort of at wit's end with long COVID.

Scott Benner (18:39) And I had heard

Suzanne (18:40) this know what it's like. (18:41) You know what this is like.

Scott Benner (18:42) Parifying. (18:43) Absolutely. (18:43) So, you know, go to the mall, come home, three days resting?

Suzanne (18:47) Yeah. (18:48) Yeah. (18:48) Exactly. (18:48) Exactly. (18:49) Like like, I'm I'm very excited about this interview, but I'm like, okay.

Suzanne (18:52) At least I'm very glad I don't have anything else that I have to do today.

Scott Benner (18:56) Right. (18:56) No. (18:56) No. (18:57) No. (18:57) I've I've I've seen it for a while now.

Scott Benner (18:59) I saw some people online talking about it. (19:01) Seemed like bro science at that point. (19:04) And but I still mentioned it to my wife. (19:05) Let me clear my throat. (19:06) Anyway, she, poo pooed me.

Scott Benner (19:09) And Uh-huh. (19:09) As she should have, by the way. (19:11) And Yeah. (19:11) And then I'm talking to a lady on the podcast a few years later a few months later, excuse me, and she says, oh, I've, you know, really getting my long COVID, under control. (19:21) And I was like, how'd you do that?

Scott Benner (19:22) And she goes, oh, you know, I hope this doesn't sound crazy, but I use nicotine patches. (19:25) And I was like, oh, I've heard of that. (19:27) We talked it through, and I went on Amazon, ordered nicotine patches, and, you know, basically said to my wife, like, know, just do this. (19:35) What could Mhmm. (19:36) You know, it's not gonna hurt you.

Scott Benner (19:38) It's not like it's not it's not like your your head's gonna pop off. (19:41) Like, put the nicotine patch on once every twenty four hours, and let's see what happens. (19:44) And I'd say about three weeks into it, I overheard her on a call with a colleague telling them, my husband, like, he suggested this, and I feel a lot better now. (19:53) And it really did help

Suzanne (19:54) her Wow.

Scott Benner (19:55) Astonishingly. (19:56) Anyway

Suzanne (19:56) I I mean, I I it might be worth a try. (19:58) I'm very sensitive, like, to a lot of things, so it's like I have to be careful with, like, regular coffee.

Scott Benner (20:05) Start with half a patch. (20:06) Cut it in half.

Suzanne (20:07) Yeah. (20:08) Yeah. (20:08) You know, I I mean so I I I did find my TSH, and I'm 2.23.

Scott Benner (20:12) Yeah. (20:13) See, I would tell you to listen to episode four thirteen of the podcast where, integrative doctor and endocrinologist is gonna tell you that anything over two one with symptoms needs medication.

Suzanne (20:24) I've tried thyroid medication many times, and I

Scott Benner (20:27) It brings your TSH down, but doesn't make you feel better?

Suzanne (20:30) I can't even take it for, more than a week. (20:33) What happens? (20:35) I what's the word? (20:37) I can't describe it, but I feel horrible. (20:39) Like, I it's it's it's kinda makes me, like, race.

Suzanne (20:42) Like, I I can't

Scott Benner (20:44) Oh, your heart races?

Suzanne (20:45) Not my heart. (20:46) No? (20:46) Just my whole being. (20:48) I I can't even explain it.

Scott Benner (20:50) It's How much are they giving you?

Suzanne (20:52) Always go with the lowest doses. (20:53) We always start with the and I and I have a great doctor.

Scott Benner (20:56) I believe you.

Suzanne (20:57) Well, I it's funny. (20:58) Like, she has a a functional medicine practice, but she can't see me there because I can't afford her prices. (21:06) But I see her at another clinic that she works at through my insurance, so she doesn't have all the time to but but she she does what she can for me. (21:14) And so she she tests she constantly tests my and I'm always on the low end of normal. (21:20) So she's like, well, let's just try something.

Suzanne (21:22) So I've tried different forms. (21:24) I've tried Cytomel. (21:25) I've tried I think I did Armour a long time ago, and I didn't think it did anything, and so I stopped. (21:32) But I think I should try that again, but my insurance doesn't pay for it. (21:35) Not that I wouldn't She was giving you the t three without the t four?

Suzanne (21:39) We've tried everything. (21:40) Oh. (21:40) We've tried the we've tried all the things. (21:43) Did you ever tried sakes.

Scott Benner (21:44) Tirosint? (21:46) It's like a Yeah. (21:47) Yeah. (21:47) You tried that either.

Suzanne (21:48) It's funny.

Scott Benner (21:48) Okay.

Suzanne (21:48) It's funny because I was going through some stuff, and I found it the other day. (21:51) And I you know, I was like, oh, yeah. (21:53) I should probably throw this out. (21:54) Or

Scott Benner (21:55) pop one in your mouth and see what happens. (21:57) Yeah. (21:57) So you're telling me that when you're on the lowest dose, it speeds you up?

Suzanne (22:03) Yeah. (22:03) And not a and not a and not a comfortable way.

Scott Benner (22:05) Okay. (22:06) I you know, I understand that part. (22:07) Like, did you try to go to, like, every other day? (22:10) Or

Suzanne (22:11) Did I might have. (22:12) I don't remember.

Scott Benner (22:13) Because what other what do you have all the classic, like, Hashimoto's symptoms?

Suzanne (22:18) Lately, I have the weight gain, and that's been in the last few years.

Scott Benner (22:22) Mhmm.

Suzanne (22:24) Remember what the classic symptoms are?

Scott Benner (22:26) Well, fatigue, persist yeah. (22:28) Yeah. (22:29) Persistent tiredness, low energy even after sleeping, weight gain. (22:33) Yeah. (22:33) Usually, five and twenty pound range happens even when you're eating less.

Scott Benner (22:38) Cold intolerance, do you have that?

Suzanne (22:41) Sometimes, but not all the time. (22:43) I get actually, I get hot a lot.

Scott Benner (22:45) Okay. (22:45) Brain fog, slower thinking memory? (22:47) Yeah. (22:48) Okay.

Suzanne (22:48) Big time. (22:48) I mean, that's been for twenty four years.

Scott Benner (22:51) Depression or low mood?

Suzanne (22:53) Can be. (22:54) Yeah.

Scott Benner (22:54) Hair, skin, and appearance. (22:55) We're looking for hair loss on

Suzanne (22:57) the scalp, loss of the outer third of your eyebrows. (23:00) Probably the eyebrow thing. (23:01) And I I've gone through bouts of hair loss. (23:04) Right now, I'm I'm not, but, you know, like, it just kinda comes and goes.

Scott Benner (23:08) Yeah. (23:08) Suzanne, do you wanna keep going, do you wanna assume that you have Hashimoto's? (23:12) Rough or flaky skin, pale or yellowish tone?

Suzanne (23:15) No. (23:16) Not really.

Scott Benner (23:16) Okay. (23:17) Puffy face around your eyes?

Suzanne (23:20) Maybe.

Scott Benner (23:21) Brittle nails?

Suzanne (23:22) Yeah. (23:22) That's I mean I mean yeah. (23:24) Definitely.

Scott Benner (23:25) Constipation, muscle weakness?

Suzanne (23:27) The muscle weakness is new. (23:29) I mean, the fatigue has been going on for twenty four years. (23:31) Yeah. (23:32) But the the muscle weakness is really within the last few years.

Scott Benner (23:35) Okay. (23:35) Joint or muscle aching?

Suzanne (23:38) They'll come and go.

Scott Benner (23:39) Back in the day, heavy or irregular periods?

Suzanne (23:42) Yes.

Scott Benner (23:43) Low libido? (23:44) Sorry, Suzanne.

Suzanne (23:45) Probably not. (23:46) Oh,

Scott Benner (23:47) no. (23:47) You're still getting after it? (23:49) Suzanne, is that what you're telling me? (23:50) What is what is happening right now?

Suzanne (23:51) I'm just saying I'm just saying

Scott Benner (23:52) Oh, probably you don't wanna answer?

Suzanne (23:54) No. (23:54) It's just kind of a sensitive question, but Sure it is.

Scott Benner (23:58) Well, maybe that's a podcast. (23:59) If it was Yeah. (24:00) You know, if it was PBS, I probably wouldn't have asked you. (24:03) So you don't have to answer anything you don't wanna answer.

Suzanne (24:05) Okay.

Scott Benner (24:06) Okay? (24:07) Anxiety, heart palpitations, sweating, irritability.

Suzanne (24:10) That can be. (24:11) Yeah.

Scott Benner (24:11) Okay. (24:12) Wow.

Suzanne (24:13) Also Go ahead. (24:14) That's all I mean, I I just don't I don't know. (24:16) I just don't think I have Hashimoto's, but but I I know that if I if I don't eat right, like, well, maybe, you know, maybe because diet has kinda kept things at bay. (24:26) But right now, yeah, nothing's keeping anything at bay.

Scott Benner (24:29) I mean, listen. (24:30) A lot of these things are, like, vagaries that, like, apply to a lot. (24:34) It's a it's a problem with, like, a lot of autoimmune stuff, actually.

Suzanne (24:37) Right? (24:38) Right. (24:38) Right.

Scott Benner (24:38) Is it you just can be like, hey. (24:40) Do you have this? (24:40) Like, yeah. (24:41) Sort of 40 other things.

Suzanne (24:43) Yeah. (24:43) No. (24:43) No. (24:43) The yeah. (24:44) The the nonspecific symptoms.

Scott Benner (24:46) Yeah.

Suzanne (24:47) Yeah.

Scott Benner (24:47) When you're on the meds, racing heart, anxiety, jitteriness, sweating, trouble sleeping, shakiness, feeling amped up. (24:53) You had those things? (24:55) Okay. (24:56) Did it start with palpitations?

Suzanne (24:59) No. (24:59) I don't I don't think I had palpitations that

Scott Benner (25:01) I know of. (25:02) The Internet says that it that very possibly just has to do with the dose being too high.

Suzanne (25:07) But we always we always started low. (25:10) Like like, if if the doctor said, oh, take this dose, I'll be like, oh, no. (25:14) Let's take it even lower.

Scott Benner (25:15) You were able to, like, take half even or,

Suzanne (25:18) Yeah.

Scott Benner (25:19) Yeah. (25:19) Did it happen, like, as soon as you put the first pill in, or did it take a little bit of time?

Suzanne (25:23) Both. (25:25) Usually we usually took a day or two, at least.

Scott Benner (25:27) Yeah. (25:28) You are a lightweight, though, generally speaking. (25:30) Like, a lot of stuff impacts you.

Suzanne (25:32) Yeah. (25:32) I'm I'm very sensitive.

Scott Benner (25:33) Yeah. (25:33) Yeah. (25:33) That was nice. (25:34) So a nicer way to say it. (25:35) Yeah.

Scott Benner (25:35) Yeah. (25:35) I'm sorry. (25:36) Yeah. (25:36) I am very similar. (25:37) Like, when I if I go for a procedure and they put me out, I'm like, you're not gonna eat much of that.

Scott Benner (25:41) I'm like Yeah. (25:42) I'm like, I'll go out pretty easy. (25:43) Okay. (25:43) Well, I mean, listen. (25:44) I'm sorry.

Scott Benner (25:45) I'm not I would just I'm just trying to help you, like, think through it.

Suzanne (25:48) Appreciate it. (25:49) You know? (25:49) I feel like I wish I had house in my life except without the drug problem and the snarky attitude.

Scott Benner (25:54) I don't know.

Suzanne (25:55) You know? (25:56) Somebody who's like, we're gonna figure this out. (25:58) You know?

Scott Benner (25:58) I thought the attitude was fun. (26:00) The drug problem was weird.

Suzanne (26:01) Well, wouldn't be a show without the attitude.

Scott Benner (26:03) I I guess you're right. (26:04) Yeah. (26:05) I guess you're absolutely right. (26:08) I yeah. (26:09) I don't know.

Scott Benner (26:09) Like, it I mean, if it's Hashimoto's and you need the medication, then just splitting doses or just using a much lighter dose could possibly be your answer. (26:20) Like, as much as you didn't like how you felt when you were on it, did it dissipate some of the other problems?

Suzanne (26:26) Not that I know of. (26:27) And and I think I think the reason I got so crazy on it is because I don't really need it. (26:34) I don't think that's really my root issue.

Scott Benner (26:36) Yeah. (26:36) I take your point. (26:36) Like, if you didn't need it, this is exactly the outcome that would come from it. (26:39) Yeah. (26:40) Yeah.

Scott Benner (26:40) For sure.

Suzanne (26:40) But but I I I don't know. (26:41) But but I I am gonna have I was thinking I should have doctor my doctor do a, a thyroid panel next time I go see her a full one.

Scott Benner (26:49) Yeah. (26:50) It's a shame. (26:50) I mean, honestly, though, I mean, for $30, you got nicotine patches coming from Amazon. (26:55) So

Suzanne (26:56) Right.

Scott Benner (26:56) You know, I mean, I would tell you the same thing I told my wife. (26:59) If there's seven milligram patches, it's $30 for 14 patches. (27:03) So I basically I think I paid $60 for a month. (27:06) She did it for a month, and she was, like, better. (27:09) So Okay.

Scott Benner (27:10) I but I will tell you, I have dabbled with them just so I understood what was happening to her. (27:16) And it would be fair to tell you that after not using one for a while, I I tried to just slap one on again because she stopped and started, I wanted to see what was coming from stopping and starting. (27:28) And it like, I did like, I got nauseous from it. (27:32) Like, it was too much for me. (27:33) So I would if I was if you do this, I would definitely start slower.

Scott Benner (27:39) Like, there's a world where I might even, like, quarter those patches up and wear, a quarter of it for twenty four hours just to try to get yourself accustomed to it or be you know, make a science experiment out of it and figure out how much of it. (27:49) I'm not saying a quarter is the right amount, but, like, just to give yourself a little bit of it and see if you can ramp up to it. (27:55) Because, I mean, honestly, for, you know, for a month's worth of trying something, if it actually helped you, like, think how amazing that would be.

Suzanne (28:03) Right. (28:04) Right. (28:04) No.

Scott Benner (28:04) She's not continuing to do it. (28:06) She just did it, and she stopped.

Suzanne (28:08) Wow. (28:09) That's that's interesting. (28:10) Yeah. (28:10) Look at you can look it up.

Scott Benner (28:11) There's a website online that talks about, nicotine and COVID if you wanna look into it.

Suzanne (28:16) Can you recommend a brand?

Scott Benner (28:17) I was using Havitrol.

Suzanne (28:20) Havitrol?

Scott Benner (28:21) H a b I t r o l. (28:23) There's other ones. (28:23) Okay. (28:24) Some of them are Okay. (28:25) Less expensive.

Suzanne (28:26) Okay. (28:27) Well, just sometimes you go you go to look for something, and there's a million choices. (28:31) Yeah. (28:31) Yeah.

Scott Benner (28:32) Yeah.

Suzanne (28:32) Can somebody just give me a the work for the

Scott Benner (28:35) Tell me what to do, please. (28:36) Yeah. (28:37) I'm not yeah. (28:37) I I have to find let me see if I can find the, nicotine protocol. (28:46) It's covidinstitute.org.

Scott Benner (28:51) It it'll talk about nicotine. (28:54) What nicotine cannot do, nicotine doesn't it's it's so funny. (28:57) Like, everyone online says nicotine, like, like, interacts with the receptor. (29:03) And so it doesn't actually it doesn't touch the spike protein itself, and I don't even know. (29:10) I'm I'm looking here.

Scott Benner (29:11) It weakly binds to the alpha seven nicotine receptor on a different site, the spike protein. (29:17) So it's unable to dislodge the spike protein from the nicotine. (29:19) Oh, see, this is interesting. (29:21) So covidinstitute.org is telling you nicotine is not gonna work on long COVID.

Suzanne (29:27) Mhmm.

Scott Benner (29:28) That's interesting. (29:29) And if you go to a different

Suzanne (29:32) website didn't know that. (29:33) Right?

Scott Benner (29:34) No. (29:34) No. (29:34) I mean, honestly, like, yeah, I just went with what the lady on the like, the conversation. (29:38) Like, look. (29:38) I tried it, and it really helped me.

Scott Benner (29:40) And I thought, well, for $30, we can get going and see.

Suzanne (29:42) Yeah. (29:43) Yeah. (29:43) It's all

Scott Benner (29:44) over the place. (29:45) Nicotine patches could help. (29:46) Nicotine patches won't help. (29:48) Blah blah blah. (29:49) The world is so interesting, isn't it?

Scott Benner (29:51) Yeah.

Suzanne (29:51) When I when I, was first dealing with the fatigue, everybody was tell all the doctors were telling me I was depressed, and that's why I was tired. (29:59) And so they started me on the tour of SSRIs and and I didn't have a good experience with those. (30:06) I took several and finally, I was like, I'm done with this. (30:09) And I'd read about this stuff called five HTP

Scott Benner (30:13) Mhmm.

Suzanne (30:14) In a magazine, and I thought, what the heck? (30:17) And I tried it, and it really helps with my mood.

Scott Benner (30:20) Okay.

Suzanne (30:20) It it really so, you know, it's like sometimes you're just like, I'm just gonna try this.

Scott Benner (30:25) And Hey. (30:26) Listen. (30:26) When you're in your situation, I say why not?

Suzanne (30:29) Yeah. (30:29) Yeah.

Scott Benner (30:30) Yeah. (30:31) Because if it's not thyroid and, I mean, the SSRI thing, that's just what they do to ladies when they I know. (30:37) They have your complaints. (30:39) That's just the bull thing they do.

Suzanne (30:40) That's that's why when I go to the doctor and they say, are you depressed? (30:45) I'm like, I'm good. (30:46) Just like, don't wanna

Scott Benner (30:48) Now everything's fine.

Suzanne (30:48) I'm I don't wanna go down that route.

Scott Benner (30:51) I love chronic pain and fatigue. (30:53) Thank you. (30:53) Yeah. (30:54) Yeah. (30:54) And five HTP precursor to serotonin serotonin, it can increase serotonin or melatonin, help with mood calmness, pain regulation, sleep.

Scott Benner (31:04) Yeah. (31:05) It's interesting. (31:05) Mood and anxiety. (31:06) Low thyroid function could be associated with lower serotonin signaling, so raising serotonin may help with low mood, irritability, anxiety, feeling mentally overwhelmed. (31:16) Interesting.

Suzanne (31:17) Yeah. (31:18) Yeah.

Scott Benner (31:18) Very good.

Suzanne (31:19) So I under I'm I'm I'm I'm not adverse to just trying something.

Scott Benner (31:22) Sure. (31:23) No. (31:23) It doesn't sound like it. (31:24) Yeah. (31:24) Now you were like, hey.

Scott Benner (31:24) I heard of something in a magazine. (31:26) I'll swallow it.

Suzanne (31:27) Yeah. (31:27) Exactly. (31:28) It

Scott Benner (31:30) sounds crazy. (31:31) I mean, a little, but I think maybe one more generation of people living on the Internet, no one's gonna think of that oddly anymore. (31:38) You know what I mean?

Suzanne (31:39) Like Right.

Scott Benner (31:40) Yeah. (31:40) Because you and I are old enough to remember if somebody said something to you, you're like, that is crazy because you didn't know about it or couldn't talk to anybody else.

Suzanne (31:48) Yeah. (31:48) Right. (31:49) Right. (31:49) Right.

Caregiving for an Aging Parent with T1D

Scott Benner (31:50) How do you deal with the the diabetes? (31:53) Is it a pretty successful thing? (31:55) Is it a background thing for you, or is it a thing that even years later, you still struggle with?

Suzanne (31:59) Well, here's the thing. (32:01) I I feel like when I was first diagnosed, I took it in stride. (32:06) Like, I it was a background thing.

Scott Benner (32:08) Okay.

Suzanne (32:09) You know? (32:10) I mean, like like you always say, you know, if you're gonna have diabetes, this is the time in the world to have it. (32:15) You know? (32:16) Like, we've got the tools. (32:18) You know, I was grateful to to be able to do finger sticks even at the beginning.

Suzanne (32:22) And and right now, I I do a closed loop with tandem, and that that's been pretty good. (32:29) But the thing about it is now that I have chronic fatigue, it's it's just another burden. (32:37) Diabetes is like a burden. (32:39) And then now taking care of my mother with diabetes Yeah. (32:42) And and just everything from dealing with customer service to dealing with, you know, just the site changes and like, if I'm gonna go away I mean, this is a big thing right now.

Suzanne (32:53) Like, I I was able to travel a couple times last year. (32:57) Mhmm. (32:57) I went for I used to go for, like, six weeks at a time because I don't I don't have a lot of money, and all my close friends are in Boston, so I'll just go there.

Scott Benner (33:04) Yeah.

Suzanne (33:04) But now I, you know, I I could only I went for first, I went for one week. (33:09) The second time, I went for, I think, two or three weeks. (33:13) And finding people to change her stuff was really hard. (33:18) And we live in a smallish city, and so just finding people to deal with that was was really, really difficult. (33:26) So now it's it's it's more it's it's more of a burden.

Scott Benner (33:30) Okay. (33:31) Yeah. (33:31) Be because it's two people?

Suzanne (33:33) Because it's two people and I have chronic fatigue.

Scott Benner (33:36) And you have chronic yeah.

Suzanne (33:37) And and also because just finding caregivers that like, my mom almost went into an independent living facility a couple months ago. (33:48) I talked to one of the administrators, I'm like, Well, the thing is are we gonna be able to have somebody that can help her? (33:55) Because she can't do her site changes now. (33:59) Yeah, she stopped being able to do that about seventeen months ago.

Scott Benner (34:02) Mhmm.

Suzanne (34:03) So I have to do all that for her. (34:06) And just to and the guy was like, oh, yeah. (34:08) We have a lot of people in her situation. (34:10) And then when I talked to the actual people that do it, they had no idea what to do with a pump, no idea not much idea about a CGM. (34:18) A lot of people there do wear CGMs, but they're able to do them themselves.

Suzanne (34:22) And it it was just like, woah. (34:25) This is this is crazy.

Scott Benner (34:26) I like when they're like, no. (34:27) We know all about it. (34:28) We mistreat people with type one diabetes all the time here.

Suzanne (34:30) Yeah. (34:31) And and then when when it came down to it, they found somebody that could do it, but it was gonna cost about $560 a month just for somebody to come in for, you know, like, ten minutes and, like like, a few a couple of times a week.

Scott Benner (34:46) Really? (34:47) And what what do you do? (34:48) Are you going over and helping her?

Suzanne (34:49) Well, see, this was in a different town that I live in. (34:52) And I would I would eventually move there, but I'm I'm just not ready to pick up and move right now. (34:57) She had a friend there, and it would kinda be a fun place for her to be. (35:01) Like, she'd have a lot of of social interaction. (35:03) And so it was it wouldn't I wouldn't be able to just come over and do it.

Suzanne (35:09) Mhmm. (35:09) Or at least for a while until I, you know, packed up and moved.

Scott Benner (35:13) Is there a big, mental health component to this? (35:17) Like, do you feel like you're not helping her as much, or is it more of a strain on you? (35:22) Like, what's the the, I guess, the psychological impacts to your mom being in this situation?

Suzanne (35:28) The cycle impact on me? (35:30) Yeah. (35:31) On you. (35:31) Yeah.

Scott Benner (35:31) Do you feel like you're

Suzanne (35:33) I yeah. (35:33) You know

Scott Benner (35:33) what I mean?

Suzanne (35:33) It's it's too much. (35:35) It's and and it's, actually, it's it's been amazing, though. (35:39) I'm I'm grateful, but it it has been a lot. (35:43) Like, it it's not even just that. (35:44) It's that I have to do all her financial stuff as well.

Suzanne (35:47) And it's just it's just kind of and and I I have you know, I'm I'm wanting to to work on some music right now. (35:54) And so it's just it's just hard to find time to to, you know, balance everything. (35:58) And I and I teach a little bit as well. (36:01) So it's it's just kinda like I sometimes I feel like I'm just kinda circling the know?

Scott Benner (36:06) Suzanne's like, listen. (36:07) I'm giving up. (36:08) This is what I'm this is what I would do. (36:09) Yeah. (36:10) Would just I'm here to tell you all.

Suzanne (36:12) Yeah. (36:13) No. (36:13) I mean, it's just I'm and also, I'm I'm I'm kind of I'm kind of sick of of self care for myself, you know, just I have, a special diet and all and I'm just I'm just like, ugh. (36:24) You know? (36:24) Like

Scott Benner (36:25) Too much to to to be thinking about constantly.

Suzanne (36:28) Yeah. (36:28) It's just it's just kinda too much. (36:30) But but but my mom is a really delightful person, and so I'm grateful that I'm able and I I was just talking to a friend of mine this morning, and she reminded me that if I didn't have diabetes and I hadn't learned a whole lot about natural medicine, I wouldn't be able to help my mom the way that I have been.

Scott Benner (36:47) Yeah. (36:47) I mean, there's high sides to all this, but it doesn't change what a burden it

Suzanne (36:50) is. (36:50) No. (36:51) It doesn't. (36:51) It it doesn't. (36:52) It doesn't take that away.

Scott Benner (36:53) Are you anxious?

Suzanne (36:55) I can be, but I'm not usually, but I I can be.

Scott Benner (36:59) Okay. (37:00) The burden of this is really about time and energy then?

Suzanne (37:03) Yeah. (37:04) Yeah. (37:04) Okay.

Scott Benner (37:05) Yeah. (37:05) You think if you had energy the way other people do, maybe it wouldn't feel the same to you?

Suzanne (37:09) Oh, yeah. (37:10) Oh, yeah.

Scott Benner (37:10) Okay. (37:11) Yeah. (37:11) Because you do seem excited to help her. (37:13) Actually, like, happy to help her, I guess.

Suzanne (37:15) Yeah. (37:16) Well, in most days, yeah. (37:18) A

Scott Benner (37:18) lot. (37:18) Yeah.

Suzanne (37:19) Yeah. (37:19) It's it's like, you know, some days when I've like like, my pump has run out and I've had to do like, it it only takes, like, five, ten minutes, but it's like and then then hers will run out or her her pump will, like, malfunction or, you know, just something like that, and you gotta call customer service and da da da. (37:35) You know, it all happens at the same time. (37:37) And

Scott Benner (37:38) I just had to go to the pharmacy yesterday, and they messed everything up so much that I got home and nothing was the way it was supposed to be, and I had to go back. (37:46) And as I left the house, I said to my wife, I feel capable of dealing with this, but just in case things go sideways, I'll see you at the police station.

Suzanne (37:55) And I and I and I was

Scott Benner (37:56) I was on my way out the door again. (37:58) I know how you feel.

Suzanne (37:59) Exactly. (38:00) Yeah.

Scott Benner (38:00) Yeah. (38:01) Ex Do you have brothers or sisters?

Suzanne (38:04) I do. (38:05) I have a brother.

Scott Benner (38:06) Is he not helpful?

Suzanne (38:07) He's got a lot going on. (38:09) He's got three adult kids in three different states, and he kinda leaves things to me.

Scott Benner (38:14) The answer is yes. (38:14) He's not helpful?

Suzanne (38:18) Okay. (38:18) I you know You're so polite, Suzette. (38:22) I you're you're fine. (38:22) Ask him for something if I ask him for something, he'll he'll try to do it. (38:27) But he's not like, oh, how can I, you know, how can I do this?

Suzanne (38:30) How can I help?

Scott Benner (38:31) That's how I describe my marriage after thirty years.

Suzanne (38:33) If I ask her to do something, she'll try to do it. (38:35) No.

Scott Benner (38:36) I hear what you're saying. (38:37) Do you and your mom ever look at each other and are like, look at us in this thing with this diabetes? (38:41) Do you guys talk about it?

Suzanne (38:43) Yeah. (38:43) Yeah. (38:44) We do.

Scott Benner (38:44) What's her takeaway of a life with diabetes, do you think?

Suzanne (38:48) Well okay. (38:49) She's only had it for, like, since she's been in her fifties.

Scott Benner (38:52) That's a long time.

Suzanne (38:53) It is. (38:54) Is long

Scott Benner (38:54) time. (38:55) Yeah.

Suzanne (38:55) Yeah. (38:55) I think so so she was probably I guess she was probably, like, 55 maybe when she was so so I guess

Scott Benner (39:01) Thirty years?

Suzanne (39:02) Yeah. (39:02) So she's had it for thirty years. (39:03) I've had it for thirty four. (39:05) So yeah. (39:08) What's her take?

Suzanne (39:10) I don't know what her take is.

Scott Benner (39:12) Does she seem did she seem burdened by it prior to not being able to take care of herself?

Suzanne (39:17) You know, she you know, it's funny because I got it first. (39:22) And so she was just kinda she just kinda and she she was able to diagnose herself by kinda looking at me with some of the symptoms. (39:30) Mhmm. (39:31) So I think she just thought I was kind of like a a a good example to her. (39:36) And so she was just like, well, Suzanne can do it.

Suzanne (39:38) I can do it kind of thing.

Scott Benner (39:39) Yeah. (39:40) She just went on her way and did it. (39:41) Okay. (39:41) Yeah. (39:41) Hey.

Overmedication vs. Dementia

Scott Benner (39:42) Why did you think she had dementia, but she didn't?

Suzanne (39:44) Oh, well okay. (39:45) So she thought she had dementia. (39:47) Okay. (39:48) And well, for what there was a certain political, person that, she would look at the TV and go, I have what he has. (40:00) And because of look in his on his face.

Suzanne (40:02) One day, she drove over to my house. (40:05) I was gonna help her with something with her insulin pump.

Scott Benner (40:07) Okay.

Suzanne (40:08) And in the course of the conversation, it came out that she didn't feel safe living alone anymore. (40:14) She didn't feel safe driving anymore, and she didn't wanna drive anyway. (40:19) And I was like, well, you can stay here. (40:21) I mean, I didn't know what else to say. (40:22) Like, you can stay here tonight.

Suzanne (40:23) You know? (40:24) A week and a half into that, and she had she had scheduled herself for a cognitive evaluation.

Scott Benner (40:30) Really? (40:31) How old and what age did this happen?

Suzanne (40:33) She was, like, 83.

Scott Benner (40:35) Oh, just a couple years ago. (40:36) Okay.

Suzanne (40:36) Yeah. (40:37) Yeah. (40:37) Yeah. (40:37) This is, like, seven. (40:38) Yeah.

Suzanne (40:39) Like yeah.

Scott Benner (40:39) Okay.

Suzanne (40:40) We finally well, and then a week and a half of her living with me, she broke her arm.

Scott Benner (40:45) Oh my gosh.

Suzanne (40:46) Fell and broke her arm. (40:47) So that was really hard. (40:49) That was talk about burden. (40:51) That was really hard. (40:52) Yeah.

Suzanne (40:52) You know? (40:53) Like, I had to help her with everything. (40:54) So she got her cognitive evaluation in, like, October year, and they do this little test called a slums test. (41:03) I it's Saint Louis something. (41:05) It's like this little cursory, you know, cognitive evaluation, and she got 13 out of 30 on it.

Suzanne (41:11) I'm kind of about natural medicine when you can be. (41:16) I mean, I would never go a day without my insulin or or, you know, like, there's a place for but but I I also think a lot of things are overprescribed. (41:25) The the doctor said, oh, let's hold she was on three blood pressure medications.

Scott Benner (41:30) Okay.

Suzanne (41:31) And so I took her off two of those, and now she only takes the other one once a day where she was taking it twice a day and her blood pressure's fine. (41:40) I took her off a statin drug and she was shuffling her feet. (41:45) She does not shuffle her feet anymore. (41:47) When she moved in with me, she was not interested in food. (41:51) She was not interested in reading, the things that she loves.

Suzanne (41:54) She just didn't care. (41:55) And over the course of time, she she got another slums test in March, and she got 19 out of 30. (42:07) And then last October, she got another one. (42:09) She got 27 out of 30, which is pretty much normal.

Scott Benner (42:12) Is this the blood pressure meant? (42:14) I mean, first of all, this is, this might sound crazy to people, but this is not incredibly uncommon for older people to go to a doctor. (42:20) They put her on a blood pressure medication. (42:22) Then they go to another doctor. (42:24) They add a med, but don't take the other one away.

Scott Benner (42:26) Yeah. (42:26) Yeah.

Suzanne (42:26) Yeah. (42:27) Exactly.

Scott Benner (42:27) Right.

Suzanne (42:28) So I I think it was just maybe she was just over medicated. (42:32) Yeah. (42:32) And and I I also, you know, I I help her with her food, you know, and I help manage her diabetes. (42:38) Like, her her a one c's have been great lately. (42:40) Like, they've been, like, six something.

Scott Benner (42:42) Wow. (42:43) Good for you. (42:43) I'm sorry. (42:44) Does this whole process of being with her make you start worrying about yourself as an older? (42:49) Because you Oh, yeah.

Scott Benner (42:49) Because you don't have a you when you get older.

Suzanne (42:52) Exactly. (42:53) Yeah. (42:53) No. (42:53) I don't. (42:54) And I yeah.

Suzanne (42:54) And I don't have kids. (42:55) And, yeah, I don't have kids to take care of me. (42:57) I I yeah. (42:58) So exactly. (43:00) Yeah.

Suzanne (43:00) It definite definitely.

Scott Benner (43:01) To answer your question, yes, I'm scared out of my mind. (43:04) Thank you.

Suzanne (43:04) Yeah.

Scott Benner (43:04) Well, yeah, no. (43:05) I hear you. (43:06) If you left her to her own, like, what would stop her from taking good care of herself? (43:10) Is it dexterity? (43:11) Is it clarity?

Scott Benner (43:13) Like, what would stop her from taking care of her diabetes by herself?

Suzanne (43:16) Well, I think she said the with the pump, it's like her eyesight. (43:21) Mhmm. (43:21) You know, like, being able to see the you know? (43:24) And she does wear glasses, but, you know, like, her eyesight kinda, changes. (43:27) She keeps all her glasses because she had a doctor tell her, keep all your glasses because your eyesight will change even if you get a new prescription.

Suzanne (43:36) But still, for her to living alone was just hard for her. (43:41) Sure. (43:41) I mean, we were in touch. (43:42) Like, we we spent time together. (43:44) It wasn't like like I just left her out there on the farm.

Suzanne (43:47) But, like, we ate together frequently.

Scott Benner (43:50) And Is it is it strange for you to still be this in touch with your mom, or do you like it?

Suzanne (43:55) I really liked living alone. (43:57) I really did. (43:59) I really did. (44:00) But I I'm like, I don't know. (44:02) Like, I'm I'm grateful.

Suzanne (44:04) You know, I think it would be great. (44:05) She may get another apartment in this building. (44:08) That might be good. (44:09) I'm I'm not sure if I wanna stay in this building. (44:11) I want some green space too.

Scott Benner (44:12) Okay.

Suzanne (44:13) Fortunately, I have an extra bedroom. (44:15) Like, what if I didn't? (44:16) Yeah. (44:16) You'd be on the sofa. (44:17) Your mom be sleeping in your bed.

Suzanne (44:19) Yeah. (44:19) Yeah. (44:19) Exactly. (44:20) Exactly. (44:21) So You live in Iowa.

Suzanne (44:22) Have you tried meth for all these problems, or

Scott Benner (44:24) is that not something you've gotten into yet?

Suzanne (44:25) Meth. (44:26) Why is why is meth an Iowa thing?

Scott Benner (44:28) I don't

Suzanne (44:29) know, isn't it? (44:30) I don't

Scott Benner (44:33) Listen. (44:33) If I'm just gonna generalize and you guys would've hold me down to all the details, this is gonna be a problem making this podcast. (44:38) Okay? (44:39) Okay.

Suzanne (44:40) Yeah. (44:41) Well, you need a fact checker.

Scott Benner (44:42) Well, let's not get crazy. (44:44) I guess I was leading into, like, how did you avoid medicating yourself other ways, like, through your life with all this? (44:52) Like, how come like, you're not a drinker. (44:54) Right? (44:54) You don't get high?

Scott Benner (44:55) Like, why do you not

Suzanne (44:56) Well, a friend's prayer, a lot of prayer.

Scott Benner (44:59) Yeah.

Suzanne (45:00) A lot of friends that that, you know, are committed to the same ethic. (45:06) Yeah. (45:06) But most of my close friends don't live in my state.

Scott Benner (45:09) They're in Boston?

Suzanne (45:10) Yeah. (45:11) They're in Boston or in Virginia or Texas or

Scott Benner (45:14) Yeah. (45:15) Yeah. (45:15) People move around. (45:16) What do you do for a living?

Suzanne (45:17) Most of my income is disability, but I still teach a little bit of music. (45:21) Mhmm. (45:22) And I'm learning music production.

Scott Benner (45:24) Oh, nice. (45:25) Throughout your adult life, it's been mostly disability?

Suzanne (45:28) No. (45:29) No. (45:29) I I I got on disability when I moved home to Iowa.

Scott Benner (45:32) Okay.

Suzanne (45:32) But I Okay. (45:34) When I was in Boston, I worked for a nonprofit, and I went around to different schools and taught music and produced big shows with kids.

Scott Benner (45:40) And Oh, wow.

Suzanne (45:41) So I I look back, and I'm like, how did I do that? (45:44) I mean, I I still in Boston for, like, ten years with with chronic fatigue at least. (45:51) Yeah. (45:51) Yeah.

Scott Benner (45:52) Just kinda power do you feel like you were powering through it?

Suzanne (45:54) Oh, yeah. (45:55) Yeah. (45:55) I mean and I had to pace. (45:57) Like, I couldn't I couldn't work enough. (45:59) Fortunately, I I worked at a job where I contracted, So you didn't you weren't there, you know, five days a week.

Suzanne (46:07) You would maybe be at some places two days a week and and maybe not for the whole day. (46:12) So but I would I was not able to keep up enough contracts to really

Scott Benner (46:17) Float the whole thing.

Suzanne (46:18) Yeah. (46:19) Yeah. (46:19) Yeah. (46:19) Well, that's Yeah.

Scott Benner (46:20) It really is just terrible to be impacted so much by something like that.

Suzanne (46:24) Right.

Scott Benner (46:25) Yeah.

Suzanne (46:25) So I right now, I have six private students. (46:28) And last month, I subbed online for a colleague, and it was just three students. (46:33) Absolutely delightful, but by the end of the month, I was a mess. (46:37) Just three like, it was about an hour and a half of extra time at you know?

Scott Benner (46:41) And it exhausted you.

Suzanne (46:42) And I was a mess, yeah, by the end of the month. (46:45) And I'm just like, ugh. (46:47) Yeah. (46:48) So and and I I love teaching. (46:50) I absolutely love it, but I just have to really pace myself.

Scott Benner (46:53) Yeah. (46:53) How long does it take you to bounce back when once you get, like, kind of, like, not burned out is the wrong word, once you get exhausted?

Suzanne (46:59) It depends. (47:01) Like, sometimes it'll take a day. (47:03) Sometimes it'll take, like okay. (47:05) So I was subbing for my friend in, like, towards the end well, anyway, like, the whole week after, I had, like, one and a half I counted. (47:16) I had, like, one and a half good days that whole next week.

Scott Benner (47:18) Like,

Suzanne (47:20) it was it was a mess. (47:22) Describe to people the difference between a good day and a bad day. (47:24) A bad day, you feel like there's this magnet pulling you towards your bed. (47:29) Like, yesterday was Saturday was kind of a bad day, and I I I actually dragged myself out. (47:35) One of my students was in a musical, and I dragged myself out and went to it.

Suzanne (47:41) But the whole time, I was just really like, I just wanted to be in my bed and and just not having to interact with people, and and I can't explain it.

Scott Benner (47:51) But not depression. (47:52) It's not you don't feel depressed. (47:53) You feel exhausted. (47:54) You

Suzanne (47:55) you kinda do, but you know it's a more of a physiological thing.

Scott Benner (47:59) Mhmm. (48:00) So you need to, like, get ramped up somehow. (48:03) Like, yeah, like, your battery your battery is low.

Suzanne (48:06) But that makes it worse. (48:08) Like, when you ramp yourself up, it's like you're using energy that you don't have, and so it kinda makes things worse.

Scott Benner (48:13) Oh, you get, like, an adrenaline crash afterwards?

Suzanne (48:16) Yes. (48:16) Yes.

Scott Benner (48:17) Okay. (48:18) Yeah. (48:18) Do if you do ramp yourself up for something, then the you pay you pay harder at the end. (48:23) You pay.

Suzanne (48:24) You you gotta pay the piper. (48:25) You you yeah. (48:26) That's the hard thing about it.

Scott Benner (48:28) Nothing's ever helped. (48:30) There's not a moment where you thought, like, as crazy as it sounds, like, you know, the the the oddest thing felt like it had an impact for you?

Suzanne (48:38) Not permanently. (48:39) No. (48:40) And and I'm very quick to pronounce myself cured if I have a good day.

Scott Benner (48:44) I'm like,

Suzanne (48:44) this has all been in my head all these years. (48:47) It's it's

Scott Benner (48:47) Figured it out. (48:48) It's green beans. (48:49) Yeah.

Suzanne (48:50) It's all been in my head. (48:51) So there's nothing that's that's like, oh, yeah. (48:55) I'm consistently friends paid for me to do an adrenal program and lots of different supplements. (49:01) I I felt like I was I was very sensitive to a lot of the supplements even you you know? (49:07) And they encourage you, like, take it really, really, really, really slow.

Scott Benner (49:11) You know? (49:12) How about your iron? (49:13) Do do a full iron panel ever?

Suzanne (49:15) You know, I used to have low iron when I first started all this. (49:19) And I would but that didn't even help. (49:21) I mean, I would take iron, and it didn't

Scott Benner (49:23) So you had a moment where somebody's like, oh, you're anemic. (49:26) This is gonna help you, and they jacked you back up, and then nothing changed? (49:29) Yeah. (49:30) How did you get your iron back up? (49:32) They give you infusions?

Suzanne (49:34) No. (49:34) They just tablets.

Scott Benner (49:36) Yeah. (49:36) Ew.

Suzanne (49:37) And then I think when I went through menopause, my iron was fine again. (49:41) You know? (49:41) Okay. (49:42) I I haven't had problems with iron, but I I probably should have my doctor test that this this I'll I'll see her at the end of the month.

Scott Benner (49:49) Yeah. (49:50) Make sure they test your ferritin too.

Suzanne (49:52) Yeah. (49:53) No. (49:53) She's she's a really smart doctor. (49:55) Yeah. (49:55) And she she doesn't do the just cursory stuff.

Scott Benner (49:57) Suzanne, listen. (49:59) I'm always interested when people say stuff like this. (50:01) Like, she's

Suzanne (50:01) a really great doctor. (50:03) You have a lot

Scott Benner (50:03) of problems. (50:04) I don't see her fixing any of them.

Suzanne (50:06) Yeah. (50:06) I know. (50:07) I know.

Finding Hope and Coping Mechanisms

Scott Benner (50:07) She's I I know. (50:08) So you mean she's thoughtful, thinks outside of the box, just trying to help you in ways other people wouldn't, etcetera.

Suzanne (50:14) That.

Scott Benner (50:15) But she hasn't gotten to the, like, the the promised land where she said something that ended up being valuable. (50:20) Do you think there's nothing that will help?

Suzanne (50:22) I don't know. (50:23) I I mean, I I don't know. (50:25) I hope there is.

Scott Benner (50:26) But What keeps you looking? (50:29) Like, what what keeps you motivated to keep hoping and, like, thinking like, you know what I mean? (50:33) Like, where's the hope come from that makes you think, like, I'm cured. (50:36) I figured it out. (50:36) Like, where do you get that from?

Suzanne (50:38) I I don't know if it's just a hope for a cure, but I don't know. (50:41) There there there's a fragment of a psalm that says, why are you downcast, oh my soul? (50:46) Why are you so disturbed within me? (50:48) Put your hope in God for I will yet praise him. (50:51) And I just I you know, whether I get better or not, I know that God is giving me something to hope for, whether it's in this life or the next.

Suzanne (51:00) I don't I don't that's all I can say, really.

Scott Benner (51:03) No. (51:03) You find you find your hope through faith.

Suzanne (51:04) Yes. (51:05) Yeah. (51:05) Yeah.

Scott Benner (51:06) Well, listen. (51:07) I I I would think you you deserve it wherever you can get it from, so that's awesome that you found it somewhere. (51:12) Because I I can imagine people would be I mean, this is a thing I think about a lot. (51:16) Right? (51:17) Like, with, you know, the people around me and the people that listen to this podcast, you know, lot of you are on difficult paths that don't always end with, like, some successful outcome.

Scott Benner (51:29) And you still have to get up and do it again and, you know, you have bouts of time where you feel better and worse and, you know, like, how do you keep going when the worst times come and how do you enjoy your life when the good times are there without thinking, oh, it's just gonna get bad again? (51:43) It's a lot. (51:44) You know?

Suzanne (51:44) It is.

Scott Benner (51:45) Yeah. (51:45) I mean, there's a lot of you can see even with, like like, you've you've mentioned money a number of times. (51:51) Like, I don't have money for that or anything. (51:53) Like, you know, you're watching, what, Selena Gomez out in the world. (51:56) Right?

Scott Benner (51:56) She has, what, lupus or something like that? (51:58) Like, it's

Suzanne (51:59) She's got her own she's got her own Oreo too. (52:01) Did you notice that?

Scott Benner (52:02) She has her own what?

Suzanne (52:03) Oreo. (52:04) I I was in the grocery store the other day. (52:06) Yes. (52:07) I was in the grocery store the other day, and they had Selena Gomez Oreos, and I'm like

Scott Benner (52:11) Well, I didn't know that, but that makes my point better. (52:13) Like, she's got

Suzanne (52:14) I guess you've made it when you've got your own Oreo.

Scott Benner (52:16) You have you when you have Oreo money to pay for your treatments is what I'm saying is you're getting great, like you know, you're probably getting cutting edge help, and I've still seen I've seen her struggle over the last number of years pretty heartily.

Suzanne (52:28) I didn't realize she had lupus.

Scott Benner (52:29) Is that what she oh, listen. (52:30) I might have made that up. (52:31) Hold on a second.

Suzanne (52:32) She just said that. (52:33) I I mean, I'm just I'm not familiar with her music or and I know she's a she's a, like, a pop star, but I don't I'm not all that familiar with her music.

Scott Benner (52:42) Hold on a second. (52:42) Let me just make sure I'm right about that. (52:45) I didn't just give her something.

Suzanne (52:46) I think said you said yeah.

Scott Benner (52:48) She has Do you not watch Only Murders in the Building?

Suzanne (52:51) No. (52:52) Oh my goodness.

Scott Benner (52:53) Oh, okay. (52:53) So so she does have lupus. (52:55) She's had a kidney transplant because of kidney failure. (52:58) Woah. (52:59) 2020, she publicly revealed she has bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression.

Scott Benner (53:04) Wow. (53:05) But the lupus specifically like, there's a lot of, like so if you watch Only Murders in the Building, you'll, like, watch a season of it, and there's a version of Selena Gomez that's acting in it. (53:16) And then the next season of it, she looks like she might weigh forty or fifty pounds more. (53:21) And then in the next season, it's gone again. (53:23) And I think that's all the lupus and the inflammation and all that stuff.

Scott Benner (53:27) Wow. (53:27) My point was is that, like, when you've got her money and you still can't overcome stuff like this

Suzanne (53:33) Exactly. (53:34) Yeah.

Scott Benner (53:34) Yeah. (53:34) Yeah.

Suzanne (53:34) Like, it's maybe it's not a matter of affording being able to afford treatment. (53:40) It's just life.

Scott Benner (53:41) Yeah. (53:42) But maybe this is just and you're 62. (53:45) Like, so I think we're forgetting that because, again, you have a very youthful voice and way about you. (53:49) But, like, at 62 years old and you've been at this for for as long as you have been, I mean, at what point do you just say to yourself without being sad, this is it? (54:00) Like, this is my role.

Scott Benner (54:01) Like, so just I'm gonna do the best with it I can and stop, like you know what I mean?

Suzanne (54:06) Well, I mean, sometimes that's why I'm not like, oh, let's try this. (54:09) Let's try this. (54:10) Because I'm just like, I just wanna I just wanna wake up and and work on a song or something or, you know, like Yes. (54:15) Just do my thing and and not have to, like, constantly be thinking about, you know. (54:20) I had kidney issues a couple years ago.

Suzanne (54:23) I was able to, get back to normal kidney function. (54:26) So, like like, you talked about Selena having Mhmm. (54:29) Like, it's just it's just always something. (54:30) I feel like I'm playing whack a mole. (54:32) You know?

Suzanne (54:32) It's like Let's dig into that for

Scott Benner (54:33) a second because I think that's really interesting. (54:35) The idea of, like, you you're trying to live. (54:37) It probably feels like you're always in college. (54:40) Meaning, as soon as I do these things, complete these tasks, then I get to go live my life.

Suzanne (54:46) Yeah. (54:46) Yeah.

Scott Benner (54:47) Right? (54:47) Except that never stops happening.

Suzanne (54:49) Yeah. (54:49) Exactly.

Scott Benner (54:50) You don't go to therapy?

Suzanne (54:51) I had a therapist for a while. (54:53) I didn't feel like she was helping. (54:55) Ugh. (54:55) I I need to find another one. (54:58) But but who even has time to go?

Scott Benner (55:00) You're like, when am I doing that?

Suzanne (55:02) Yeah. (55:02) Yeah. (55:02) Exact this sounds like another thing, and I'm like, like, I'm so burned out on self care.

Scott Benner (55:07) Like, I'm just I guess isn't that funny?

Suzanne (55:09) Like yeah.

Scott Benner (55:10) Seriously, there's a real conversation in there because if self care, which is the thing that's supposed to elevate you and help you do better, is the thing that's burning you out, then where's the tipping point between the value and and the harm?

Suzanne (55:22) That that's why I'm trying to figure out.

Scott Benner (55:25) Oh, you thought I was gonna help with that?

Suzanne (55:28) I not necessarily, but

Scott Benner (55:31) I can't even remember to put my face cream on. (55:34) Arden's like, you're wrinkly. (55:35) If you just use cream, I'm like, how am I supposed to remember to do this? (55:37) She goes, it's on the sink. (55:39) She's like she's like, when you get

Suzanne (55:41) out of the shower, rub some of it on your hands and put it on your face.

Scott Benner (55:44) And I go, I don't It seems like a lot. (55:46) So

Suzanne (55:47) Yeah. (55:47) No. (55:47) There's there's so many crazy things I have to do to just keep going, and I'm like, ugh. (55:52) Yeah.

Scott Benner (55:52) Yeah. (55:52) No. (55:53) I think that's important. (55:54) The I'm glad that came up, actually. (55:56) Yeah.

Scott Benner (55:56) Yeah. (55:57) Because everybody's in that I think everyone to some level or another is in that space where they're trying to find the balance between living and staying alive. (56:06) Right? (56:07) Like, you're trying to, like, like, how do I stay healthy without giving away every ounce of who I am to that process? (56:14) Because then am I not then I don't have time for anything else.

Suzanne (56:17) Exactly. (56:18) Exactly. (56:19) I'm I'm trying to start releasing music, and I I released my first song last year. (56:24) Oh. (56:25) And I've got songs in the pipeline, and I'm just like you know, it's just trying to figure out how to

Scott Benner (56:31) make kind of music? (56:32) Mumble rap? (56:32) What do you do?

Suzanne (56:35) I'm I'm I'm pretty eclectic as far as genres. (56:39) Most most of it is is Christian music, but styles are are fairly eclectic.

Scott Benner (56:43) Mhmm. (56:44) How do you release it? (56:45) Like, through, like

Suzanne (56:46) Like, YouTube. (56:50) There's a whole process, and I and I've done it once. (56:52) Now I'll have to, like, revisit how to do it again once I get another song ready.

Scott Benner (56:57) Right. (56:58) How long does it take to put a song together?

Suzanne (57:00) It depends. (57:02) I guess it depends if, like like, I'm new with the production process.

Scott Benner (57:07) Mhmm.

Suzanne (57:07) And it took me, like, from, like, August through April to do my first one. (57:14) But but other people you know, it's just with everything else going on in my life, like, that was it it just took a lot longer than it was supposed to.

Scott Benner (57:23) Yeah. (57:23) Well, right. (57:23) Because every everything is extra. (57:26) Right?

Suzanne (57:26) Right. (57:27) Right. (57:28) Like, I I try to work in little fifteen, twenty minute increments. (57:32) And then, you know, when I when I finally put put it out, it took, like like, there was hours of time just, you know, trying to work through, you know, like, the distributor and figuring out all that stuff online. (57:44) I I went through a, like, a accelerator mentorship process to do that.

Suzanne (57:48) But even with that, it was it took a it took some time.

Scott Benner (57:53) I'm sorry. (57:53) I have to do something here. (57:54) This is we don't allow political, like, posts on the Facebook group. (57:58) Right? (57:59) Because it's I know it feels like a left turn person.

Suzanne (58:01) There's no you don't have

Scott Benner (58:02) to

Suzanne (58:03) explain

Scott Benner (58:03) it. (58:03) Because well, because it just it'll devolve no matter what. (58:06) And people like to put something up that's very political and then say, this is not political.

Suzanne (58:14) Exactly.

Scott Benner (58:15) I'm putting it up there because it's very important for people with diabetes. (58:18) And I'm like, it is incredibly important for people with diabetes. (58:21) It doesn't make it not political, or it doesn't mean it's not going to be five minutes from now when everybody start yelling at each other about it. (58:28) And this is a this is a community for people to support each other with their diabetes, not for them to argue about, you know, politics.

Suzanne (58:35) So Yeah. (58:36) Yeah. (58:36) No. (58:36) You don't have to explain that to me.

Scott Benner (58:38) Well, yeah. (58:38) It's nice.

Suzanne (58:39) It's the world we live in. (58:40) My my yeah.

Scott Benner (58:41) It's my favorite thing that people do. (58:43) They're like, okay. (58:44) Listen. (58:45) This isn't political, so don't talk about it that way. (58:48) You know what politician really sucks because they're not helping people with diabetes?

Scott Benner (58:53) I'm

Suzanne (58:53) like Yeah.

Scott Benner (58:54) Yeah. (58:54) That's political.

Suzanne (58:56) Yeah.

Scott Benner (58:57) It's very funny.

Suzanne (58:58) Yeah. (58:58) Just Yeah. (58:58) Put a a popcorn GIF on there.

Scott Benner (59:01) I don't know. (59:01) I'm not getting I No. (59:03) My group runs very well for a very specific reason, and it's we politics, religion, pretty much, you know, we we we don't go down those roads. (59:12) And it's tough in times like this. (59:14) Like, I don't have any trouble talking about it here, it's tough in times like this.

Scott Benner (59:16) There's a lot of people who wanna stick up for islet cell legislation and everything, and I'm I'm with them. (59:22) I think that's great. (59:23) But I you can't start making a pod a post about it in the Facebook group. (59:27) It doesn't work that way. (59:28) So Wow.

Scott Benner (59:29) Yeah. (59:30) It sucks. (59:30) It's a weird line to have to draw when you're me. (59:32) And then I get yelled at for not being something. (59:35) You know what I mean?

Scott Benner (59:36) Yeah. (59:36) Yeah.

Suzanne (59:37) Right. (59:37) Well, we we have that dynamic also in my family too. (59:40) So it, like, it it does hasn't really helped. (59:44) There's some political spectacles in my family. (59:46) So And

Scott Benner (59:47) and then what happens? (59:48) It it gets in the in the way of, like, personal relationships

Suzanne (59:52) and Yes. (59:53) Yeah. (59:53) Yes.

Scott Benner (59:54) Well, that's my point. (59:55) If none of you knew each other's politics, you wouldn't be having any of those other problems.

Suzanne (59:58) So Exactly. (1:00:00) Exactly.

Scott Benner (1:00:00) At the very least, in a Facebook group, we're gonna avoid it. (1:00:04) That's pretty much

Suzanne (1:00:04) it. (1:00:04) Yeah.

Scott Benner (1:00:05) Okay. (1:00:05) Is there anything we haven't talked about that we should have? (1:00:07) Anything? (1:00:08) Because I don't I don't wanna shortchange on and

Suzanne (1:00:10) make sure. (1:00:10) Tons of stuff I'd love to talk about, but but let me just say my mom so she she had a formal evaluation with her dementia Yeah. (1:00:18) In January, and she it's so it's March now. (1:00:22) And they they decided she doesn't have dementia because she's just a normal 85 year old. (1:00:27) But I think she's she's transformed a lot since she's been living with me.

Suzanne (1:00:32) And she so now she loves to read. (1:00:34) She can walk to the light. (1:00:35) She doesn't shuffle her feet anymore. (1:00:37) Yeah. (1:00:37) She can walk to the library, buy a book, or check out a book, or there's a little bookstore over there, and she she prefers buying a book.

Suzanne (1:00:45) And so, like, she's she's really transformed, but it's still like, I wish I had others that could care for her and her diabetes.

Scott Benner (1:00:54) Yeah.

Suzanne (1:00:55) That would make my life, little little easier.

Scott Benner (1:00:59) Mahersh too, maybe. (1:01:00) I'm sure she has some level of guilt around having you take care of her.

Suzanne (1:01:05) Yeah. (1:01:05) Yeah. (1:01:05) She's on Medtronic closed loop, and the CGM right now that we're using is a little bit complicated as far as the what how to how to

Scott Benner (1:01:16) Is it the one that recharges? (1:01:18) Like, you have to plug it in sometimes?

Suzanne (1:01:20) Yeah. (1:01:20) You just plug that. (1:01:21) But but also the procedure of putting it on is a little bit crazy.

Scott Benner (1:01:25) They have the new one.

Suzanne (1:01:27) I know. (1:01:27) I know. (1:01:28) So they the her doctor has already ordered that. (1:01:31) So but we just got a shipment of the old one. (1:01:33) So when we go work through that, we'll we'll start with the new one.

Scott Benner (1:01:36) How many is in the shipment of the older model?

Suzanne (1:01:39) Three months worth. (1:01:41) Jesus. (1:01:42) Yeah. (1:01:43) She just called them up and

Scott Benner (1:01:44) say say it didn't come. (1:01:45) And and yeah.

Suzanne (1:01:47) I know. (1:01:47) I mean, we we might be able to start earlier and that I probably will if I decide to travel soon. (1:01:53) Like, sometimes I'm just too tired, but I wanna start training her to redo her infusions to to be able to put on her own infusion set. (1:02:02) But sometimes her brain will glitch a little bit, so it can it can be one time when I was traveling, she was like, oh, yeah. (1:02:09) I I she I had to take a shot, and I was like, took the whole syringe, you know, for three units.

Suzanne (1:02:15) I'm like, mom, you put in 30 units. (1:02:17) She didn't do three units. (1:02:19) Yeah. (1:02:20) Jeez. (1:02:20) So she was okay.

Suzanne (1:02:21) She was able to eat enough to get through it, but so there's you know, like, it's it's not like, she she doesn't have dementia, and I don't worry about her doing something crazy like wandering, but it's still she probably shouldn't be alone for for too long.

Scott Benner (1:02:37) No. (1:02:38) I hear you. (1:02:38) I I mean, my mom lived into her early eighties, and there's just parts of being that age that are just come with being that age. (1:02:46) Like, you know, my mom had a a cancer at the end of her life, so there's, like, some scans that she got done. (1:02:51) And I remember, you know, they did a brain like, a brain scan.

Scott Benner (1:02:54) And, you know, just looking at the report, just, you know, the way the report is written, it said something about, like, frontal lobe deterioration equivalent with age. (1:03:06) Yeah. (1:03:07) And you think, oh, that's not a thing you think about when you're younger. (1:03:11) Yeah. (1:03:11) You know?

Scott Benner (1:03:11) Yeah. (1:03:12) So

Suzanne (1:03:13) But, you know, our bodies aren't meant to well, I mean, they were meant to last forever, but they don't, and it's part of life.

Scott Benner (1:03:20) Yeah. (1:03:20) No. (1:03:21) It it really is. (1:03:22) So she's experiencing things that are just commiserate with being her age. (1:03:26) Yes.

Scott Benner (1:03:26) Yeah. (1:03:27) Yeah. (1:03:27) And then having to deal with diabetes on top of all that.

Suzanne (1:03:31) Mhmm.

Scott Benner (1:03:31) Yeah. (1:03:32) Well, she's very lucky to have you. (1:03:33) That's for certain.

Suzanne (1:03:34) I'm lucky to have her. (1:03:35) Oh oh, the other thing too is she she does a lot of cooking now. (1:03:39) Like, she didn't care about food anymore. (1:03:41) Now she on the days I work, she makes dinner. (1:03:44) She does all the dishes.

Suzanne (1:03:45) She does a lot of the laundry. (1:03:47) You know? (1:03:47) So it's she's been great.

Scott Benner (1:03:49) Oh, let's go. (1:03:49) That's awesome. (1:03:50) I'll take her here if she's gonna cook and clean. (1:03:54) Ship her over. (1:03:55) I'll take care of her diabetes.

Scott Benner (1:03:56) I have no trouble.

Suzanne (1:03:57) Yeah. (1:03:58) Hey. (1:03:58) There's an idea. (1:03:59) Next time I travel

Scott Benner (1:04:01) If the end of this podcast was just me taking on older people with type one diabetes to get free cooking and cleaning out of them?

Suzanne (1:04:07) Not not a not a bad strategy. (1:04:10) Not a

Scott Benner (1:04:10) I don't know.

Suzanne (1:04:13) She makes a she makes a really good pork chop. (1:04:15) I'll tell you. (1:04:16) Yes. (1:04:16) It

Scott Benner (1:04:17) might be cheaper for me to just, like, hire a cooker than Yeah. (1:04:22) Than to take care of a person in the eighties.

Suzanne (1:04:24) That's true.

Scott Benner (1:04:25) Boy, that's some

Suzanne (1:04:26) but you have a really interesting story.

Scott Benner (1:04:27) Is there any did we miss anything that you think really solidifies your story, or do you think we hit the big parts?

Suzanne (1:04:33) Nothing that necessarily you know, the lots of lots of all kinds of things, you know, that or I I just thought it was really interesting that I was diagnosed in Boston. (1:04:42) That was kind of a cool thing because of access to Jocelyn. (1:04:46) I worked at Camp Jocelyn for a summer. (1:04:49) Just lots of lots of little different little things, but nothing, you know, super.

Scott Benner (1:04:53) You know, you've had touch points with with that. (1:04:55) I mean, there's a lot of research in hospitals in Boston for sure.

Suzanne (1:04:58) Yeah. (1:04:58) I remember when the DCC ten first came out and going to a a big thing at a hotel where they announced the, you know, the findings of the DCC 10. (1:05:08) And I and I was very newly diagnosed at the time, so that was, like, a really good way to set my mind. (1:05:15) Like, okay. (1:05:16) Self care really does does make a difference.

Scott Benner (1:05:19) Yeah. (1:05:20) I I hear you. (1:05:21) So tell people a little more about it, the DCC 10.

Suzanne (1:05:24) Well, d c c 10, it was this big study that they did to find out if if, you know, the way you cared for yourself would make a difference in in long term complications.

Scott Benner (1:05:35) Okay. (1:05:36) And? (1:05:36) And and

Suzanne (1:05:37) What did they come up with? (1:05:39) Well, I thought she I thought that you've mentioned it before on the podcast.

Scott Benner (1:05:42) Have I? (1:05:42) I mean, honestly, you heard me earlier say that I really don't know a lot about what I'm doing. (1:05:46) So go ahead.

Suzanne (1:05:47) Heard it. (1:05:47) I've heard you meant but it but, yes, absolutely. (1:05:50) You know, like keeping your a one c down, keeping your blood sugars normal as possible. (1:05:55) Yes. (1:05:56) It it it really does you know, it's it's not like a foregone conclusion that, oh, I have diabetes, so, of course, I'm gonna have all this litany of stuff.

Scott Benner (1:06:03) Right.

Suzanne (1:06:04) So, yeah, it was it was a nice way to, you know, have my mindset at the the beginning of the of but but your podcast really helped too. (1:06:13) Like, I was kind of like, when I first moved home, I was just I was tired. (1:06:17) I was looking to for stuff to listen to when I was, you know, resting, and I was like, I wonder if there's any diabetes podcasts out there. (1:06:25) Well, yeah. (1:06:25) Yeah.

Suzanne (1:06:25) The one

Scott Benner (1:06:26) thing I feel sad about, in our interview today and that I would like to return to before we say goodbye is that before we started recording, you were super excited to talk to me. (1:06:36) And then that love and adoration did not come out with as vociferously as it was coming out before we were being recorded. (1:06:43) So, do you wanna tell all the people why this is such a special moment?

Suzanne (1:06:46) Oh. (1:06:47) Oh.

Scott Benner (1:06:47) Why am I so great? (1:06:48) Tell everybody that at the end, Suzanne.

Suzanne (1:06:49) Go ahead. (1:06:50) Mean, I just I just I think I opened I said, I'm talking to the Scott Benner. (1:06:54) You know, I I I felt like I feel like I know you because I've listened to the podcast so much. (1:06:59) You know? (1:07:00) Like like, it's funny when when you listen to or read an author, you think you know them, but you don't really.

Suzanne (1:07:04) But but, you know, it's like, wow. (1:07:07) You know? (1:07:07) I mean but, yeah, you you've, you know, just I I think you've helped me. (1:07:12) You've helped a lot of people.

Scott Benner (1:07:13) Oh, well, that's very nice. (1:07:14) How how do you think the podcast has helped you mostly?

Suzanne (1:07:16) I think a lot of the, like, the practicals try I can't even think of specifics, but I know when I was first started listening, just a lot of the practicals and and and I feel like you gave me permission to not have to write everything down. (1:07:33) Oh, really? (1:07:34) You know, they yeah. (1:07:35) Like, they they were like, oh, you have to write all your blood sugars down, and you have to write down all your carbs and count them all exactly. (1:07:42) And I you know?

Suzanne (1:07:43) And maybe I'd do better if I did that, but it just I just never did well with all that stuff. (1:07:48) And, you know, like I like we were talking about trying to live your life Like,

Scott Benner (1:07:52) I who

Suzanne (1:07:53) who has time to, like, write all down everything they eat and measure it just exactly? (1:07:59) And Well, what do you mean you could do better? (1:08:01) Like, what what are your outcomes like right now?

Scott Benner (1:08:03) I mean, your mom's got an a grade a one c at 85. (1:08:06) So what's yours?

Suzanne (1:08:07) I'm I'm like I hover around, like, seven one, seven six nine.

Scott Benner (1:08:12) Mhmm.

Suzanne (1:08:12) I mean, you know, probably could be better. (1:08:14) Sometimes I get insulin resistant in the mornings usually, and I I probably need to just tweak something in my basil, but but yeah. (1:08:24) I mean, mean, just I just like hearing people because you just don't hear people talk about this stuff every day.

Scott Benner (1:08:29) Yeah. (1:08:29) That that ends up being the I think one of the values of the podcast is that it pulls together a lot of voices that you are hard to find in your regular life.

Suzanne (1:08:38) Right. (1:08:39) And people that are trying to live their lives too that have, like, you know, normal lives as well, but they're trying to live them and but then they have to deal with this on top of it.

Scott Benner (1:08:47) Yeah. (1:08:48) No. (1:08:48) I I hear you. (1:08:49) Yeah. (1:08:49) Well, I'm glad that it's it's

Suzanne (1:08:50) been valuable for you.

Scott Benner (1:08:51) Also, I think your a one c sounds terrific. (1:08:53) Wait. (1:08:53) What system are you on?

Suzanne (1:08:55) I'm on a closed loop tandem.

Scott Benner (1:08:57) So, like, are you using the, t slim or are using the Mobi?

Suzanne (1:09:01) T slim.

Scott Benner (1:09:02) Okay. (1:09:03) And you have, like what'd you say? (1:09:04) Like, a seven?

Suzanne (1:09:05) Yeah. (1:09:06) Around I have her around seven.

Scott Benner (1:09:07) Oh, your mom around seven. (1:09:08) But where are you at?

Suzanne (1:09:09) I'm I'm around seven. (1:09:10) My mom is, like, six something usually.

Scott Benner (1:09:13) Your because your mom eats differently than you?

Suzanne (1:09:16) Well, she actually has kind of gone a little lower glycemic since she's been with me, but but she can eat other things than, her diet's more expanded than mine is.

Scott Benner (1:09:26) Okay.

Suzanne (1:09:27) She can eat dairy, which I wish I could.

Scott Benner (1:09:30) What happens when you have dairy?

Suzanne (1:09:32) I get earaches and sore throats.

Scott Benner (1:09:34) Earaches and sore throats. (1:09:36) Okay. (1:09:37) Yeah. (1:09:37) There's a lot going on for you.

Suzanne (1:09:39) Yeah.

Scott Benner (1:09:40) Do you have a lot of allergies?

Suzanne (1:09:42) No. (1:09:44) Okay. (1:09:44) Not not really. (1:09:46) But a few things, but not nothing.

Scott Benner (1:09:48) Mhmm.

Suzanne (1:09:49) Yeah.

Scott Benner (1:09:49) Okay. (1:09:50) Alright.

Suzanne (1:09:50) Like, I'm I'm allergic to echinacea, and I'm allergic to Valyrian and, you know, like, weird stuff.

Scott Benner (1:09:56) It sounds like you're allergic to economics and the metal that the swords are made out of on Game of

Suzanne (1:10:02) Thrones is what I just heard. (1:10:03) But yeah. (1:10:07) That.

Scott Benner (1:10:08) That? (1:10:08) Yeah. (1:10:09) The Valyrian steel really gets to you?

Suzanne (1:10:11) Yeah. (1:10:12) Well, I don't know. (1:10:13) Trust me.

Scott Benner (1:10:14) I don't know. (1:10:14) But Valyrian steel makes a lot of sense to me because you're listen. (1:10:17) I'll tell you why, and then I'll let you go back to your life.

Suzanne (1:10:20) Okay.

Scott Benner (1:10:21) You're obviously a strong person. (1:10:22) You're going through a lot. (1:10:23) You're being pulled down by a lot, and I do not hear it in your voice or in your actions. (1:10:28) You're helping an elderly parent who also has type one diabetes in a society that does not really always do that for people. (1:10:37) And, you know, so it's not set up that way, and it's an extra effort there to help there.

Scott Benner (1:10:42) You're doing it on a low budget, and that's just another example of your desire to be valuable and to work hard at this. (1:10:51) I mean, every answer you gave me sounded like an answer that is born out of a lot of experience and the knowledge that there's no real other answer except keep going. (1:11:03) And, you know, I think that's a pretty steely attitude to have. (1:11:06) So you're getting Valyrian steel, like it or not. (1:11:09) I'm sorry.

Scott Benner (1:11:10) And if you have not watched Game of Thrones, go watch it. (1:11:12) You'll enjoy it. (1:11:13) It's excellent.

Suzanne (1:11:13) I probably won't.

Scott Benner (1:11:15) Why not? (1:11:15) It's so good. (1:11:19) I mean, you when you're laying in bed, watch Game of Thrones.

Suzanne (1:11:22) I I don't I don't like to I you know, I don't watch a lot of TV anyway.

Scott Benner (1:11:26) Suzanne, don't ruin this by telling me you don't love television, the greatest American art form.

Suzanne (1:11:31) I'm I'm that's that's a contempt my mom wants to have a TV, I'm like, no, mom.

Scott Benner (1:11:36) You won't let your poor mother have a television at the end of her life. (1:11:40) What is wrong with you? (1:11:41) I'll buy her a TV.

Suzanne (1:11:42) It'll be great when she gets her own apartment, and she can enjoy that. (1:11:46) I just I I just can't. (1:11:48) I just can't have a TV going on.

Scott Benner (1:11:50) Oh my gosh, Suzanne.

Suzanne (1:11:52) Yeah. (1:11:52) This this I've changed

Scott Benner (1:11:53) my whole opinion of you now.

Suzanne (1:11:54) Okay. (1:11:55) So, also, like, I I do like watching occasional things.

Scott Benner (1:11:59) Like what? (1:11:59) Tell me what you do like on television.

Suzanne (1:12:01) What do I like to watch? (1:12:02) We like to watch, All Creatures Great and Small every Sunday. (1:12:05) We like to watch The Chosen. (1:12:07) I like to watch House of House of David, which is

Scott Benner (1:12:09) This sounds like real is this, like, religious programming?

Suzanne (1:12:12) It is. (1:12:13) But House of David, you'd like you'd probably like House of David.

Scott Benner (1:12:16) What is it?

Suzanne (1:12:17) It's a story of King David. (1:12:19) Sometimes I've said to myself

Scott Benner (1:12:20) Oh, I see it. (1:12:21) Why it's on Amazon Prime?

Suzanne (1:12:22) Put why don't they put this stuff on prime time TV? (1:12:24) Because this is this is pretty racy stuff. (1:12:27) You know?

Scott Benner (1:12:27) Well, I gotta tell you, Suzanne. (1:12:28) I watched an episode of fear factor the other night that was awesome. (1:12:32) So I don't think I'm gonna be digging into the house, David. (1:12:34) I am watching, yeah. (1:12:37) I don't think our our television probably doesn't jive well.

Scott Benner (1:12:39) Like, I do I I watch bad TV through the winter. (1:12:43) So, like, good TV, bad TV. (1:12:45) I don't know how to like, I'm watching paradise right now on Hulu, which I'm enjoying for some reason that I can't completely wrap my head around. (1:12:51) I think I just got done shrinking, season three. (1:12:56) My wife and I just watched Task.

Scott Benner (1:12:58) Is it Task on HBO?

Suzanne (1:13:00) Okay.

Scott Benner (1:13:01) But it's almost baseball season. (1:13:02) I'm just gonna put baseball on television for for, like, the next nine months, and then I'll get back to it at some point. (1:13:08) But the once a mighty king Saul falls victim to his own pride, this is House of David. (1:13:14) In case anyone's interested, it's on Amazon Prime.

Suzanne (1:13:17) It's good stuff. (1:13:18) I have a yeah. (1:13:18) I have a friend that's doing editing for it. (1:13:21) It's it's good stuff Yeah. (1:13:22) I think.

Scott Benner (1:13:23) Listen. (1:13:23) I'm not arguing with your style.

Suzanne (1:13:25) Oh, but but my my point too is I can't I sometimes I can't watch TV for very long Why? (1:13:31) Because I'm that sensitive. (1:13:32) My Are you serious? (1:13:32) Yeah. (1:13:33) I'm serious.

Suzanne (1:13:34) I I can't like, I'm too tired to watch TV. (1:13:37) Like, it's just it's like it's a whole other

Scott Benner (1:13:40) Thing to do?

Suzanne (1:13:41) Thing. (1:13:41) Yeah. (1:13:42) It's like,

Scott Benner (1:13:42) oh kidding.

Suzanne (1:13:43) This this gonna drink.

Scott Benner (1:13:44) Paying attention is exhausting?

Suzanne (1:13:46) I guess.

Scott Benner (1:13:48) Mean, it's your life. (1:13:48) I you'd have to answer. (1:13:49) I I don't know exactly.

Suzanne (1:13:50) But, like, they like, the actual, like, Well, that's interesting, isn't it? (1:13:54) Yeah.

Scott Benner (1:13:54) Well, maybe if you're watching Fear Factor, it wouldn't feel that way.

Suzanne (1:13:58) That would probably ramp me up and I'd

Scott Benner (1:14:01) Last week, they made them eat pies made out of bugs. (1:14:05) Oh. (1:14:05) It was horrifying. (1:14:07) Oh. (1:14:07) There was wretched.

Suzanne (1:14:08) Yeah. (1:14:08) I think I I think I'll pass on that one.

Scott Benner (1:14:10) We watched it while Arden was baking. (1:14:12) It was hilarious. (1:14:13) Because Arden was like, turn

Suzanne (1:14:13) it down. (1:14:14) Turn it down. (1:14:14) Turn it down. (1:14:15) I can't I

Scott Benner (1:14:15) don't she's like, don't I don't wanna hear that. (1:14:19) One of the pies was made out of scorpions, I just wanna say.

Suzanne (1:14:21) So Was she baking pies?

Scott Benner (1:14:24) She was making cookies at the time

Suzanne (1:14:25) Oh, okay. (1:14:26) Okay.

Scott Benner (1:14:26) For her boyfriend. (1:14:28) Aw. (1:14:28) Yeah. (1:14:28) It was nice. (1:14:29) Okay.

Scott Benner (1:14:29) I'm gonna let you go. (1:14:30) This was fantastic. (1:14:32) Thank you very much for the time. (1:14:33) Hold on a second, though. (1:14:34) I'm gonna tell you a couple of things about how it comes out and everything.

Scott Benner (1:14:36) So hold on

Suzanne (1:14:37) one second. (1:14:37) Great.

Scott Benner (1:14:37) Great. (1:14:38) Thanks again. (1:14:47) A huge thanks to my longest sponsor, Omnipod. (1:14:50) Check out the Omnipod five now with my link, omnipod.com/juicebox. (1:14:56) You may be eligible for a free starter kit, a free Omnipod five starter kit at my link.

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Scott Benner (1:17:09) I hired Rob @wrongwayrecording.com.

Read More

#1843 Two Fancy Pill Boxes - Part 2

Suzanne returns to discuss managing Addison's disease and T1D, detailing emergency injection protocols and steroid-induced insulin resistance. They also tackle dinner pre-bolusing struggles and diabetes social media burnout.

Companies that Support Juicebox

Simplify Lifewith Omnipod
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Minimed
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Tandem
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Touched By Type 1
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Eversense
Simplify Lifewith Omnipod
Omnipod
DexcomG7 15 Day Sensor
Dexcom
Save 20%Save 20% with offer code: JUICEBOX
Cozy Earth
US MEDGet your Diabetes Supplies
US MED
ContourEasy to Use and Highly Accurate
Contour Next
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Minimed
TandemControl-IQ+ with AutoBolus
Tandem
CommunitySupport Touched By Type 1
Touched By Type 1
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Eversense

Key Takeaways

  • Addison's Emergency Protocols: Severe physical stress, such as a broken bone or severe illness that prevents medication absorption, requires individuals with Addison's to administer an emergency injection of liquid cortisone to prevent a life-threatening adrenal crisis.
  • Sick Day Rules & Medications: Introducing medications like GLP-1s requires caution for those with Addison's. Side effects like vomiting and diarrhea can prevent the body from absorbing crucial daily oral steroids, potentially triggering an emergency.
  • Value of True Community: Navigating the oversaturation of diabetes content on social media can be draining. Finding a genuine, interactive support system—like a dedicated Facebook group—often provides deeper, more reliable support than fleeting, algorithm-driven trends.
  • Dinner Pre-Bolusing Hurdles: Remembering to pre-bolus during the chaotic time of making dinner is a common challenge. Planning the specific macros (carbs, fat, and protein) for your typical meals ahead of time can reduce decision fatigue and improve post-meal numbers.
  • Managing Fat and Protein: Meals heavy in fat and protein often result in a delayed blood sugar rise. Utilizing pump features like an extended bolus (on the Tandem pump) or manually staggering insulin doses can help counteract these later spikes.

Resources Mentioned

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Introduction

Scott Benner (0:00)

Welcome back, friends, to another episode of the Juice Box podcast.

Suzanne (0:14)

Hi. My name is Suzanne, and I have been a type one diabetic for fifty one years. I feel like I was diagnosed in the dark ages.

Scott Benner (0:25)

This is part two of a two part episode. Go look at the title. If you don't recognize it, you haven't heard part one yet. It's probably the episode right before this in your podcast player. The podcast contains so many different series and collections of information that it can be difficult to find them in your traditional podcast app sometimes. That's why they're also collected at juiceboxpodcast.com. Go up to the top. There's a menu right there. Click on series, defining diabetes, bold beginnings, the pro tip series, small sips, Omnipod five, ask Scott and Jenny, mental wellness, fat and protein, defining thyroid, after dark, diabetes variables, grand rounds, cold win, pregnancy, type two diabetes, GLP meds, the math behind diabetes, diabetes myths, and so much more. You have to go check it out. It's all there and waiting for you, and it's absolutely free. Juiceboxpodcast.com. Nothing you hear on the Juicebox podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise. Always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan.

Sponsors: Able Now & Contour Next Gen

Scott Benner (1:29)

This episode is sponsored by Able Now, tax advantaged savings accounts for eligible individuals with disabilities. If you or your child lives with diabetes, you may qualify for an ABLE account because of ongoing medical needs, and many people in the diabetes community do. With ABLE Now, you can save for future expenses without affecting eligibility for certain disability benefits such as Medicaid. Learn more and check your eligibility at ablenow.com. You spell that ablenow.com. Today's episode is also sponsored by the Kontoor Next Gen blood glucose meter. This is the meter that my daughter has on her person right now. It is incredibly accurate and waiting for you at kontoornext.com/juicebox. Why does that matter?

Addison's Disease and Emergency Protocols

Suzanne (2:19)

I don't know if it does. I don't know if it does. It I also am a bit scared, full disclosure, of how my body will respond. I have not been in a crisis, knock on wood Oh, since okay. The first diagnosis in that whole like, I was in a crisis when I went into the hospital both times. Right? Both hospitals.

Scott Benner (2:40)

Yeah.

Suzanne (2:41)

So I don't know how I respond. I worry about, although I know there are things you can do, but I worry about the gastro effects because you know with diarrhea and vomiting then it becomes a whole another game with the Addison's and the steroids.

Scott Benner (2:57)

Mhmm. The the most significant danger GLP medications commonly cause nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea, especially when first starting or increasing the dose for someone with Addison's vomiting or severe diarrhea is dangerous because it can prevent the absorption of your daily oral steroids. If your body doesn't absorb these hormones, you could rapidly trigger a life threatening adrenal crisis. Oh, so you're worried it oh, so you don't know how youre gonna, like, take to them. I would Yeah. Listen. I am not the right person to ask about this, but

Suzanne (3:28)

But you love them.

Scott Benner (3:29)

I have used them. Used them. Took it yesterday. I I hugged the pen when I was done with it. And, before I threw it in the trash, I said, thank you. I whispered in a tear. I mean, maybe you could get the endo to help you, like, like, microdose it at first to try.

Suzanne (3:45)

I think it's a not now. Yeah. I think I'm also still getting used to this. You know? Okay. I have look. I'm not one to try to have I've I have never been one to have my diabetes stop me from something. Addison's, I kinda feel like is a whole another game. I've decided, like, I'm not going back to paddle because if I fall and break a bone, for example K. I've gotta have that emergency injection. And then I've gotta explain to everybody, like, if I fall, I have to have this emergency injection. And let's not forget, it's not like an EpiPen. Mhmm. You've gotta mix it. Take it. It's like old days of glucagon.

Scott Benner (4:23)

You have to explain this better. What those, like, your sick like, sick day rules, right, for Addison's?

Suzanne (4:28)

Yes.

Scott Benner (4:28)

Yeah.

Suzanne (4:29)

Tell me. Sick day rules for Addison's. So if you break a bone, you fall, you do something like that, which is why I'm not gonna play paddle, and I I'm not gonna go skiing. Like, my family just went skiing this couple weeks ago.

Scott Benner (4:40)

I'm like, nope.

Suzanne (4:40)

I'm not doing it. No. I went, but I didn't ski. I worked out in the gym. I did other things. If something like that were to happen, you have to have this emergency injection because normally, your body would produce all of this cortisol to deal with the stress of that injury to allow for you to heal and just deal with what what's going on. I would not have that extra cortisol, so you have to take this emergency injection of of, liquid cortisone

Scott Benner (5:09)

Okay.

Suzanne (5:10)

To prevent a crisis. Also

Scott Benner (5:13)

Then that changes your steroids. Right?

Suzanne (5:15)

So well, it changes the steroids?

Scott Benner (5:18)

Would you need more steroids if you had to take the emergency injection?

Suzanne (5:20)

Yeah. So the cortisol is the is the steroid emergency injection. It's the same thing. Depending on like like, if I'm in the hospital, say, you would I'd be on a higher dose of steroids, and then I'd have to taper down, like, after an injection most likely. Okay. You know, there's so

Scott Benner (5:35)

many different like so you take them orally usually, but in a sick day crisis, it would be an injection?

Suzanne (5:40)

No. No. In a sick day crisis, I would up my dose. But in an emergency situation like a broken bone, you have to have that injection.

Scott Benner (5:48)

That is the injection. Okay.

Suzanne (5:49)

Yeah. Or if it's a sick day and I cannot keep the pills down, I would have to do the emergency injection and then go to the ER.

Scott Benner (5:57)

And has that happened yet?

Suzanne (5:59)

Knock on wood. No.

Scott Benner (6:00)

You are coasting now as far as a person with all your issues could coast, and you're very scared to upset the apple cart. Yeah. Yeah. That makes a lot of sense to me, by the way.

Suzanne (6:09)

I'm even like so this is I don't know. This is kinda silly. But, like, I think my biggest fear with the Addison's is, like, a car accident. Oh. Right? Because if I'm in a car accident, I have to have that injection.

Scott Benner (6:23)

Are you still in the city? No. No. You're out

Suzanne (6:26)

of Okay. Yeah. Connecticut suburbs. Yeah. So

Scott Benner (6:30)

And people in Connecticut really can't drive, so that might be a problem.

Suzanne (6:33)

Not drive.

Scott Benner (6:34)

Yeah. Yeah. Horrible. Well, it's because they lived in Manhattan their whole lives. Yeah. Yeah. Then they bought a car.

Suzanne (6:39)

Assholes. They make assholes look good now, almost. It's so bad.

Weather and Moving South

Scott Benner (6:43)

We had to go to Boston recently, and Arden goes, why are we not driving? And I was like, I do not wanna drive through Connecticut and Massachusetts. Yeah.

Suzanne (6:50)

Yeah. It's horrible. Yeah. It's bad. So, you know, in many ways, it's I I would say I'm not fearful of the diabetes. I'm more fearful of the Addison's, and I don't know if that's because it's all new. Or, I mean, I think they're legitimate, quite frankly, legitimate reasons

Scott Benner (7:09)

Maybe not.

Suzanne (7:09)

To be fearful of Yeah.

Scott Benner (7:10)

Also, doctor knows you and no one else. So, like, you will be doing a little bit of an experiment together. Also, let me just say to the people in Massachusetts, I don't think you're assholes. I love you, and thank you for listening. Please don't unsubscribe. Yes. Yeah.

Suzanne (7:23)

We have great friends

Scott Benner (7:23)

from Massachusetts.

Suzanne (7:24)

I agree. I agree.

Scott Benner (7:25)

Oh, it's just it's just so cold there. Other than that, it's

Suzanne (7:28)

it's fun. Anyway, snow here today.

Scott Benner (7:32)

You know what? It was 82 degrees yesterday, and then my and Arden comes home and she's, did you hear it might snow today? And I went, why are we not moving? Why will no one listen to me when I tell you to move south? I'm can I tell you something? I am I just said yes to doing a one day speaking event in Atlanta for Touched by Type one

Suzanne (7:52)

Mhmm.

Scott Benner (7:52)

In April. And I would normally just jump on the plane and because I live I mean, I live in Central Jersey. I could actually despite the news that came out of Trenton the other day, I could jump on one of those quick Trenton flights to go right to Atlanta. Right?

Suzanne (8:06)

Mhmm.

Scott Benner (8:07)

And drive fifteen minutes from my house, get on a plane, land in Atlanta, come home, $20 to park, be home fifteen minutes after the plane lands. Like, so

Suzanne (8:15)

That's so crazy.

Scott Benner (8:16)

So I'm like, maybe I'll do that. But then I thought, maybe I'll drive. And I still sound crazy at first because maybe I'll take a couple days on the way home and go through some of the parts of the South that I keep trying to tell my wife we should move to for weather and tax purposes. Maybe I'm gonna do that to see if it's just something I'm saying out loud that I don't mean. Like, do you know what I mean? Like, Mhmm. Mhmm. I just I wanna I wanna

Suzanne (8:39)

What parts of the South would you wanna drive through? Because I grew up in Southern Virginia.

Scott Benner (8:43)

I've been looking at houses east of, like, Nashville. Oh. Yeah. Because of the Tennessee That's not on your way

Suzanne (8:51)

to Atlanta, by the way.

Scott Benner (8:52)

Well, no. I I can leave Atlanta. I could drive south about three and a half hours or north north and and end up in Nashville. Yeah. Oh, and then go maybe go home through, like, the maybe I'll do the mountain. Like, it's instead of going all the way back to '95, maybe I'll go up through, you know, like, through the other pathway up north.

Suzanne (9:09)

Okay.

Scott Benner (9:09)

But my point is is that I don't know if you know there's no income tax in Tennessee.

Suzanne (9:14)

I did not know.

Scott Benner (9:15)

Yeah. But now you know and you're thinking, where's Scott? I'll meet you. We'll take a look around.

Suzanne (9:19)

Yeah. Just tell my husband he'll be there.

Scott Benner (9:20)

She's never gonna let me move. She hasn't let me do one thing I wanted to do since I met her, so I don't know why I think this is gonna work out.

Suzanne (9:28)

Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (9:28)

But

Suzanne (9:29)

But you know you go. Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (9:31)

Maybe a condo. Yeah. Why do we both have to go? We've been married thirty years.

Suzanne (9:36)

Right. We talk about this stuff often too. And, you know, the bottom line is for us, because of me, is health care.

Scott Benner (9:46)

You wanna stay close to health care. I know it is one of the it is one of the thoughts. All the Vanderbilts down there, they must know what they're doing. Right?

Suzanne (9:52)

They have to know what they're doing. Yeah. Yeah. So Yeah. Know, I feel very fortunate to have the doctors that I have because it's not like this everywhere.

Scott Benner (10:01)

No. No. For sure. You could be I listen. I talked to plenty of people who never get answers about anything. And Yeah. And for the struggle you're having, who knows how much less it is because of, you know, of the health care you have access to.

Suzanne (10:13)

Absolutely. Yeah. Absolutely.

Scott Benner (10:15)

No. I I take your point. I I really do. I the the problem here is is that I'm not wealthy because I would just live there part that you know, enough days for tax reasons and then come back here for other stuff.

Suzanne (10:26)

But Right.

Scott Benner (10:27)

I really don't want I do hate the cold. I wanna say that. I'm very upset by the cold. And I just the you know, the last two days, walking outside was such a joy the last two days.

Suzanne (10:37)

So nice.

Scott Benner (10:38)

Yeah. So

Suzanne (10:39)

While the piles of snow are melting.

Scott Benner (10:41)

Are there not other people who ex enjoy that more frequently is what I'm saying? And Yeah. Couldn't I be one of them, please?

Suzanne (10:47)

Right. Right.

Scott Benner (10:48)

Kelly's gonna say no. She's gonna say the kids are here. We don't know what Arden's doing yet. We can't move away. Yeah. I'll be like, just make them they they don't have money. Like, we'll just force them to come with us.

Suzanne (10:59)

Yeah. Yeah. They can follow you.

Scott Benner (11:02)

You say have no choices is what I'm saying.

Suzanne (11:04)

We could just Right. They're still relying on you. We could

Scott Benner (11:06)

just strong-arm them. I mean, it wouldn't be that big of a deal. They'd get over it eventually.

Suzanne (11:10)

Yeah.

Scott Benner (11:10)

I don't know.

Suzanne (11:11)

And you have the beauty if you can work from wherever you are.

Scott Benner (11:13)

It doesn't matter where I'm at. As long as the Internet's good, I'm rock solid. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. She seems to think her biz her job would like her to be at work, and I'm like, can't we? I'm sure we could work it out. Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (11:26)

We make flexible.

The Yellow Tree Monitor

Scott Benner (11:27)

By the way, I'm not getting enough credit for this episode. What no one knows but me is that I I I think I've said this once. I'll say it one more time just so it kinda covers. My original chameleon died recently, like, few months ago.

Suzanne (11:41)

Sorry.

Scott Benner (11:41)

Thank you. She was lovely, and she she lived at a reasonable time and and did okay. But she left me with a bunch of space, and I did replace her not replace her, but I got something different. But I I didn't get a chameleon this time. I got a tree monitor, and she is running around in there like a crackhead.

Suzanne (12:01)

Tree monitor?

Scott Benner (12:03)

Yeah. It's a yellow tree monitor.

Suzanne (12:05)

I'm gonna Google this.

Scott Benner (12:06)

Oh, jeez. You know what? Okay. Go ahead.

Suzanne (12:08)

I wish I had the camera to see them.

Scott Benner (12:10)

Yellow tree monitor. Google that. K. You're gonna get an image. It's either gonna horrify you or delight you. It depends on your on how you feel.

Suzanne (12:18)

Oh, kinda cute. Quince monitor.

Scott Benner (12:22)

She's like, no. Not a Quince.

Suzanne (12:24)

Yeah. Why did it come up Quince monitor?

Scott Benner (12:26)

No. Those are big. I that I couldn't do. This one's smaller.

Suzanne (12:30)

Okay.

Scott Benner (12:30)

Alright. But, anyway, she has what they call the poop zoomies. So she's gone to the bathroom, so she's just thrilled. I most people know what I'm probably have this happen in

Suzanne (12:39)

the mix. My dogs. Yeah.

Scott Benner (12:41)

Yeah. And she is just, like, diving around and taking laps and running up and down and flopping on the ground and then running up the wall. Like, she's just all she's like a crackhead right now.

Suzanne (12:52)

That's so cute.

Scott Benner (12:52)

So, anyway, she she's it's been in the corner of my eye. I'm trying not to look so that I can keep talking to you.

Suzanne (12:58)

I had to drug drug my dogs for this today.

Scott Benner (13:00)

You had to drug your oh, you know what I've I

Suzanne (13:03)

was literally thinking about drugging them, but I gave them some CBD treats, and I shut them in the basement.

Scott Benner (13:09)

You know what I've been wondering the whole time you're talking?

Suzanne (13:11)

Yeah.

Scott Benner (13:12)

Did Jackie get a bonus?

Suzanne (13:15)

Jackie's my life I call her my lifesaver.

Scott Benner (13:17)

I mean, honestly, like, the dog sitter took you to the hospital.

Suzanne (13:21)

Yeah. Look. Jackie's amazing. She also, Scott, stayed with me till, like, one something in the morning. And I was like, Jackie, you gotta go home.

Suzanne (13:28)

Well, and home was to my house

Scott Benner (13:29)

at that point in time. Right? Listen. You gotta go take care of the dogs. As I told you earlier, ABLE Now is sponsoring this episode. ABLE Now, of course, tax advantaged ABLE accounts for eligible individuals with disabilities. If you or your child lives with diabetes, you may qualify for an ABLE account because of ongoing medical needs. Many people in the diabetes community do. With ABLE now, you can save for future expenses without affecting eligibility for certain disability benefits such as Medicaid. And thanks to updates to federal law, ABLE accounts are now available to more people than ever before. That means more individuals and families can use ABLE now to save and invest. Funds in an ABLE now account can be used for a wide range of everyday needs, including education, transportation, health care, assistive technology, and more. There's no enrollment fee, and you can open an AbleNow account with a small initial contribution and build from there. Learn more and check your eligibility at ablenow.com. That's ablenow.com, ablenow.com.

Scott Benner (14:36)

Contournext.com/juicebox. That's the link you'll use to find out more about the Kontoor Next Gen blood glucose meter. When you get there, there's a little bit at the top. You can click right on blood glucose monitoring. I'll do it with you. Go to meters. Click on any of the meters. I'll click on the Next Gen, and you're gonna get more information. It's easy to use and highly accurate. SmartLight provides a simple understanding of your blood glucose levels. And, of course, with second chance sampling technology, you can save money with fewer wasted test strips. As if all that wasn't enough, the Kontoor Nextgen also has a compatible app for an easy way to share and see your blood glucose results. Contournext.com/juicebox. And if you scroll down at that link, you're gonna see things like a buy now button. You could register your meter after you purchase it. Or what is this? Download a coupon. Oh, receive a free Kontoor Next Gen blood glucose meter. Do tell. Kontoornext.com/juicebox.

Scott Benner (15:39)

Head over there now. Get the same accurate and reliable meter that we use.

Social Media Saturation in the Diabetes Space

Suzanne (15:43)

Jackie's amazing. I love her. And, you know, we have started this great friendship because of our diabetes. It's tied us together and obviously the love of our dogs, my dogs. But I live in this great area and yet there is such a lack of a diabetic community. It is shocking. And so I feel like Jackie and I have this great bond with the diabetes and the fact that I call her my lifesaver now. It's just the fact that we can talk to each other about things that are working, things that are not working, and introduce each other to new things. Like, I told her about the glow glucose gummies.

Scott Benner (16:21)

Mhmm. Well, those are good.

Suzanne (16:23)

Or, like, I'm a I'm either those are great. And I even gave her some of my g six transmitters that I don't need anymore. You know? I'm like, here. Take these.

Scott Benner (16:32)

You know, I turned down a speaking engagement in your area recently because it just wasn't deep enough. Like, the

Suzanne (16:39)

I I don't get it.

Scott Benner (16:40)

The topic they wanted was so surface. I was like, I'm not driving all the way up there forever.

Suzanne (16:44)

Who was gonna do it? Who was gonna do

Scott Benner (16:45)

the talk? Wanna say. But, like, I don't wanna I don't wanna bad mouth anybody. But I got I mean, they invited me, but then the topic they wanted was just so it felt surface y. So I I I pushed and pushed back. I I offered back. I said, why don't you let me do something more like this? And I think the person calling me wanted to, but I don't think it worked out with their scheduling or how much time they had in their space and stuff like that. So maybe they'll try again next year.

Suzanne (17:10)

Like like, I don't get it. Like, this is this is a suburb of New York City. Right? I'm in Connecticut. Right?

Suzanne (17:15)

Suburb of New York City. And there have to be a ton of other diabetics.

Scott Benner (17:20)

Yeah.

Suzanne (17:20)

And there is no that I have found, like, I've tried to Google this, there is no support group here. I I just to me, it makes no sense.

Scott Benner (17:28)

Yeah. Well, I mean, people don't what I've learned doing what I do is that if there's not an appetite for something, then doing it is it's expensive, and and it ends up feeling like a waste of time. Yeah. I just closed down a social media thing I was doing that I think is fantastic. Yeah.

Scott Benner (17:44)

I think it's absolutely fantastic. It just didn't catch on with people. So I'm like, okay. Fair enough. Like, I'm not gonna beat my head against this wall. Like, I'll close it up. I'll save the money, and and I'll put the effort somewhere else. You know? But everything everything doesn't always work.

Suzanne (17:58)

No. But Facebook works for

Scott Benner (18:00)

It really does.

Suzanne (18:01)

I think it's great.

Scott Benner (18:02)

Yeah.

Suzanne (18:02)

Yeah.

Scott Benner (18:02)

Yeah. No. It's awesome. It's funny. I was looking today.

Scott Benner (18:05)

I I started getting myself worked up this morning, and I realized if I was a different kind of I can't believe I'm gonna say content creator. But if I was a different kind of content creator, I would definitely rant and rave about this. I feel like the diabetes space online is starting to get oversaturated. That worries me because I think that ends up pushing people away. When you have too much when there's too much, I think it becomes noisy and then people just kinda run. I'm watching big organizations put up their social media, like, stuff stuff I, like you know, not only do I agree with, but, like, I'm supportive of, like, this one thing I'm thinking of. I would never out them, but, like, if this really well conceived piece of social media they put up, it's got two likes in after seven days.

Suzanne (18:48)

Oh.

Scott Benner (18:49)

No one sees this. And there's a another thing. They couldn't possibly have better production value in these videos they're making and 1,400 views on Instagram, which means, like, five people might have looked at

Suzanne (19:03)

it. Mhmm.

Scott Benner (19:04)

Mhmm. You know what I mean? And it's just there's an oversaturation. Like, everybody I think you're all doing the wrong thing. But God bless you.

Scott Benner (19:11)

You're gonna do it. I know you are. But, like, they're chasing social media trends, but trying to adapt it to diabetes. I don't think anybody cares. It doesn't touch me.

Scott Benner (19:21)

I live in a bubble as far as that stuff goes, like, the the way the podcast operates. But I feel bad because there's so much desire to do something, and I just feel like they're they're putting all that effort into the like, it would be much better to just start a like a I think, like, a group in Connecticut for people to get together and talk once a month. They would be much less expensive. It wouldn't look exciting because, you know, maybe 30 people would show up, but those 30 people would really be helped by that. Yeah.

Scott Benner (19:48)

And, you know, I don't know. Like, I'm I sound like an old man who's like saying, get off your I want you off my lawn now. You're making the same mistake that the blogging world made, like, fifteen years ago. Mhmm. They're oversaturating it.

Scott Benner (20:01)

They're gonna kill it.

Suzanne (20:02)

And they spent money to figure that out too.

Scott Benner (20:04)

A lot. The I mean, there's a ton like, don't get me wrong. Some of it works. You have to boost it. You have to, like, pay it's gotta be paid stuff, like, stuff like that.

Scott Benner (20:12)

Like, just generically, like, nothing works anymore. Like Yeah. You know what I mean? Like, I don't even think of my social media social media. I think of it as a way to just connect with people who listen to me who are looking to, like, interact on those like, I'm not trying to grow on Instagram or something like that.

Scott Benner (20:27)

I couldn't maybe possibly care less. I don't know. Like, there's just so much effort and money being put into this stuff, and I think it's because they're all afraid not to be doing it. Like, they it's like it's like FOMO. Yeah.

Scott Benner (20:40)

Like, they really feel like, well, what if we I think they should all just stop. Yeah. I don't think I don't think it's doing any

Suzanne (20:47)

somewhere else?

Scott Benner (20:47)

Yeah. I don't think it's doing anything. It looks like something. It's great to go on LinkedIn and pat each other on the back all the time, say, look at all the stuff we're doing. I'm like, hey.

Scott Benner (20:55)

You guys are the only ones that say it, but god bless you. It's shiny. It looks great.

Suzanne (20:59)

Now I'm wondering what you're I'm wondering.

Scott Benner (21:01)

I'd be happy to tell you once we're not recording, but I just calling. I'm not

Suzanne (21:04)

across my feeds.

Scott Benner (21:05)

I don't want I don't want people to, like, like, I'm listen. They should you know, if that's what they wanna do, they should do it. I just think if you were if you consulted with me and said, what should I do? I would say I would definitely not spend all that money on making that fancy video that four people looked at.

Suzanne (21:19)

Right.

Scott Benner (21:20)

You know? So and by the way, I'm gonna guess you're two of them. So

Suzanne (21:25)

If not four.

Scott Benner (21:26)

So COVID outed everybody. Right?

Suzanne (21:29)

Right.

Scott Benner (21:29)

Because everyone tried to pivot digital during COVID.

Suzanne (21:34)

Mhmm.

Scott Benner (21:34)

And, like, I have said this before, so I'll say it again. Like, I knew what was gonna happen back when the JDRF tried to go live on Facebook, and, like, 11 people were watching. And I and I was one of them. And I was just going, oh my god. There's only 11 people watching this.

Scott Benner (21:49)

So, like, I wasn't watching it for the content. I was watching it because it seemed like a it seemed like a car wreck to me. Right. Then then suddenly, all these institutions that would like they they looked big online because they have so many followers. Like, you don't realize they're historical followers.

Suzanne (22:06)

Mhmm.

Scott Benner (22:07)

You know what I mean? Like, oh, we have I have a 100,000 people following me. Like, no. You don't. You know what I mean?

Scott Benner (22:11)

Like, you've collected a 100,000 people over the last fifteen years.

Suzanne (22:14)

They're following you.

Scott Benner (22:16)

You're posted 20 likes. There's there's 20 people following you. Yeah. Yeah. Like, that's why I'm I'm super proud of the of our Facebook group because it does, like clockwork, between 90 is the low number, up to a 160 is the high number, daily new posts.

Suzanne (22:36)

That's amazing.

Scott Benner (22:37)

Yeah. And then likes, a a combined collection of likes, comments, hearts like that Yeah. Between eight and nine thousand a day.

Suzanne (22:46)

I'm so bad. I never I I I skipped the likes and the hearts and all that.

Scott Benner (22:52)

Even put put that into context. Yeah. Right? Like, most people don't like heart and comment. And yet

Suzanne (22:58)

And it's not that I dislike it. I just don't remember to like it.

Scott Benner (23:01)

Well, you you don't need like, I'm saying, like but still look at all that happens. Like like Mhmm. 8,000 a day is you're a normal person. Like, you don't know about this, but trust me. I get on a phone call with the right person.

Scott Benner (23:13)

They they they're like, oh my god. How do you do this? And I'm like, I just let people talk and treat them like adults. I was like and and I don't I don't push crappy social media, like, trends at them and tell them to be upset about the islet cell problem. And, like, I just let them like, stop.

Scott Benner (23:31)

Stop. Like, just stop using social media around diabetes like social media. Yeah. The only thing that works is outrage. I almost said something I don't wanna say here.

Scott Benner (23:42)

Skin and outrage is the only thing that works. And Right. And you're chasing that, some of you. It's just I mean, it's just I am not a big fan of soliciting, you know, people in bikinis to show you their devices. And but I know that's the only thing that works.

Scott Benner (24:00)

Go ahead and look at any company's social media. The ones where you see more skin get better likes.

Suzanne (24:07)

So interesting.

Scott Benner (24:08)

Yeah. Like and so Sad statement. Yeah. And and it just it's what it is. Right?

Scott Benner (24:13)

Or you you know, the influencers around diabetes who are more popular are generally female. They're generally younger, and they burn out, like, incredibly quickly. Like, so whoever

Suzanne (24:24)

a weird concept to me, like, influencers with the diabetes.

Scott Benner (24:28)

Yeah. I mean, I don't have a problem with it. I'm just saying that, like Yeah. What I'm telling you is that the people looking, they don't care about the diabetes piece. Yeah.

Scott Benner (24:36)

They found you because you have diabetes. They're clicking or scrolling because you're pretty or you're attractive or you're handsome or whatever you are. Like, you you know what I mean? That's it. Like, it's a real I don't know.

Scott Benner (24:48)

Arden and I just did some social media for Omnipod. It's gonna be out pretty soon. And I'm wondering if anybody will even look at it because it's just me talking or Arden Arden's doing pod fill examples, like how to fill a pod. And but I don't think anybody will care.

Suzanne (25:05)

I think people will.

Scott Benner (25:06)

Oh, well, maybe.

Suzanne (25:07)

People will.

Scott Benner (25:07)

I have no idea. But, like, my my point is is that, like, Arden's dressed in filling a pod. So I'm not not sure how that's gonna go. Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (25:15)

Yeah. No. I was I was happy about it. I don't know where any of this goes. So it's still, like, it's cure, outrage, skin, and then strife.

Scott Benner (25:26)

Strife.

Suzanne (25:26)

See, I just think I'm too old for all that other stuff. Like, I would really be interested to see how you fill the cartridge.

Scott Benner (25:33)

Yeah. No. Right. But once

Suzanne (25:34)

I have no idea.

Scott Benner (25:35)

But that would but here's the point about it being social media and, like, all this money that goes into it. You'd be interested in it once. Yes. You'd look and go, oh, wow. Look at that.

Scott Benner (25:43)

Watch it for sixty seconds, and you'd never think about it again. You certainly wouldn't head back to see if they were doing it again next week.

Suzanne (25:49)

I forget to like it also.

Scott Benner (25:51)

And you forget to like it, and that would make those people so sad who worked so well on

Suzanne (25:54)

it. Right.

Scott Benner (25:55)

I mean, if you stop and look at the things that attract people over and over again, they eventually, it burns out. And I'm just saying, I'm shooting a flare up in the air, and I'm telling you all, don't burn this out because you'll lose all these people. They'll be gone. Yeah. And I could use any number of, you know, other I don't know.

Scott Benner (26:17)

Here, I'll I'll do this one. During COVID, people started keeping this is gonna sound crazy because this is not when I started doing it. But, like, during COVID, people started keeping reptiles much more than they used to. It was that thing you could do in your That's

Suzanne (26:33)

interesting.

Scott Benner (26:33)

They could be shipped to you. You could bring like, you know, the cage could be shipped to you. The animal could be shipped to you. And reptile YouTubers blew up. Oh.

Scott Benner (26:44)

People YouTubing about their bearded dragon or something like that. These people were doing half a million views on a YouTube. They they were like, oh my god. This is a job. Peep they were quitting their jobs, like, you know, doing this whole thing.

Scott Benner (27:01)

It's all gone now. Like, it's just all you burned everyone out. Like, you showed them too many goddamn reptile videos, and they went, they were like, uncle, I'm done. I don't care anymore. Leave me alone.

Scott Benner (27:14)

And now there's, you know, one or two remain behind. If you're listening right now, you you know, like, there's a there's a channel called snake discovery. Like, people like that one. It it it held up. There is a guy doing these big videos that were super power like, popular forever.

Scott Benner (27:30)

He's hundreds of thousands of likes or or or views on everyone. Now he does more like forty, fifty thousand views.

Suzanne (27:36)

Oh, wow.

Scott Benner (27:37)

And do I blame people for seeing success and wanting to be a part of it? I don't. I think that's the natural way things work. But when everyone rushes in, you you saturate the market. And then once you saturate it, then you make people sick of it.

Scott Benner (27:53)

And then when they get sick of it, they're gone, and you will never get them back. And only a couple people will remain on top. And that's happening in diabetes right now, I think.

Suzanne (28:02)

It's just too bad.

Scott Benner (28:02)

Yeah.

Suzanne (28:03)

It's too bad.

Scott Benner (28:03)

So, anyway, I watched it happen with blogging. They oversaturated it, and it collapsed. I pivoted out of blogging fast enough to do this. I don't seem to be getting any, I don't wanna say this the wrong way. I think there are people doing cool stuff.

Scott Benner (28:19)

I don't dislike them at all, but they're not competing with me on downloads is probably the nicest way to say it. Do think I'm in a bubble, but eventually this bubble will burst too. It's just not gonna burst because so many people got into it. It's gonna burst because I screw it up or I run out of things to say or whatever happens.

Suzanne (28:35)

I think you feel a huge need. You know, think about me here in this, you know, highly populated area. There is no community. Mhmm.

Scott Benner (28:44)

No. No. And you get to tell your story today about stuff that like, I guarantee you that countless people listen today and went, oh god. Do I have Addison's? That all sounds very familiar.

Scott Benner (28:53)

You know what I mean? But it's gonna have like, that's how people find out about stuff. You know?

Suzanne (28:57)

But people should be aware. You know? Like Yeah. Yeah. I was I mean, I think that's, you know, part of the reason why I wanted to come on here.

Family Autoimmune History and TrialNet

Suzanne (29:03)

You know? I had no clue about Addison's other than the fact that JFK had had it. You know? Now Did he really? Yeah.

Scott Benner (29:11)

I didn't know that.

Suzanne (29:12)

Yeah. Yeah. Okay. And that was, like, one of my attitudes in the hospital. I was like, well, if he can handle the Cuban missile crisis, I think I can handle this.

Scott Benner (29:20)

I can get coffee and take my dogs for a walk for sure. Exactly.

Suzanne (29:23)

Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Right?

Scott Benner (29:24)

Well Yeah. Yeah. Well, I really I wanna make sure we didn't like, I know I chatted too much at the end there, but, Susan, did we did we miss anything, or did you get everything out you were hoping to say?

Suzanne (29:34)

No. I was gonna say it's funny. You always ask about autoimmune history.

Scott Benner (29:38)

Oh, I didn't do that? Hey, Suzanne. Is there any other autoimmune in your family? Like, I don't know, like brothers, sisters, sisters, uncles all the way down the line?

Suzanne (29:45)

Funny. You should ask ask that, Scott. So my grandmother's sister was a type one diabetic.

Scott Benner (29:50)

Okay.

Suzanne (29:51)

And that's all that I thought there was in our family. And then right after the Addison's diagnosis, I was trying to find, like, paperwork from I knew I had a few pieces of paperwork from when I was younger, you know, that my parents somehow randomly given me a few of these pieces of paper about my care. And by the way, we had done genetic counseling when we were married to see about having kids, And I didn't have any of this information except for my grandmother's sister's a type one diabetic. But on my dad's side, there was hypothyroidism and then rheumatoid arthritis on both sides of the family. Oh.

Suzanne (30:29)

And I had no clue.

Scott Benner (30:30)

You don't have RA, though?

Suzanne (30:32)

Like, no. Not yet. Yeah.

Scott Benner (30:34)

It's probably you probably would know by now, I would imagine.

Suzanne (30:36)

I would probably know by now. Yeah. Yeah. Well Yeah. Funny how these things come to light later on.

Scott Benner (30:42)

How about your kids? Are they showing signs of anything?

Suzanne (30:45)

Knock on wood. They're fine. My daughter would like to do the trial net study. I just need her to be home long enough to get the blood work done. My son has no interest.

Suzanne (30:56)

He's younger, and he's still in high school. He has no interest in doing that, but would like for her to do that.

Scott Benner (31:01)

She came to you or you came you went to her?

Suzanne (31:04)

You know, when I was doing one of these studies at the hospital that I go to in the city, they were actually offering it. And she was she was definitely younger then, and she didn't wanna do it. And then, when the whole Addison's thing came up, I brought it up again, and she's like, oh, yeah. I totally wanna do that. So and and, of course, my son is like, no.

Suzanne (31:25)

Okay.

Scott Benner (31:25)

Mhmm. No.

Suzanne (31:27)

But I think she will do it and find out. Yeah. I think it's important to know.

Scott Benner (31:32)

Listen. If it's a thing she wants to know, she should definitely do it. It's easy it's easy enough to accomplish. You know?

Suzanne (31:37)

I consider I have a brother also, and he's totally normal. I kinda consider us medical orphans now. I wish there are you know, so many questions I wish I had asked, but I'm

Scott Benner (31:48)

not Oh, now there's nobody to ask. Time.

Suzanne (31:50)

Yeah. Yeah. Now there's nobody to ask.

Scott Benner (31:51)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Your your brother's totally normal. Is that what you said?

Suzanne (31:55)

Yep. Totally normal. In fact, that was almost a direct quote from one of these, like, forms from, like I think it was, like, Duke University or somewhere like that. You know? Brother's normal.

Scott Benner (32:04)

Brother's normal.

Suzanne (32:06)

Brother's normal.

Scott Benner (32:06)

Girl seems to be an issue.

Suzanne (32:08)

Girl's an issue, but brother's normal.

Scott Benner (32:10)

Right? Through all this. I'm sorry to ask you this. But, like, through your life, like, menstruation, all that, never a problem?

Suzanne (32:15)

Yeah. That's an interesting question. I did have heavy periods. Mhmm. I did have heavy periods.

Correlations vs. Complications

Suzanne (32:21)

My mom had endometriosis, so I, you know, I don't know if there's a connection there, but I I did have some heavy periods. Yeah.

Scott Benner (32:31)

Yeah.

Suzanne (32:31)

And then I would try you know, certain kinds of birth control will help with that also.

Scott Benner (32:36)

Yeah. That's what they I a lot of girls fight against that now. They don't wanna

Suzanne (32:40)

do it. Yeah. Yes.

Scott Benner (32:41)

Arden's been offered, she's like, I I just I didn't like how it felt, and I don't wanna do it. So

Suzanne (32:47)

My daughter fights with that. Yeah. What makes what made you ask that? I'm curious.

Scott Benner (32:51)

I just think that a lot of women in and around autoimmune seem to have heavy periods and trouble Interesting. Menstruating. Like, I don't know enough to say it out loud, but it just a lot of

Suzanne (33:02)

Yeah.

Scott Benner (33:02)

My job is weird, and I hear people, you know, who are in a bucket, basically, and they say a lot of things that are similar. That's the same way I feel about, like, anxiety and people with autoimmune seems to be just, like, rampant. I went through that phase for a couple of years where everybody had, like, a a bipolar uncle. I I was like, this is, like, you know, this is, like how many people are gonna say this to me? You you know what mean?

Suzanne (33:25)

There's a lot of correlations with diabetes that are not considered complications.

Scott Benner (33:30)

You just think it's autoimmune in general and and inflammation and stuff like that.

Suzanne (33:34)

Right. Inflammation. Like, they consider the trigger fingers to to not be a complication, but more of a correlation, was once told by a doctor.

Scott Benner (33:43)

Is that called Dupuytger's something?

Suzanne (33:45)

Yeah. There's so many different things.

Scott Benner (33:47)

Yeah.

Suzanne (33:47)

I thought Dupuytren's contracture was something else, but maybe that is a trigger finger.

Scott Benner (33:52)

I don't know.

Suzanne (33:53)

I know I've had trigger releases. I don't know which fingers anymore. It's hard to tell. The carpal tunnel on both hands, and then I've had also something called Dekker veins.

Scott Benner (34:05)

What's

Suzanne (34:05)

that? And I might be mispronouncing that. So that was when I had my daughter literally picking her up, that that action of holding a baby and picking her up was so painful.

Scott Benner (34:18)

And

Suzanne (34:20)

gone to see an ortho who was like, oh, you'll be fine, you know, once your daughter starts walking. And she was a baby.

Scott Benner (34:28)

Because you won't have to pick her up anymore?

Suzanne (34:30)

Okay. Right. Like, I'm like, I'm picking up this child for a very long time, and I had seen someone this was a local orthopedist, and, I went back to my doctor in the city who had done my surgeries, and he was like, oh, you've got I think it's called Dekroveins, but Dekroveins, something like that. Cannot pronounce it, as I said. And he's like, nope.

Suzanne (34:50)

This is what you have. And I was like, can you fix it? And he's like, well, it's another surgery very similar to carpal tunnel. And I was like, okay. You need to do both hands, like, at once.

Suzanne (35:01)

Like, take care of both hand.

Scott Benner (35:03)

Okay. Did they do that? They usually won't do that.

Suzanne (35:06)

They usually won't do that, and I convinced them to do it.

Scott Benner (35:09)

I just Yeah. I have to tell you. The world confuses the hell out of me sometimes. Hey. It hurts when I pick my kid up.

Scott Benner (35:16)

Don't worry. She'll start walking. What? What? What kind of an answer is that?

Suzanne (35:22)

What a jerk.

Scott Benner (35:23)

What kind of an answer is that?

Suzanne (35:24)

What a jerk. And, oh, I tell everyone locally, like, don't go see him. Like, horrible. Horrible bedside manner. What a jerk.

Suzanne (35:32)

And I end up having, like, bilateral surgery

Scott Benner (35:35)

Okay.

Suzanne (35:36)

To fix it. Yeah. Right? And I did it. I insisted upon it bilateral, like, to do it all at once because I could get help from my parents to come up for, like, six weeks Mhmm.

Suzanne (35:45)

To help me, because I wasn't gonna be able to lift up my child and a husband commuting to the city. So, we were helpless. I I couldn't have someone come up for twelve weeks for two different surgeries. You know? Couldn't even

Scott Benner (35:58)

talk my dentist into doing a cavity on two sides of my mouth at the same time. Oh. He's like, you're gonna bite your tongue off. I'm like, what if I promise not to?

Suzanne (36:05)

Yeah. I don't know if I do that. I have to be honest. That would wake me up.

Scott Benner (36:08)

I'm like, look. I'll just, can I just put something in my mouth for an hour or two and after I leave to make sure I don't bite my tongue off? Like, I'll like, I don't Yeah.

Suzanne (36:16)

What would you I mean yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (36:18)

Give me a tongue depressor. I'll I'll do it. But yeah. Like, what he's like, no. You might bite your tongue off.

Scott Benner (36:23)

Like, my god. Like, don't you think if I bit my tongue off, I deserve it? Do you know what I mean? Like, you don't think that's a thing I could focus on for ninety minutes? Hey, Scott.

Scott Benner (36:33)

Don't bite your tongue off. Right. Like, what if I put it on a sticky and held it at my hand? And so but then I gotta go back twice. I think he's just looking for money.

Suzanne (36:42)

Well, it yeah.

Scott Benner (36:43)

He's getting ready to retire.

Suzanne (36:45)

Yeah. You know mean? He'll pay for it.

Scott Benner (36:46)

Probably make a little pile here at the end. I know what's going Yeah. Yeah. I'm just kidding. I'm sure it's it sounds pretty unsafe to numb both sides of a purse, but but I've tried, like, to get them to do it, they've been like, no.

Scott Benner (36:58)

So that's why I was interested they would do both your hands. Because the I mean, how did you wipe? Like, there wasn't there a lot going on there?

Suzanne (37:04)

I mean, my my mom had to help me. I mean, I was like an infant again. Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (37:08)

Lay on your back and pull your legs up?

Suzanne (37:10)

You know? I mean, I think, like, to a certain extent of, you know, I could like, it wasn't that long till I could do that. Yeah. Yeah. But I couldn't wiping's different from picking up a child, Scott.

Suzanne (37:18)

Mhmm. You know? But yeah. Yeah. That's interesting.

Suzanne (37:22)

Funny.

Scott Benner (37:22)

Your life is, is interesting. I appreciate you sharing it with me.

Suzanne (37:26)

Thank you.

Scott Benner (37:27)

Seriously. Yeah. No. This was this was really fun. I mean, odd

Suzanne (37:30)

I'm just living it. I'm just living it, and that's all I can do. Right?

Scott Benner (37:34)

I mean, there doesn't seem to be a lot of other options as far as I can tell.

Suzanne (37:38)

No. You gotta you gotta take what you're given, and and I think you have to make the make the most of it, you know, and make the best of it. It's not perfect. You know? Like, I am not a perfect diabetic right now at all.

Suzanne (37:50)

I can just keep working on and trying.

Scott Benner (37:52)

Yeah.

Suzanne (37:52)

I'm still proud of where my a one c is. I think despite everything, I'm in a good I'm actually in a very good place. Mhmm. I just think I could do better. That's all.

Dinner Pre-Bolusing and Extended Bolus

Scott Benner (38:01)

Well, what would I mean, give me give me two minutes. What what would that look like? What would you have to do?

Suzanne (38:06)

I really suck at pre bolusing at dinnertime.

Scott Benner (38:09)

Okay.

Suzanne (38:10)

That's hard for me. Only because I'm cooking and making dinner and, you know, we don't try to eat healthy and, you know, make dinner and things like that. So it's always it's a little bit of a mess. Right? Like, trying to cook dinner, get dinner on the table.

Suzanne (38:22)

Like, last night, I was trying to be so good and pre bolus, and I'm on the tandem pump. And I I don't know what I did. I I didn't click or press the button to go ahead and make it start the bolus. And I sit down to dinner, and I'm like, ugh. Are you kidding me?

Suzanne (38:39)

Like yeah. Stuff like that will sometimes happen or more often than not. I find dinnertime for some reason is is a mess, not just because of that, but also the just with my insulin absorption and maybe the steroids.

Scott Benner (38:53)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (38:54)

I just struggle. I go higher later at dinner, so I'm trying to do a lot of prolonged bolusing, or stretch that bolus out. I'm pretty good in the morning.

Scott Benner (39:03)

Maybe a magnet on your refrigerator that says pre bolus.

Suzanne (39:06)

I yeah. Gave Something.

Scott Benner (39:08)

I gave all mine away or I would I would give you one.

Suzanne (39:10)

I need something.

Scott Benner (39:11)

Yeah. I I don't know how it's one of those things.

Suzanne (39:13)

Like It's hard.

Scott Benner (39:14)

Yeah. If you don't have somebody helping like, last night, I was cooking last night, and I texted Arden Bowles now. She was, like, eight feet from me. But she was work she was sitting at the table in the kitchen.

Suzanne (39:25)

She'll respond better to a text. Right?

Scott Benner (39:26)

She was studying for a French homework. And so, like, in my mind, I was like, it's ridiculous now that I think back on it. Like, I didn't wanna bother her, but I also she needed a bolus. And so, like, I thought maybe it'll just pop up in front of her, and she'll just, you know, keep moving and go. Instead, she turns out, she looks at me, she goes, I'm right here.

Scott Benner (39:44)

I was like, that's usually my line. That I was like, but, you know, but she's got somebody to, you know, help her remember sometimes. Yeah. And I'll I'll tell you, know it seems simple, but I have spoken to so many people. Remembering the pre bowl as a meal is is really difficult.

Suzanne (40:00)

It's huge.

Scott Benner (40:01)

Yeah. It's

Suzanne (40:01)

huge. But it but it and it makes such difference.

Scott Benner (40:04)

Yeah.

Suzanne (40:04)

Huge impact. Right? And I think sometimes it'll give myself enough insulin at dinner too, but that's a separate issue. But

Scott Benner (40:10)

You're miscounting carbs, or are you trying to

Suzanne (40:13)

No. You know what I think it is, Scott? It's the magic of fat and protein.

Scott Benner (40:17)

Oh, you're getting a rise later. Yeah.

Suzanne (40:18)

Yeah. Yeah. I haven't figured that out yet. That's yeah. I haven't quite mastered that.

Scott Benner (40:23)

There's not a lot

Suzanne (40:23)

of I still find it confusing despite listening to the podcast. I still find it a little complicated. But

Scott Benner (40:29)

Boneless for your carbs, wait forty five minutes, and bolus for the fat.

Suzanne (40:34)

Yeah. Okay. And and if and and still do that on top of my I forget what Tandem calls it. I still sometimes speak Medtronic from years ago. Dual wave.

Suzanne (40:45)

Square wave

Scott Benner (40:45)

bolus. Whatever they used to call

Suzanne (40:47)

it for Medtronic. Extended bolus. That's what it is on Tandem.

Scott Benner (40:50)

Yeah. I mean, you could give yourself an extended bolus on tandem. Just do that instead.

Suzanne (40:54)

I do. But you know what? I still think I need that bump. I think you're absolutely right. I think I need that bump later.

Scott Benner (41:00)

Yeah.

Suzanne (41:00)

I think that's what I'm missing, actually.

Scott Benner (41:02)

There's a little estimator on my website if you wanna look at it. Did you Awesome. Have you tried it?

Suzanne (41:07)

Yeah. I actually

Scott Benner (41:09)

Good. Did it happen?

Suzanne (41:10)

But, again

Scott Benner (41:11)

Then you gotta

Suzanne (41:11)

make very time chaos. Yeah.

Scott Benner (41:15)

Yeah. Well, figure them out ahead of time. That's not that's not crazy. Right? Like, what if you

Suzanne (41:19)

spend crazy.

Scott Benner (41:20)

Fifteen minutes thinking about five meals that, you know, you're gonna have this week and do the carbs and the fat and the protein for them, and then write them down on a piece of paper. Then when you go to eco, this is how I'm gonna bowl this for it. And then maybe you'll just become calm. I don't know. I'm just spitballing.

Suzanne (41:34)

A great idea. You make it yeah. No. That's that's a really simple solution, actually. I mean, just Yeah.

Scott Benner (41:40)

You know what they said when they made those sneakers for Michael Jordan? Just do it. Just do it. Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (41:45)

Exactly. Yeah. You'll be Just do it. Yeah. No.

Suzanne (41:47)

That's a good that's good.

Medical Alerts and Pillboxes

Scott Benner (41:48)

By the way, your episode is called fancy pillbox. And Oh.

Suzanne (41:53)

I wish I could show it to you. I actually have two fancy pillboxes too, by the way. Do you really? I do because I carry pills. I have, like, this really nice one that I that I spent way too much money on but I was like, hey, I just got Addison's.

Suzanne (42:09)

Like, I'm getting all this stuff. And so I've got like, you know, these Etsy bags to keep my steroid injection stuff in it and so I have this like super fancy pillbox to go in that bag to carry pills in addition to the injectable. And then I've got my awesome Amazon one that has, like, separated four times a day. Yeah.

Scott Benner (42:30)

You girls are fantastic. I got Addison's. Oh, I can buy a bag.

Suzanne (42:35)

Well, no. It wasn't quite like that. Let me just to

Scott Benner (42:37)

be honest. It was. You were in the doctor's office, like, does this come with something I have to carry? Because I need a No.

Suzanne (42:43)

I promise it wasn't quite like that. But, but I did have to get, like, two customizable bags to say, like, steroid dependent. You know, it's got my husband's number on it. And and now I think I wanna get a seat belt cover. Okay.

Suzanne (42:56)

Because, again, that's my biggest fear is being in a car accident.

Scott Benner (42:59)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, the seat belt cover

Suzanne (43:02)

Makes sense.

Scott Benner (43:02)

What I hear from EMT though is they don't know if the person driving the car is the person the seat belt cover was put on for.

Suzanne (43:10)

Are you kidding me? Well, then they would look at my wrist. They would look at something.

Scott Benner (43:14)

Hopefully. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (43:16)

Hopefully. Hopefully, they're not idiots.

Scott Benner (43:17)

Well, I don't know though, but imagine you're not the you know, people drive you other people's cars. Imagine if you if your husband drives your car, he drives into a wall. Oh. He's unconscious, and they are like, oh, this guy's, you know, got Addison's.

Suzanne (43:32)

It wouldn't be on the seat belt. Say, I'm gonna have to take it with me.

Scott Benner (43:36)

Like, a towel? Forehead.

Suzanne (43:38)

Yeah. Yeah. I'm gonna have

Scott Benner (43:39)

to say, I'm gonna have to

Suzanne (43:40)

carry one more thing now.

Scott Benner (43:41)

Right? Also, I've had EMTs tell me tattoos are not a valuable way to do medical alert.

Suzanne (43:47)

Yeah. I don't want

Scott Benner (43:48)

a or bracelets.

Suzanne (43:50)

Yeah. I don't want a tattoo. Because I'm afraid when when I get older, it's gonna get all wrinkled.

Scott Benner (43:53)

And nasty. Definitely gonna happen. Yeah.

Suzanne (43:56)

Yeah. I don't want a tattoo.

Scott Benner (43:57)

Yeah. Okay. Well, listen. You were able to stay on long enough to get a two part episode.

Suzanne (44:01)

Oh, really?

Scott Benner (44:02)

Yeah. I think so. Time wide. I can't I can't do an hour and a half and a while. Is helpful to someone.

Scott Benner (44:07)

Well, first of all

Suzanne (44:08)

hears it appreciates it.

Scott Benner (44:09)

It's gonna be helpful. You're entertaining. I was fantastic today. You were great. I've been good lately.

Suzanne (44:15)

Always.

Scott Benner (44:15)

Can I just say, I I'll say something that'll sound ridiculous? I've already pompously, told people to stay off of social media, just let me do it, which is not what I meant, but I'm imagining someone's gonna hear it that way. But I listened to an episode of the podcast today, which I don't do all the time called school ties when it came out, like, yesterday or today or something. Okay. And I was listening to it, and I have to tell you, I was excellent.

Suzanne (44:40)

Was Oh, good.

Scott Benner (44:41)

No. No. I, like, listened to it. Was like, this is great.

Suzanne (44:44)

Listen and think you're not?

Scott Benner (44:45)

Yeah. Yeah. Sometimes. Interesting. Yeah. Sometimes I'm tired or I just the wrong like, I'll listen back sometimes and somebody will say something. And as a as the person listening, I'll go, oh, this is the follow-up question, and then that's not the one I ask. And I think, you blew it. Like, that was such a good opportunity to say this, and you didn't do it.

Suzanne (45:03)

That's hindsight. That's hindsight.

Scott Benner (45:05)

Yeah. A little bit. But I I don't know. There's just there's something about that person. That woman and I got along well.

Scott Benner (45:11)

Her attitude and mind meshed well. I thought your attitude and mind meshed well too. Yeah. There's sometimes I feel like I'm

Suzanne (45:16)

fighting There's vibe.

Scott Benner (45:17)

Yeah. Yeah. There's sometimes I think they're great episodes, but there isn't a vibe, and then it feels more interviewy, and this feels more conversational. Yeah. Like, so

Suzanne (45:28)

Which you said it will. You said it would.

Scott Benner (45:29)

Well, yeah. I could tell. Anyway Yeah.

Suzanne (45:32)

Thank you.

Scott Benner (45:32)

You were fantastic. I really do appreciate this. I I wish you nothing but luck. I don't know a ton about Addison's other than what I've heard through, you know, a friend and a couple of people I've seen online. And I I know it's a it's a bit of a slog, so I wish you nothing but the best.

Suzanne (45:47)

And Thank you.

Scott Benner (45:48)

Yeah. You Appreciate Scott. Very welcome. Hold on one second for me. I'll tell you about all those people who I wouldn't name on the podcast.

Suzanne (45:53)

Thanks.

Scott Benner (45:54)

Yep. A huge thanks to today's sponsor, AbleNow. AbleNow offers tax advantaged able accounts for eligible individuals with disabilities. If you or your child lives with diabetes, you may qualify because of ongoing medical needs. With Able Now, you can save for a wide range of disability related expenses without affecting eligibility for certain disability benefits such as Medicaid.

Scott Benner (46:22)

And thanks to recent federal law updates, more people are eligible than ever before. Learn more and check your eligibility at ablenow.com. You spell that ablenow.com. There's links in the show notes and links at juiceboxpodcast.com. I'd like to thank the blood glucose meter that my daughter carries, the Kontoor Next Gen blood glucose meter.

Scott Benner (46:47)

Learn more and get started today at kontoornext.com/juicebox. And don't forget, you may be paying more through your insurance right now for the meter you have than you would pay for the contour next gen in cash. There are links in the show notes of the audio app you're listening in right now and links at juiceboxpodcast.com to Contour and all of the sponsors. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of the juice box podcast.

Scott Benner (47:17)

If you're not already subscribed or following the podcast in your favorite audio app, like Spotify or Apple Podcasts, please do that now. Seriously, just to hit follow or subscribe will really help the show. If you go a little further in Apple Podcasts and set it up so that it downloads all new episodes, I'll be your best friend. And if you leave a five star review, oh, I'll probably send you a Christmas card. Would you like a Christmas card?

Scott Benner (47:42)

If this is your first time listening to the Juice Box podcast and you'd like to hear more, download Apple Podcasts or Spotify, really any audio app at all. Look for the Juice Box podcast and follow or subscribe. We put out new content every day that you'll enjoy. Wanna learn more about your diabetes management? Go to juiceboxpodcast.com up in the menu and look for Bold Beginnings, the diabetes pro tip series, and much more.

Scott Benner (48:07)

This podcast is full of collections and series of information that will help you to live better with insulin. If you're looking for community around type one diabetes, check out the Juice Box podcast private Facebook group. Juice Box podcast, type one diabetes. But everybody is welcome. Type one, type two, gestational, loved ones, it doesn't matter to me.

Scott Benner (48:30)

If you're impacted by diabetes and you're looking for support, comfort, or community, check out Juice Box podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook. Have a podcast? Want it to sound fantastic? Wrongwayrecording.com.

Read More

#1842 Two Fancy Pill Boxes - Part 1

Diagnosed with T1D 51 years ago , Suzanne discusses her journey with autoimmune stacking. She details a terrifying adrenal crisis that ultimately led to an Addison’s disease diagnosis.

Companies that Support Juicebox

Simplify Lifewith Omnipod
Omnipod
DexcomG7 15 Day Sensor
Dexcom
Save 20%Save 20% with offer code: JUICEBOX
Cozy Earth
US MEDGet your Diabetes Supplies
US MED
ContourEasy to Use and Highly Accurate
Contour Next
MiniMedMake everyday a better day
Minimed
TandemControl-IQ+ with AutoBolus
Tandem
CommunitySupport Touched By Type 1
Touched By Type 1
EversenseOne Year One CGM
Eversense
Simplify Lifewith Omnipod
Omnipod
DexcomG7 15 Day Sensor
Dexcom
Save 20%Save 20% with offer code: JUICEBOX
Cozy Earth
US MEDGet your Diabetes Supplies
US MED
ContourEasy to Use and Highly Accurate
Contour Next
MiniMedMake everyday a better day
Minimed
TandemControl-IQ+ with AutoBolus
Tandem
CommunitySupport Touched By Type 1
Touched By Type 1
EversenseOne Year One CGM
Eversense

Key Takeaways

  • Early Diabetes Management: Diagnosed 51 years ago at age four, Suzanne's early management relied on primitive tools like medieval-style metal lancets, basic urine tests, and limited dietary guidance, highlighting the drastic evolution of diabetes care.
  • Autoimmune Disease Stacking: Suzanne's medical journey demonstrates how autoimmune diseases often cluster. She developed vitiligo and hypothyroidism (Hashimoto's) before facing a severe Addison's disease diagnosis later in life.
  • Navigating T1D Burnout: Teenage years and college brought on diabetes rebellion and burnout, leading to a relaxed diet (like eating Pop-Tarts in boarding school) and less frequent testing, a common phase for many growing up with T1D.
  • The Addison's Crisis: Addison's disease can present with vague symptoms like low sodium, fatigue, lightheadedness, and cramping, eventually culminating in a life-threatening adrenal crisis requiring emergency hospital and mini-ICU care.
  • Steroids vs. Insulin Resistance: Managing Addison's requires daily steroid medications, which directly antagonize insulin. This causes significant insulin resistance, driving up daily insulin needs (from 28 to 40+ units) and causing unwanted weight gain.

Resources Mentioned

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Introduction & Bold Beginnings

Scott Benner (0:00)

Welcome back, friends. You are listening to the Juice Box podcast.

Suzanne (0:14)

Hi, my name is Suzanne and I have been a type one diabetic for fifty one years. I feel like I was diagnosed in the dark ages.

Scott Benner (0:25)

If your loved one is newly diagnosed with type one diabetes and you're seeking a clear practical perspective, check out the Bold Beginnings series on the Juice Box podcast. It's hosted by myself and Jenny Smith, an experienced diabetes educator with over thirty five years of personal insight into type one. Our series cuts through the medical jargon and delivers straightforward answers to your most pressing questions. You'll gain insight from real patients and caregivers and find practical advice to help you confidently navigate life with type one. You can start your journey informed and empowered with the Juice Box podcast.

Scott Benner (0:59)

The bold beginning series and all of the collections in the Juice Box podcast are available in your audio app and at juiceboxpodcast.com in the menu. While you're listening, please remember that nothing you hear on the Juice Box podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise. Always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan or becoming bold with insulin.

Sponsors: Touched by Type 1, Eversense & Tandem

Scott Benner (1:29)

This episode of the Juice Box podcast is brought to you by my favorite diabetes organization, Touched by Type one. Please take a moment to learn more about them at touchedbytype1.org on Facebook and Instagram. Touchedbytype1.org. Check out their many programs, their annual conference, awareness campaign, their d box program, dancing for diabetes. They have a dance program for local kids, a golf night, and so much more. Touchedbytype1.org. You're looking to help or you wanna see people helping people with type one, you want touched by type1.org.

Scott Benner (2:08)

Today's episode is also sponsored by the Eversense three sixty five, the one year wear CGM. That's one insertion a year. That's it. And here's a little bonus for you. How about there's no limit on how many friends and family you can share your data with with the Eversense Now app? No limits. Eversense. The podcast is also sponsored today by the Tandem Mobi system, which is powered by Tandem's newest algorithm, Control IQ Plus technology. Tandem Mobi has a predictive algorithm that helps prevent highs and lows and is now available for ages two and up. Learn more and get started today at tandemdiabetes.com/juicebox.

Suzanne's 51-Year T1D Journey & Autoimmune Diagnoses

Suzanne (2:49)

Hi. My name is Suzanne, and I have been a type one diabetic for fifty one years. I feel like I was diagnosed in the dark ages. I also have several other autoimmune diseases that we will be discussing today. I'm sure that's part of the reason why I wanted to come on here.

Scott Benner (3:10)

Yeah. I'm looking at your list here. Suzanne, you got a you got a banger here.

Suzanne (3:14)

I have a banger. Yeah. I do. I do. I have I was diagnosed with, well actually I was never diagnosed technically. I have vitiligo. That was the first thing after diabetes to appear and that was about twenty three years ago. I first noticed it when I was getting married actually. And then I was diagnosed with hypothyroidism when I was pregnant with my first child. I have two kids. Almost a year ago, Mother's Day weekend, I had a fabulous spa trip at the local hospital where I was diagnosed with Addison's.

Scott Benner (3:49)

You had me going. I thought you were gonna have would were going to have been diagnosed during a spa trip. And then but the lovely wording, Addison's, not fun from what I understand from people.

Suzanne (3:59)

It is not fun. Yeah. I'll say that was like a slap in the face. Huge slap in the face. I think it's one thing to have grown up as a diabetic, good or bad, and it's got its pluses and minuses certainly as has been discussed on this podcast, I think, many times. That's like one thing, you know, I had that. I it was under control and then the Addison's with the diabetes is not easy. I am still working on that. It is a struggle every day.

Scott Benner (4:28)

Susan, I have to ask you. Your camera was on when you first came on. You've had diabetes for fifty one years. What were you born with it?

Suzanne (4:35)

Four no. I was four years old when I was diagnosed.

Scott Benner (4:38)

First of all, you don't look like you're 55. So good for you. Yeah. Congratulations.

Suzanne (4:41)

Thank you.

Scott Benner (4:42)

Take that with you.

Suzanne (4:42)

55? Yeah. I had COVID on my birthday this year for the time.

Scott Benner (4:46)

My god. Are they after you, Suzanne? Whoever they are, what do you think?

Suzanne (4:49)

They are. But I have to tell you, that was kinda nice because he basically sat in my daughter's bedroom who's in Madrid, and I watched Netflix for five days. Not gonna lie.

Scott Benner (5:00)

Young people are thinking of having children and becoming real adults. The lady just said, I got COVID on my birthday. What a wonderful gift.

Suzanne (5:06)

Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (5:07)

Yeah. Yeah. And no one bothered me, and I sat still for a while.

Suzanne (5:11)

Yeah. The dogs hung out with me. It was it was awesome.

Scott Benner (5:13)

Oh, wow. Okay. Let's let's figure this whole thing out. So I heard you say you have two kids.

Suzanne (5:19)

Mhmm.

Scott Benner (5:19)

One of them sounds fancy because they live in Madrid.

Suzanne (5:22)

Well, she doesn't live there. She's actually a semester abroad. Oh. Or actually not Madrid. I said Madrid. She's in Barcelona. My bad.

Scott Benner (5:27)

I sorry. Why'd you say Madrid, you think?

Suzanne (5:29)

Somewhere in Spain. I don't know. She's somewhere

Scott Benner (5:31)

in Spain. In Spain. I was in Spain for Yeah. I'm pretty sure. Well, when the fever hits you, what's it even matter?

Suzanne (5:37)

Exactly.

Scott Benner (5:38)

How was COVID five years later? Is it like a cold, or did it hit you hard?

Suzanne (5:43)

Yeah. You know, it was really interesting. It was just like a super congested cold. And, like on a whim, I decided to test and all of a sudden I was like positive. I was like oh my god, I finally have it. And it was super super congested. And I did go on Paxlovid because I don't think there's any scientific evidence for this, but the last thing I wanted was another autoimmune disease from a virus because they don't

Scott Benner (6:11)

I don't need more room for them, actually.

Suzanne (6:13)

Yeah. I don't. And I and, you know, I know that I was headed in the Addison's direction looking back on everything, but I, you know, it's not a coincidence that the previous year right before my birthday, I got really sick also and it was not COVID. It was not flu A. It was not flu B. It was not RSV RSV. But whatever it was, you know, I had fever. I had chills, and I ended up coughing for, like, two and a half months. And I think that just pushed me over the edge with the Addison's, quite frankly. But I'm not a doctor.

Growing Up With Diabetes in the 70s

Scott Benner (6:46)

Well, listen. What do I know? First of that Paxlovid, what what an ad campaign. I I forget the wording, but it bounced so nicely. Something COVID packs take Paxlovid. Was like, god. Who came up with that? It's awesome. Just really I don't know if it works or not. I have no idea.

Suzanne (6:59)

I don't know. It it wasn't bad. I mean, you know Yeah. COVID wasn't bad. I don't think it was bad to begin with,

Scott Benner (7:04)

but yeah. Yeah. And this is the first time you got it?

Suzanne (7:08)

Mhmm. Well, look at you dodging dodging all the raindrops.

Suzanne (7:10)

I know. Yeah. And my son has yet to test positive for so I don't know.

Scott Benner (7:14)

First time I got it, I, I didn't feel good. I'm gonna be I'm gonna be able to be honest with you. There's an episode of this podcast. It's about using Gvoke HypoPen, and it's with Jenny. And if you find it and listen to it, I am, like, burning up with a fever while I'm making it. And, like, when we got done recording, Jenny was looking at me and she was, are you okay? And I was like, why? And she goes, you don't look okay. And I'm like, no. No. I'm alright. And I got up and walked out the door and my son looks at me and goes, yo, you're all wet. Oh. And I was just like, my shirt was soaked and I if you listen back to that, I don't know how I held it together while I was making that actually. And then I laid in bed and, like, you know, nearly pooped myself and was just, like, feeling terrible for a week. Anyway, I'm glad you got it, later than that. But Yeah. Diabetes, four years old, fifty one years ago. Fifty one years ago was 75?

Suzanne (8:09)

Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (8:10)

God. Now in time for this bicentennial. How nice. Mhmm. Mhmm. Yeah. Tell me what you remember about growing up with diabetes.

Suzanne (8:17)

I remember we actually had so my dad was a physician and there were obviously no blood sugar test kits but he had a blood sugar test kit that he must have gotten through work. And imagine it like some metal suitcase that had foam padding all around it and then it was this machine that looked like, I'm not sure if it's a voltmeter, ampmeter, you know, it had some you would test the blood sugar. The lancets were medieval, square, metal, you know, you'd have to jam it down into a finger. And then this this meter, which is kinda the the needle will go back and forth till it figured out where you were, and that was used for emergencies only.

Scott Benner (9:05)

Okay.

Suzanne (9:06)

You know? And I remember my mom would have to hold me. Someone, you know, hands would be out. Someone would prick me, and then that was the way we tested. And that was not all the time. Again, emergencies only.

Scott Benner (9:17)

But you remember that from being four or five years old?

Suzanne (9:19)

Mhmm. I remember being diagnosed in the hospital. I remember being in the hospital actually There was a traumatic blood draw situation there. I remember that. I remember getting gifts in the hospital, but I do remember that. I remember advancing to, you know, the urine tests. I I really consider it I'm lucky to be alive today considering how little was known back then. Just huge voids of no information.

Scott Benner (9:46)

Yeah. What were they doing giving you, like, one shot a day, or how were they handling it?

Suzanne (9:49)

I was on two shots a day. I was on regular and NPH.

Scott Benner (9:53)

Okay. And do you remember eating a certain way? You ever heard Jenny talk about, like, the the schedule her mom fed her on? Like, was any of that going on?

Suzanne (10:01)

Yeah. I don't really. I mean, I remember there was some publication from the ADA that showed a very it was like it's almost like it looked like a calendar format, but, you know, it talked about the food groups and, you know, how you're supposed to have so many carbohydrates and protein and and it was basically fill a plate with, you know, half protein or I I don't know what it was. It you know, images, pictures. And it was not detailed. My parents probably didn't cook like that anyway.

Scott Benner (10:31)

What kind of physician was your dad?

Suzanne (10:33)

He was a urologist.

Scott Benner (10:34)

Oh, not not very helpful.

Suzanne (10:35)

Not very helpful. But but what's interesting is that he suspected that something was going on with me and he actually brought home test strips from his office to test my urine and they were faulty and showed up fine. I think not long after that know, he was having an accident and he's cleaning up the urine and he's like, this is sticky urine.

Scott Benner (10:58)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (10:59)

And that's when we went to the hospital.

Scott Benner (11:01)

Figured out like that. Yeah. Yeah. People in your life, as you're getting older, do they know about diabetes or is it easier to hide when it's just two shots a day? How do how does that work?

Suzanne (11:11)

It was certainly easier to hide when it was two shots a day. Yeah. I mean, people knew, but no one knew. There was no discussion of what to do, I think, of, you know, crap at the fan. I remember on my date with my husband, my first date, I was still doing multiple injections a day. And I remember kind of, like, trying to hide giving myself the shot. And it was not long after that, I started the pump.

Young Adulthood & Boarding School Rebellion

Scott Benner (11:39)

How old were you in that on that date?

Suzanne (11:41)

Oh, like, 30 years old.

Scott Benner (11:43)

Oh, no kidding. And you were still trying to kinda keep it to yourself?

Suzanne (11:46)

Yeah. Yeah. It's not what I wanted to reveal on the first date. Right?

Scott Benner (11:50)

Well, no. Yeah. I I get that. But what was his response? I guess it was a good one because you married him.

Suzanne (11:56)

So Yeah. Yeah. I mean, he was accepting, you know, that I was a diabetic. He was like, okay. You know, I think he wanted to know more about it, But, yeah, he was fine with it.

Scott Benner (12:04)

Yeah. There's someone out there for you is what I try to tell people all the time because there

Suzanne (12:08)

There's a lid for every pot. That's what he says.

Scott Benner (12:10)

Is that what he says? Which one is he the lid or the pot? I

Suzanne (12:12)

don't I don't know.

Scott Benner (12:15)

I think it's insulting either way if you would no matter what you Exactly. What you are. Exactly.

Suzanne (12:20)

Yeah.

Scott Benner (12:21)

Well, okay. Can I ask, like, getting married later in life? Was that to do with the diabetes? Did you find yourself No.

Suzanne (12:28)

No? That's because I lived in New York City. That was all about meeting a guy.

Scott Benner (12:32)

Oh, who wasn't on Coke and acting like a lytic?

Suzanne (12:35)

Exactly. That was just living yeah. Exactly. Gotcha. Yeah.

Scott Benner (12:39)

Bet you that took a while.

Suzanne (12:40)

It did take a while, but I don't consider mean, I think for the city, that was probably average. You know?

Scott Benner (12:47)

Mhmm. Which people are trying to build careers, make money, stuff like that, hustling around, having a good time, that kind of thing.

Suzanne (12:53)

Right. Right. Right. Working. Working too much.

Scott Benner (12:55)

Finance by any chance?

Suzanne (12:57)

He's in finance. I'm not. I used to teach, and now I work very part time. I'm a tutor.

Scott Benner (13:03)

What'd you teach in the city?

Suzanne (13:05)

Science, AP bio, biology, chemistry.

Scott Benner (13:07)

Wow. That's awesome. What led you into that line of work?

Suzanne (13:10)

You know, I wouldn't be surprised if it's, you know, at some level due to the diabetes. I actually had wanted to go to medical school and in college, that was the goal until one day I decided I did not want that lifestyle So I went ahead and took the MCATs and I think that was the happiest day of my life when I had that chapter behind and I went ahead and took them so that if I ever wanted to go back, the door was still open. But I decided that's not what I wanted to do and I liked science so I went into teaching.

Scott Benner (13:40)

I remember taking my wife to the MCATs. Oh. Man, she was, like, she was young and nervous and

Suzanne (13:49)

Oh, yeah.

Scott Benner (13:49)

It was like a whole day. It felt like

Suzanne (13:51)

I All day. Horrible. Horrible experience, which is why it was the happiest day of my life when it was over. I was like, thank god.

Scott Benner (13:56)

Right? Like, I might have dropped her off and picked her up, like, six, eight hours later or something like that.

Suzanne (14:00)

Yeah. Yeah. Very grueling.

Scott Benner (14:02)

Yeah. Jeez. Yeah. Oh, my goodness.

Suzanne (14:04)

So I think I made the right choice.

Scott Benner (14:07)

Yeah. Has teaching been fulfilling?

Scott Benner (14:10)

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Scott Benner (15:16)

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Suzanne (16:24)

Cheesy has been very fulfilling, and, I quit when I had the kids. We, I was commuting into the city teaching. We had moved out to the suburbs at that point in time. And tutoring's been great for me because now I get to choose how many students I want. I still work, you know, one on one with these kids, and I really enjoy it, quite frankly. It keeps me not current too with the science.

Scott Benner (16:49)

Oh, yeah. So you're not that person who's like, I didn't know we did math like that.

Suzanne (16:53)

Right.

Scott Benner (16:54)

Yeah. You didn't fall that far behind. You know, I just realized my my sister-in-law, she tutors over Zoom with

Suzanne (17:01)

That's what I do.

Scott Benner (17:02)

Students in China.

Suzanne (17:03)

I don't teach students in China.

Scott Benner (17:05)

Yeah. Yeah. It's a little hard because the time is weird. She's up really early doing it. Mhmm. But she's like, it's really kinda really interesting. Like, she's enjoying it. So, anyway Yeah.

Suzanne (17:15)

I have a student in California this year and yeah. It's it's it's great. I it it keeps me busy. You know? Yeah.

Scott Benner (17:22)

Yeah. I like it. Very nice. Yeah. Awesome. Okay. So you've got this diabetes thing. You're growing up with it. It sounds like you were fairly well, like, regulated, meaning, like, you're not upset by it or thrown by it too much. It didn't it wasn't a big It's

Suzanne (17:35)

all I knew.

Scott Benner (17:35)

Yeah. Not a big consternation in your life, really.

Suzanne (17:38)

Not a yeah. It it's all I knew. I think, you know, during the teenage years when I rebelled, I did rebel against my diabetes, you know, teenage years and college was definitely not the best control. I had to get buckled down later on. And, when I was living in the city and had good doctors, who could guide me in in ways to get that just to change, I guess, my attitude and how I was handling my diabetes. I think that's pretty typical.

Scott Benner (18:08)

Yeah. Can I understand that better though? What Yeah. So there's a moment when you're out of your you're a teenager, and there's that I'm gonna fight against the world feeling. And then you choose well, not choose consciously, but you pick diabetes to fight against. What does that mean? What's your management style right then? Like, what is it you're not doing?

Suzanne (18:25)

Here's what it was.

Scott Benner (18:26)

Yeah.

Suzanne (18:26)

I actually went to boarding school, and that was my choice. And when I was in boarding school, I think this sounds kinda silly, but you could eat anything you wanted. You know? I think I had a Pop Tart for the first time in boarding school. Like, I would never have had a Pop Tart

Scott Benner (18:43)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (18:43)

Growing up.

Scott Benner (18:44)

Because your parents wouldn't have bought it?

Suzanne (18:45)

We wouldn't have bought it. Not at all. I never even had boxed mac and cheese as a kid growing up. My mom would make mac and cheese but not you know nothing crazy fancy and it was just simple and in boarding school I could have boxed mac and cheese, I could have pop tarts. So I think I don't know if it was so much of a rebellion versus well, definitely it was a rebellion, but also an exploration I would say. As a result of the diet, my diabetes I think suffered.

Scott Benner (19:13)

How was it tracked then at that time?

Suzanne (19:15)

So it I feel I I mean, I know in college, there were definitely a one c's, but I don't know how it had been tracked with a one c's. Right?

Scott Benner (19:25)

I mean, you would think blood draws, like, maybe twice a year, something like that.

Suzanne (19:29)

Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (19:30)

And then your dad had to have been was your dad like involved still?

Suzanne (19:35)

You know, I don't know how involved he was at that point in time actually. Yeah. You know, my mom was the one who would take me to the doctor's appointments and I went to a really good university, like medical center for my diabetes growing up. So I had great care. I went to diabetes camp, which I think was amazing, probably one of the best things my parents did. But I know that when I was in college, I had to go to, like, a different hospital system because I was, like, thirteen hours away from home. I didn't love that endocrinologist. That probably had something to do with it too, I feel like. You know, you have to I think at that age, it is important to like your doctor

Scott Benner (20:16)

Yeah.

Suzanne (20:17)

Because they have such an important impact on you.

Scott Benner (20:19)

Hey. You just said something. I have to make a note to myself. I'm sorry. Hold on one second. I just got done giving away a bunch of spots at Camp Sweeney, And I have an offer to make all the people who weren't chose it's like really like, a really nice offer from Camp Sweeney. I I'm supposed to send an email out. I just realized I didn't do that yesterday. So, I just made a note for myself. I'm sorry. Thank you.

Suzanne (20:42)

Don't worry.

Scott Benner (20:42)

Don't worry. You reminding me. I definitely wouldn't have got that done today. So camp was valuable, but you're pushing back. Are you regular in Miles per hour in college, or are you have you moved up to something else by then?

Suzanne (20:55)

I might have been on seventy thirty or something else.

Scott Benner (20:58)

Okay. But still just you're still just taking a few shots a day. Oh, yeah. What did it look like? You just weren't doing it?

Suzanne (21:04)

Oh, no. I did my shots. I did my shots, but I wasn't testing all the time. Okay. You know? Yeah.

Scott Benner (21:09)

Yeah. So Yeah. Whether or not those shots were enough for the food you were eating, that was not a thing you were concerned with?

Suzanne (21:15)

Probably not.

Scott Benner (21:16)

Okay. Yeah. Got it.

Suzanne (21:17)

Yeah. Or at least not all the time. You know, I don't remember having, you know, crazy lows or and I've never been in I've never been in, knock on wood, as I'm doing right now, I've never been in DKA. So somehow I survived all this. Like, I honestly don't know how.

Scott Benner (21:31)

Do you have long term complications from diabetes?

Suzanne (21:34)

Yes. I would say some. I have been treated for diabetic retinopathy in my eyes. My eye doctor was holding off for a very long time on treating them and finally he's like, well, let's just do it and see how you respond. And then I responded beautifully, he said, and he's like, well, let's do the other eye. My eyes have been treated. I see him now once a year. I have had some trigger fingers and some and carpal tunnel surgeries for both of those. Mhmm. And knock on wood, I think that is all of my complications except for all these autoimmune diseases, which I don't consider a complication.

Autoimmune Comorbidities: Vitiligo & Hypothyroidism

Scott Benner (22:10)

No. No. No. I I wouldn't either. What's the treatment for the eyes? What'd they do?

Suzanne (22:14)

They just did the laser.

Scott Benner (22:16)

Oh, the laser. How was it?

Suzanne (22:17)

I don't even remember, Scott. That was, like I'm trying to remember when that would have been. That would have been pre 2000. It was oh, actually, no. One eye was after. It was totally fine. You know, it's just a weird feeling having your eyes lasered. Yeah.

Scott Benner (22:33)

I'm I I don't know, but I imagine. Yeah. When people talk about the diddles, and they're like, you don't feel it. I'm like, I don't understand what you're saying.

Suzanne (22:39)

Yeah. I know. They numb it and yeah. I've also had this is not because of my diabetes, an iridotomy, and that was because of the shape of my eyes. They thought the pressure was just creeping up a little bit. Mhmm. So I had that more recently, and, again, that was not bad at all.

Scott Benner (22:57)

Okay. So what's the next thing that comes? So you have diabetes. You're in college. Do you have something else by then, or when does this no.

Suzanne (23:05)

The vitiligo is what first appeared.

Scott Benner (23:07)

The vitiligo. Is it very noticeable?

Suzanne (23:10)

So in the summertime, it is. But I don't think it's horrible. You know? It's you see it definitely on my hands. It's harder to protect my hands if you're washing your hands as sunscreen comes off. Mhmm. So my fingers are definitely lighter. I know I have it on my face a little bit, but if you were to see me, you wouldn't notice it at all. No one else would notice it. Know exactly where it is. And then it's also on other parts, like, weird parts of my body.

Scott Benner (23:35)

I liked earlier when you said it's, like you said it's not diagnosed. I was like, that's

Suzanne (23:38)

No one ever told yeah. Like, I don't know when I figured out I had that.

Scott Benner (23:41)

I mean, I'm assuming you looked and went I think there's patches of uneven color on my skin. Right? Is that Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (23:48)

Yeah. It was no big deal. Like like, it was just like, oh, yeah. You have vitiligo. Like, whenever I eventually found out about it, it was no big deal.

Scott Benner (23:55)

Okay.

Suzanne (23:56)

And I don't consider it a big deal. Like, this the vitiligo is the least of my concerns.

Scott Benner (24:00)

So I wouldn't I mean, putting myself in your shoes, I wouldn't imagine. But at the same time, it's interesting to think, like, you have something. You're like, I don't even need somebody to tell me this officially. I I get it, and there's not nothing I can do about it. So what happens next is the is it the Hashimoto's with the pregnancy?

Suzanne (24:14)

Exactly. Exactly. Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (24:16)

And that's twenty five

Suzanne (24:18)

years ago? '21 that was twenty one years ago.

Scott Benner (24:20)

Twenty one years ago. Mhmm. And are you taking medication for it?

Suzanne (24:24)

Yeah. I take Synthroid, and my TSH TSH is below two. You'll be happy to

Scott Benner (24:28)

hear it. I will be happy. Thank you.

Suzanne (24:30)

Yes. You're welcome.

Scott Benner (24:32)

I just checked. Somebody told me the other day that they had a TSH of seven, and the doctor was like, well, it's not over 10. You're fine. And I'm like, wait. What? No. Yeah. That's not good.

Suzanne (24:41)

Yeah. Yeah. No. And and you might find this funny. I don't even consider the hypothyroidism to be a huge deal.

Scott Benner (24:47)

Well, if it's not impact if you're not you're not tired of

Suzanne (24:49)

impacted by it. Right.

Scott Benner (24:51)

Yeah.

Suzanne (24:51)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Take my pill for that. Mhmm. And that gets monitored every three to four months. Okay. So I feel like I'm that's controlled. Usually, every winter, my nails just go they're just they're just they're horrible. They just get so bad.

Scott Benner (25:08)

Brittle?

Suzanne (25:09)

Brittle, peeling, cracking. Ironically, this is the first year it hasn't happened. But yeah.

Scott Benner (25:14)

Okay. You know, I think that's an interesting one because if if your energy stays up, I think that's the worst impact from from Hashimoto's. I mean, there's a you could get a goiter or something, but I'm saying, like

Suzanne (25:25)

Here's my thing about that, Scott. Like, I'm a busy person. I'm a mom of, like, two kids. I've got two dogs. You know? My husband commutes to the city all the time. Like, life is exhausting to begin with.

Scott Benner (25:37)

You think you might not notice? You might

Suzanne (25:39)

Yes. I mean, like, so, you know, unless you're so exhausted that you're, you know, bedridden, I don't know if I would notice that.

Scott Benner (25:47)

I have to tell you that over the last couple years of my life having lost weight and using the GLPs and everything, I feel a a different level of good than I ever have in my life. Like, now when I'm tired, I think, oh, something's wrong with me. Yeah. Yeah. Because I'm just generally like, I feel the way I feel right now, which is to say energetic and focused and, like, all that stuff. But I was just saying to, Kelly this morning because we both lost weight, and I said, hey. She came in the I was in the shower. Actually, it would help people to know that, when I say I don't plan for the podcast that well, I was in the shower at 09:58 this morning, and this start this started at ten.

Suzanne (26:25)

So Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (26:27)

So I'm in the shower, and Kelly's getting dressed. She's gotta go into the office, and she looked nice. She came in and I said, hey. You look great. And she's, oh, I have to go to the office. And I was like, well, at least your butt looks nice. That'll be nice for people who see you. And we were chatting like that, and then she I said, you look terrific. Then she grabs, like, a spot on her, and she's like, well, this. And I said, Kelly. I'm like, go to the grocery store next time. I said, find five pound bag of flour. Pick it up. Figure out how much weight you've lost. Divide it by five. That's how many bags of flour you got rid of. I was like, and then, like, find some perspective because you look terrific. You know?

Suzanne (26:59)

Yeah. Yeah.

Scott Benner (27:00)

But on top of all that, I feel different.

Suzanne (27:04)

That's great.

The Addison's Disease Crisis

Scott Benner (27:04)

Yeah. I mean, I've weight, but, like, it's I don't know that the weight is the greatest thing. Like, visually, it's not my biggest deal. It's it's just how I feel.

Suzanne (27:11)

Yeah. But I have to say being well, I was gonna say being on steroids now and being diagnosed with the Addison's, I know there are people who are really struggling with Addison's. They can't get out of bed or, you know, they're so fatigued. I have to say that I feel great on the steroids now. And I don't think even when I just said a few minutes ago, like, you know, what's exhausted? You know, when you have hypothyroidism, how do you know? I do know in retrospect that I probably was a little more exhausted before that diagnosis and just didn't realize it because I just attribute it to life.

Scott Benner (27:50)

Yeah. Well, I think when you live with autoimmune issues, if you're tired, you should maybe have your thyroid checked. Yeah. You know? Because it is I mean, in for a lot of people, it is correctable with a pill once a day. Mhmm. Do you ever find yourself not taking the pill, or do you just take it you take it religiously?

Suzanne (28:07)

I take it religiously. Okay.

Scott Benner (28:08)

Yeah.

Suzanne (28:09)

Yeah. Yeah. And now with the Addison's, I bought this fancy pill box for, you know, dividing up my pills now four times a day. I mean, it's crazy, but there's yeah.

Scott Benner (28:18)

You're making getting older sound so sexy. You're don't freak. I got COVID and got to watch Netflix, and I have a fancy pillbox, Scott.

Suzanne (28:26)

Fancy pillbox. Yeah. Love the pillbox. I love it.

Scott Benner (28:28)

I'm really living is what I'm saying.

Suzanne (28:31)

Sad, but true.

Scott Benner (28:32)

How does the, Addison's, like, rear its head? Like, what is the first thing you notice?

Suzanne (28:37)

So that's a good story. Let me back actually, let me backtrack this. So I was diagnosed the weekend of Mother's Day. Right? The week before, like a full week plus before, I had just seen my endocrinologist, and everything was great except for my sodium level. You know, sodium is supposed to be in a very narrow range. I'm trying to think, like, the lowest is it's I don't like, one thirty five might be the lowest it's supposed to be, highest of maybe one forty five or something like that, like, it's a tiny range.

Scott Benner (29:09)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (29:09)

And I had been flirting with low sodium for a while. I had also been on a medication called spironolactone. I don't know if you've ever heard of this one.

Scott Benner (29:18)

Yeah. Sure. My wife used it for a while for period pain when she was younger. Okay. Yeah.

Suzanne (29:23)

Yeah. People use it for hair loss. People go on it for acne. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you go on it for a million and one reasons. I actually went on it for hair loss, and I had been on it for a while. It's also a diuretic. So, you know, we the first question was, you know, after my sodium

Scott Benner (29:40)

Oh, salt. Okay. Yeah.

Suzanne (29:41)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So make you go to the bathroom. And I wasn't even on a high dose, but, my endo was like maybe you need to go talk to your GP about this. And so I knew he was going to say go off this spironolactone and I was ready to go off it. I was like fine. So I quit that a few months before and tapered myself off. Went to see her that Wednesday, good week plus before, and my sodium's still low. But everything else is fine. Mhmm. Now in retrospect, there were a lot of other things that you don't think of telling the doctor.

Scott Benner (30:15)

Okay. Like

Suzanne (30:16)

For example yeah. So workout three days a week when I would do a burpee. Like, if I did a proper burpee when you're down on the ground and you, you know, do the burpee thing and you stand up, I would feel lightheaded. So I had stopped doing them where I would stand up after you, you know, your legs out. You know, I'm trying to explain that. Sorry. It's hard to do that conversation. But if you know what a burpee is

Scott Benner (30:37)

Yeah.

Suzanne (30:38)

You know. So I would just stay down and do them. I also had a lot of leg and foot cramping, particularly in the summer. That had been for a couple of years. So there were these things that were probably signs, but they're so vague. How do you know? Yeah. Right? So, anyway, so then so there's that Wednesday. The following Wednesday, literally a week later oh, wait. Sorry. One more thing. One more detail. I have a frozen shoulder, and that was because I was playing paddle tennis, and I went and got, like, trying to do an overhead shot and something popped, snapped, made a noise in my shoulder. And I remember thinking, great, wonder what that was. But no pain, nothing, and then sure enough, sometime later, my shoulder starts to freeze up.

Scott Benner (31:27)

Yeah.

Suzanne (31:28)

So, you know, look, I'm a woman, menopausal. Yes, I have diabetes. I also have hypothyroidism. That, I don't even consider that necessarily a complication of diabetes. That was probably just waiting to happen. And I'd also had previously another frozen shoulder from moving, like moving all the boxes around, unpacking, all that.

Scott Benner (31:47)

I think frozen shoulder is a I mean, that really could be a complication of the diabetes because you've got trigger finger too. Right?

Suzanne (31:54)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It totally could be. Yeah. You know? But I think no matter what, like, I was probably destined to get that with the hypothyroidism, menopause. I mean, like, all of those reasons.

Scott Benner (32:04)

Actually, I like your attitude around it a lot. Thank

Suzanne (32:07)

you. Denial? I don't know if maybe.

Scott Benner (32:09)

I don't know if it's denial or if it's just like, yeah. It happened. And then It happened. Yeah. Right.

Suzanne (32:13)

Yeah. And I knew the funny thing was I knew as soon as I had the first one, and I went to the doctor like months after it first started, I knew I'd get the second one. It was just a matter of time. And sure enough, that one stroke on the paddle court. So I had been dealing with this frozen shoulder and starting that Wednesday before I went to the doctor, following weekend I hadn't slept well and I was blaming my frozen shoulder because why not? You know it's uncomfortable at night sometimes so I wasn't feeling great. Monday I go work out and in retrospect the person I work out with and the two people I work out with they were like, Yeah, you didn't look so great. Go have lunch with my mother-in-law and she told me I didn't look so great. I was like, okay. Tuesday I have dinner or lunch with a friend, not really hungry, kind of a loss of an appetite. I decide that night just to have a peanut butter sandwich for dinner. Then Wednesday I wake up and literally my husband is walking out of the house to go to California until, I guess, Friday night.

Scott Benner (33:19)

Okay.

Suzanne (33:19)

And I crossed paths with him to walk into our powder room to vomit. He turns around and he looks at me and he's like, Do I need to stay? I was like, Nope. I got this. Because I don't know how many diabetics are like this, but when I vomit, there's a very good chance I'm going to get ketones.

Scott Benner (33:38)

Okay.

Suzanne (33:38)

So I start to play what I call the ketone game where I take Zofran and I try to hydrate with electrolytes and try to keep some carbohydrates in me of some sort to prevent the ketones and to stay out of the hospital.

Scott Benner (33:53)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (33:54)

So that's that's like the normal protocol.

Scott Benner (33:56)

Yeah.

Suzanne (33:57)

So I just tell them, nope. I got this. I was fine for the rest of the day. I even picked up my son for something, drove him, went into takeout because I wasn't feeling good enough well enough to make dinner and didn't really have an appetite to eat that. And I would say by around 08:00, I'm like, yeah. I'm not really feeling well at all. And I called my dog sitter who also happens to be a type one diabetic.

Scott Benner (34:22)

I was like, why are you calling your dog sitter?

Suzanne (34:24)

Well, husband's away. I've got my son here. You

Scott Benner (34:28)

know? Okay.

Suzanne (34:28)

He's gonna have school. And I called her, and I was like, are you available if I have to throw on the towel and go to the hospital? Like, I just needed to know, like, is she available?

Scott Benner (34:39)

Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (34:40)

That's it. She's like, yep. Any anything you need. And sure enough, by the time my son goes to bed, I get sick again. So I, like, I managed, like, twelve hours plus not getting sick. And I feel like this always hits the van at night. Right?

Scott Benner (34:56)

Yeah.

Suzanne (34:57)

And I'm getting ready for bed, and I throw up again. And I'm like, you know what? Like, this isn't right. Like, there's something going on, and I had no ketones.

Scott Benner (35:05)

Right. So do you start thinking at that point maybe this isn't what I think it is?

Suzanne (35:09)

I didn't know what to think, Scott.

Scott Benner (35:10)

Okay.

Suzanne (35:10)

I did not feel well.

Scott Benner (35:11)

Okay. Well, you're starting to get dazed and not really I don't know.

Suzanne (35:15)

Yeah. But, like, I just I didn't feel well. And I called I called Jackie up, my dog sitter, and she immediately came over. And then I'm, you know, ready to take myself to the ER and she's like, no. You're not. So she drives me and as a diabetic, you get in pretty quickly. Usually, it was I think it was also a slow night.

Scott Benner (35:33)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (35:34)

But this is, like, the local hospital and they do blood work, and they tell me that my sodium is one sixteen. And that's really low. Like Okay. That's severely low. Like, I could have confusion, seizures, coma, like, bad stuff. And they immediately sent me off for a CAT scan to make sure my brain hasn't swollen, and lucky enough, it had not. And I think oh, go ahead.

Scott Benner (36:02)

No. That's just horrifying. That's all. Also, your husband's about to do a round trip over to California is what I just heard too. But

Suzanne (36:08)

You did not hear that, by the way.

Scott Benner (36:10)

Oh, he didn't come back?

Suzanne (36:11)

Well, we'll get to that.

Scott Benner (36:12)

But Okay.

Suzanne (36:13)

Didn't know how bad it was, Scott.

Scott Benner (36:14)

Oh, okay. Okay.

Suzanne (36:15)

You know, so they tell me my sodium is on 16. I don't know what that really means. So I'm like, okay. I have low sodium. They do the brain scan. And then next thing I know, they're admitting me. And I didn't know they admitted me to the mini ICU, so I have no idea.

Scott Benner (36:27)

Okay.

Suzanne (36:27)

And I didn't know until, like, I was practically being released, the day I was being released, that I was in the mini ICU.

Scott Benner (36:33)

What's mini ICU mean? Is it are

Suzanne (36:34)

you medical? Like, that's what they called it, but it's like the the wing opposite the ICU so that if they have to admit you to the ICU, it's a step up or step down from the ICU, basically. Okay. Yeah. And they wanna be there, I guess, because if they couldn't raise my sodium correctly, properly, or had any issues with it, I'd have to be in the ICU. Geez. Yeah. So they had no idea why my sodium was low either at this point in time. They just know that it's low. I think they get nephrology involved because, yes, it could be my kidneys. I didn't know all of that at the time, and I wasn't confused. Like, I was very

Scott Benner (37:06)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (37:07)

Coherent. It was it's kinda weird.

Scott Benner (37:09)

How long are in the hospital for?

Suzanne (37:11)

I was in the hospital for four days. I will say they handled the Addison's very well. Oh and another symptom that I didn't realize, my blood sugars were really low beforehand and I remember commenting on that. Was like, Gosh, I can't get them up. I wonder what's going on. And it was kind of weird that that had happened and that continued in the hospital for a few days too. But they diagnosed me with Addison's. My husband did stay in California. I didn't say come home. I had girlfriends and family who were here. Think had it been known that I was in the mini ICU and perhaps how serious it was, obviously, he would have come home.

Scott Benner (37:49)

You know, like, we've been married a long time, but not that long. Yeah. Yeah.

Suzanne (37:52)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I'm glad I listened to myself. Right?

Scott Benner (37:56)

Like Yeah.

Suzanne (37:56)

It definitely was the right thing because I'd hate to think about what would have happened if I hadn't gone in when I did. I think my body was so used to having to work at a lower sodium level to begin with that a sodium level of one sixteen, I was not having any complications from that, which I feel very fortunate. But they didn't do such a great job with releasing me with the steroids and the meds. And within a few hours of being released from the hospital, I was not right. Oh. And there were I was confused. I was hearing noises, and my legs felt like there were weights in them, and they were pulling the weights were pulling me down to the ground. And I knew something was wrong with me. Again, like, I knew this is not right, and I knew I was confused. And the worst thing you can Google or do is Google. Right? Like, you shouldn't Google when I don't know. Maybe you should. I don't know. I did. And I think part of it is like my because, you know, I I can Google something and understand a lot of the science behind it to a certain extent. And I was convinced that they had not raised my sodium correctly, and they had caused nerve damage to me. Like You

Scott Benner (39:20)

and Google figured this out together?

Suzanne (39:22)

Yeah. We did.

Scott Benner (39:22)

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Did you Google and see I I think about AI so much now, not Google. Like, I would have been like, I think I'm confused and I think AI would have been like, how do you know? Know You what I mean? And then you would have got caught in an existential conversation.

Suzanne (39:35)

Well, part of it I know. Part of it was that they said they would do another CT scan on my brain and make sure everything was okay and they didn't. And then I I started going down that rabbit hole. Oh. I mean, I was not right Scott.

Scott Benner (39:45)

Yeah, no I hear you.

Suzanne (39:46)

I should have been this confused when I went into the hospital, not when I came out. And you know my husband knew something was not right and I was like we have to go back to the hospital. And for some reason we called my endo. I actually had her cell phone number because I've done a lot of studies with her practice in the and I had her cell phone number and she's like yeah, you need to go back to the ER. And it was like, we go to New York City or do we go to another university hospital that's close by? And we decided she thought New York would be too much of a mess in the ER, and we went to the other hospital. I thought I was having a stroke in the ER, Scott. My husband's like, you were not having a stroke. Oh, yeah. I mean, was not myself, and he's like, she's not right. I know she's not right. I was like another person, like a crazy person.

Scott Benner (40:37)

Yeah.

Suzanne (40:37)

I mean, I can look back and laugh at this now.

Scott Benner (40:40)

But It's scary at the time.

Suzanne (40:42)

At the time, it was scary. Like, I was convinced I was having a stroke.

Scott Benner (40:45)

He's too old to date. You know what I mean? He's got a there's he's got concerns as well.

Suzanne (40:50)

Stuck with me.

Scott Benner (40:51)

Yeah. He's like, I got this lady's gotta hang in there. I don't wanna do this again.

Suzanne (40:55)

Exactly. He's got kids. That messes it

Scott Benner (40:58)

all up. Yeah. The kids seem to like her. I don't this is bad. We gotta figure this out. God, I don't wanna do the laundry.

Suzanne (41:06)

Right.

Scott Benner (41:06)

Suzanne, wake up. But you felt like you were having a stroke?

Suzanne (41:12)

I did. I was convinced I'm having

Scott Benner (41:13)

a stroke. Okay.

Suzanne (41:14)

I mean, it probably didn't help that I saw the signs for stroke, like, right across from me. But, I mean, like, I, like, I felt like my mouth was getting swollen. I was having trouble swallowing, like, all this crazy stuff.

Scott Benner (41:25)

Right.

Suzanne (41:25)

So they actually ended up doing a CT scan of me, my brain, I guess, I don't know, in the ER. And actually, that was one of the most psychedelic experiences I've ever had and that is the only way I can explain it. It was not like my first CT scan a few days prior. It was the psychedelic light show. I don't know what was going on. They ended up admitting me and this is also a little weird. I had had to transfer me to another one of their hospitals within the system just like on the And other side of my only experience with that other hospital was that I knew someone's dad who was a psychiatrist and that was his hospital. That's where he saw his patients. Okay? So that that's important because when once they got me transferred to the other hospital, and this is like late at night, by the way. Mhmm. I wake up at this this this other hospital. You know, they they set me up. There's a a woman who I'm sharing the room with who is I can't see her. The the screen is between us, but she's talking about fentanyl patches and all this stuff, and I'm like, okay. This is really interesting. And I hear screaming noises from the hallway from patients. Okay? And for a minute there, Scott, I literally thought was Mother's Day, the way.

Scott Benner (42:44)

Put you in a psych ward.

Suzanne (42:45)

Yes. And I was like, I'm not crazy. Like, I was like, I'm not crazy. But how would you know if you are? Know.

Scott Benner (42:52)

Yeah. This is the worst season of Sex and the City I've ever heard.

Suzanne (42:58)

I thought I'd woken up in a cyborg, and it it became very clear soon enough that, obviously, I had not. The woman next to me had she had a tumor in her pancreas. I mean, so, like, they were gonna have to do, you know, whipple and all this stuff on her. The poor woman, she was super nice. I talked with her. The screams from the hall were the patients with dementia. You know?

Scott Benner (43:20)

Mhmm. You're like, I could give you some insulin advice, but I am tripping balls right now, so I don't think I should tell you anything.

Suzanne (43:26)

I was fine.

Scott Benner (43:26)

I was fine. By then, you were okay? Okay.

Suzanne (43:28)

Yeah. So they actually said there were two things they said. They said one thing that they thought I was having a panic attack.

Scott Benner (43:35)

Okay.

Suzanne (43:35)

Maybe. I don't know. Probably. Could've. It could've have been

Scott Benner (43:38)

steroid to me a little bit, but go ahead.

Suzanne (43:41)

Right. Right. So, you know, I've had one panic attack before. It was not like that at all. Mhmm. That was during COVID when I had to fly for the first time to go visit my sick parents. So that was something totally different. And then when I've been in the ER, you know, they were trying to figure out if I was in DKA, and I remember flipping out in the ER because, like, I was like, I've never been in DKA. What are you talking about? You know? Like so I don't know. It there was just a lot of confusion. I think I was in. My endo now says she thinks I was having a crisis. She had connected, unbeknownst to me behind the scenes, connected with other doctors at this hospital, and this lovely doctor came to visit me. She was pregnant with her second child on Mother's Day. I, you know, bless her for coming in that day. And she was like, you're fine. She's like, you have to eat. I think I had some ketones, but nothing crazy. She's like, you just need to eat. And she's like, you need a week, and you just need to deal with this new diagnosis. She's like, you're gonna be fine. We finally made it home for dinner. That was the beginning of Addison's except for the fact that I came home. So that's Sunday night. On Tuesday, I had a Zoom call with my end up, and I asked her if I could be readmitted. I was like, can you can we just start this all over again, please? Because at this point in time, I had two different hospitals telling me what steroids to take when. Like, it was such a mess, Scott. Yeah. And she was so amazing. Like, you know, I met with her 08:30 in the morning on Zoom. She told me what to take, and then she hooked me up few months later, it took with an adrenal specialist in her practice.

Managing Steroids, Insulin Resistance & Conclusion

Scott Benner (45:22)

I was gonna say, who manages the the Addison's?

Suzanne (45:25)

So I see two Endos now.

Scott Benner (45:26)

You have an Endo for diabetes?

Suzanne (45:28)

I don't know if I need to, but you know what's crazy is that I I asked my Endo. I was like, so how many other Addison's patients do you have? And she looked at me, she's like, just you.

Scott Benner (45:37)

It's just you, me, and Google, baby. We're gonna get it. Don't worry.

Suzanne (45:41)

Right? And then I asked the adrenal specialist. I'm like I was like, so how many other type ones do you have? And she's like

Scott Benner (45:50)

Just you.

Suzanne (45:51)

Yeah. Maybe one, but I mean, maybe one if you don't know is just you.

Scott Benner (45:55)

Yeah. Right.

Suzanne (45:55)

And, you know, look, they're both in a med school university setting, so they don't see patients every day. Right? They see patients two to three times a week, then they're teaching, they're, you know, doing whatever they do behind the scenes with the research. So they don't have a full patient load, but between the two of them, it's almost a full patient load.

Scott Benner (46:14)

Right. Right. Right.

Suzanne (46:15)

And I was just like, I feel like the balloon popped when I heard that. I was like, oh.

Scott Benner (46:19)

Oh, it's it's just it's just us. Have you found there's some people in the Facebook group that have Addison's have kind of

Suzanne (46:25)

found each actually a type one Addison's Facebook group.

Scott Benner (46:29)

Is there? Okay. Good. Yeah.

Suzanne (46:30)

Facebook has been amazing, I have to say. Yeah. You know, between

Scott Benner (46:34)

Somebody doesn't yell at you about your politics. It's awesome.

Suzanne (46:36)

No. But, like Yeah. Yeah. Right. But it's like, you have to take everything with a grain of salt.

Scott Benner (46:41)

Sure. And then filter through. It's a great starting point. You know what I mean? Like, people can

Suzanne (46:46)

great starting

Scott Benner (46:46)

point. Yeah.

Suzanne (46:47)

And I think early on, that was so important for me, at least with the Addison's, and there are so many adrenal insufficiency groups, and people have adrenal insufficiency for different reasons, different kinds. So that's really take everything with a grain of salt. That side of

Scott Benner (47:03)

my health. How much more are you having to bolus for the steroids?

Suzanne (47:05)

It kills me. Yeah. So that, I'm learning to get over. So I used to be on maybe twenty eight units a day, you know, maybe a day of a lot of eating or not a lot of exercising, maybe 32. But now it's around 40 something. And this is what I also hate. I feel like I have a belly now. Like, I was so proud of myself that with the diabetes, I was, like, making it through menopause and doing so well, and now I put on weight with the steroids, like, about 10 pounds. But I'm a short person, and so 10 pounds is a lot.

Scott Benner (47:36)

Well, I knew you were short because they put you in the mini ICU. It's a joke I made earlier, but you didn't hear it. I just wanted to do it one more time. That's all. I love that, by the way, before we started, you said you were nervous. You don't even need me. No. I could say, hey, everyone. This is Suzanne. She's gonna tell you about her life. I'll be back in an hour.

Suzanne (47:54)

Sorry. I'm probably talking too much.

Scott Benner (47:56)

No. You're doing great. I just like, you set me up for me having to prompt you, and then you were just you don't need that. So Thank you.

Suzanne (48:02)

Thank you.

Scott Benner (48:03)

You're not nervous now. Right? Mm-mm. Okay. Good. Good. Good. No. Chicken So what are you gonna do about the weight? Is it

Suzanne (48:09)

I wanna buy a treadmill, first of all.

Scott Benner (48:11)

I'm gonna buy some

Suzanne (48:12)

stuff, Scott. Joking.

Scott Benner (48:14)

So Are you gonna run the treadmill on your belly? How's that gonna work exactly? You do all what do you I don't know.

Suzanne (48:19)

I don't know. But here's the thing. Like, you know, I said I feel so much better on the steroids, and I do. And I feel so fortunate that I can still work out three days a week with my trainer. I'm still back doing pilates one day a week, so I'm really trying to work out.

Scott Benner (48:36)

Mhmm.

Suzanne (48:36)

I make sure I do that in the morning after I take my biggest steroid dose. But with the insulin resistance, if I could just hop on that treadmill at night for even fifteen, twenty minutes, go for a walk, do it after lunch, I think it would make such a difference. At least it would make me feel good if nothing else.

Scott Benner (48:54)

Right. No. You do. You get nothing wrong with getting moving. That'd be awesome.

Suzanne (48:57)

Nothing wrong with getting moving. Yeah. And, you know, I I often think about GLP ones because I feel like I am such a prime candidate for that now.

Scott Benner (49:08)

I wonder if it would lower your insulin needs if the Addison's would combat that the other way.

Suzanne (49:13)

No. I think I think it would combat the Addison's because that's combating you know, the the the steroids and the insulin are fighting. Right? They're antagonistic, so they're fighting. And I think the GLP one that's what I think. But and there are Addison's type ones on GLP ones. I think it would, you know, reduce the it it would let the insulin work better. I really think it would.

Scott Benner (49:37)

Well, why are you not trying it then if that's what you wanna help?

Suzanne (49:39)

That's a great question.

Scott Benner (49:40)

So Because let me say this, Suzanne. You have a reasonably comfortable life. You there's things you wanna do. You do the things you wanna do. I'm you're not being stopped by insurance or money or anything like that is what I'm saying. So, like, why at least that's my my take from this. So, like Yeah.

Suzanne (49:55)

Yeah. Insurance will not pay for it, and it is expensive. Money. Hey, that's why I tutor. Right? So what's stopping me is that it is another drug you're dependent upon. That's just one more.

Scott Benner (50:05)

Right? Why does that matter? This episode was too good to cut anything out of, but too long to make just one episode. So this is part one. Make sure you go find part two right now. It's gonna be the next episode in your feed. This episode was sponsored by Touched by Type one. I want you to go find them on Facebook, Instagram, and give them a follow, and then head to touchedbytype1.org where you're gonna learn all about their programs and resources for people with type one diabetes. Are you tired of getting a rash from your CGM adhesive? Give the Eversense three sixty five a try. Eversensecgm.com/juicebox. Beautiful silicone that they use. It changes every day. It keeps it fresh. Not only that, you only have to change the sensor once a year. So, I mean, that's better. Head now to tandemdiabetes.com/juicebox and check out today's sponsor, Tandem Diabetes Care. I think you're gonna find exactly what you're looking for at that link, including a way to sign up and get started with the Tandem Mobi system. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of the juice box podcast. If you're not already subscribed or following the podcast in your favorite audio app, like Spotify or Apple podcasts, please do that now. Seriously, just to hit follow or subscribe will really help the show. If you go a little further in Apple Podcasts and set it up so that it downloads all new episodes, I'll be your best friend. And if you leave a five star review, oh, I'll probably send you a Christmas card. Would you like a Christmas card? If you're looking for community around type one diabetes, check out the Juice Box Podcast private Facebook group. Juice Box Podcast, type one diabetes. But everybody is welcome. Type one, type two, gestational, loved ones, it doesn't matter to me. If you're impacted by diabetes and you're looking for support, comfort, or community, check out Juice Box podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook. If you have a podcast and you need a fantastic editor, you want Rob from Wrong Way Recording. Listen. Truth be told, I'm like 20% smarter when Rob edits me. He takes out all the, like, gaps of time and when I go, and stuff like that. And it just I don't know, man. Like, I listen back and I'm like, why do I sound smarter? And then I remember because I did one smart thing. I hired Rob at wrongwayrecording.com.

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