#1630 Tilt-A-Whirl
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With type 1 diabetes, ADHD, and a background in dance and psychology, Gabi, 28, opens up about family, teaching pilates, and finding her own way.
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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends and welcome back to another episode of The Juicebox podcast.
All right, Rob, so a couple things happened during this one that are going to make me tell you this. This girl has ADHD. She has long pauses and gaps. Normally we would take them out. I want to leave them all in, because they help tell her story. They help people to understand how her thought process goes and where it might impact her diabetes and her other care. As a matter of fact, use this as the voice note to open up the show, so that the people listening know that normally we would tighten this up, but so that they can really understand Gabby, we're going to leave it all just as it was recorded. Bye Rob Oh, and by everybody else. I hope you enjoy the podcast. If this is your first time listening to the Juicebox podcast and you'd like to hear more, download Apple podcasts or Spotify, really, any audio app at all. Look for the Juicebox podcast and follow or subscribe. We put out new content every day that you'll enjoy. Want to learn more about your diabetes management. Go to Juicebox podcast.com up in the menu and look for bold beginnings, the diabetes Pro Tip series and much more. This podcast is full of collections and series of information that will help you to live better with insulin. Please don't forget that nothing you hear on the Juicebox podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan or becoming bold with insulin you
the show you're about to listen to is sponsored by the ever since 365 the ever since 365 has exceptional accuracy over one year and is the most accurate CGM in The low range that you can get ever since cgm.com/juicebox dot com slash Juicebox. This episode of The Juicebox podcast is sponsored by the Omnipod five. And at my link, omnipod.com/juicebox you can get yourself a free, what I just say, a free Omnipod five starter kit, free. Get out of here. Go click on that link, omnipod.com/juicebox check it out. Terms and Conditions. Apply. Eligibility may vary. Full terms and conditions can be found at omnipod.com/juicebox links in the show notes, links at Juicebox podcast.com. This episode of The Juicebox podcast is brought to you by my favorite diabetes organization, touched by type one, please take a moment to learn more about them at touched by type one.org, on Facebook and Instagram. Touched by type one.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 touched by type one.org. You're looking to help or you want to see people helping people with type one. You want touched by type one.org.
Gabby 3:17
I am Gabby. I'm How old am I? I'm 28 I have was diagnosed when I was two, okay? And
Scott Benner 3:32
that's good. That's a good start. Gabby, also the editor, is gonna like, when you hear it back, you're gonna be like, I'm Gabby. I'm 28 and I was diagnosed when I was two, and you'll be like, Oh my God, I don't remember being that clear and concise. Amazing. Yeah, and don't worry, you'll get you'll get more comfortable. I wish life could do that. You would like an editor to walk around with you. I would love that so much. Okay, so now that we've said that, I'm going to tell Rob right here, don't edit the way Gabby said it. Leave that there, and now edit it again so people can hear what it could sound like if you edit it together. Rob, you know what I'm saying. Do that like let them hear her, and then let them hear what an edit would it sound like. Then we'll go into it. Here
Gabby 4:11
I am, Gabby, I'm 28 I was diagnosed when I was two.
Scott Benner 4:18
So you wish somebody could walk around with you and just take all the pauses out.
Gabby 4:22
Yes, all the time or a lot of my work is saying words that are supposed to make sense together in real time.
Scott Benner 4:30
Wait, what kind of work do you
Gabby 4:33
do? I teach Pilates and kids dance. Is
Scott Benner 4:37
there a job where your words don't have to make sense together? I guess there are some right
Gabby 4:43
sometimes not live, at
Scott Benner 4:45
least not Oh, I see what you mean. Like, so you have to feel smooth when people are listening to you right away, yeah, like it's happening. I feel like I'm a fairly smooth speaker. And yet sometimes I hear myself back and I'm like, oh my god, Scott. Like, get to it. Or like there was. Six different ways you could have said that. That would have been better. You know, sometimes you just get stuck with what comes out of
Gabby 5:05
your mouth as you do. How can you expect everything to go right?
Scott Benner 5:09
I don't know. There's times when it does. There's sometimes I get done. I'm like, that was good, actually. I think since I know Rob's listening closely to this one now, I actually think, like, there's not a lot of work in here for Rob. I bet you this one will be easy for him. But then there's others where I get done and I'm like, Oh, poor Rob, that's not going to go well at all, you know? And he's thinking that right now, because you said about pausing. He's like, Oh God, I hope Gabby doesn't pause between every word for the next hour. I know he's laughing right now listening to this, because he's like, I am absolutely thinking that nevertheless diagnosed when you were two years old, yeah, and you're 28 now, yep. Do you have any kids of your own? Nope, no. Are you anywhere near making a baby? No, good for you. That's why
Gabby 5:52
I giggled, because I was like, That's terrifying.
Scott Benner 5:54
Actually. Is having a baby something you've ever thought
Gabby 5:58
of? Yes, and then I just Just recently, definitely was like,
Scott Benner 6:01
Huh? I guess I am 28 what's terrifying about it
Gabby 6:07
that I'm a freelance like fitness and dancer and have no money?
Scott Benner 6:12
Listen that that should be your main thing. Yeah, that's definitely your biggest fear. It's very expensive to have kids. It's insane of life. Yeah, are you with somebody? I am.
Gabby 6:24
I've had a boyfriend partner for like, as of a couple weeks ago, like, five
Scott Benner 6:29
years. Has he ever mentioned, hey, Gabby, are we gonna get married or make a baby or anything like
Gabby 6:35
that? Yes, and baby, like, very much. Not at all.
Scott Benner 6:39
That's not a thing he's that interested in if that makes sense. Oh, does he have a good job?
Gabby 6:45
Yes, but not that he like, loves and wants to be at Forever, a long time.
Scott Benner 6:49
Oh, you can tell him, that's how everyone feels. Yeah, right. Well, I love what. I heard my son say, I don't love this. And I was like, wait, what you thought somebody loved their job. Stop it.
Gabby 7:00
I know. Well, I do, but then I burn myself out. So
Scott Benner 7:04
you love your job, but you also said it doesn't pay very much. I mean, in the grand scheme, it is to pay for a baby and stuff like that. Yeah. Is there pressure when you're a lady to think like, I have to be able to take care of this kid in case that guy flakes on me. I mean, that's always a possibility, right? Oh, did I just, like, add another concern to your life? I'm sorry.
Gabby 7:27
No, no, I was gonna say maybe from my childhood, but that's not actually true. Like, my parents divorced, but not for that reason.
Scott Benner 7:34
Yeah. I just wonder. Like, I mean, I think if you took 100 guys and 100 girls who didn't have a kid and said, Hey, if one day you have a child and you become divorced, who do you think will get the baby? I bet you. Most people would say, I think the mom would Yeah, and so
Gabby 7:49
laws and stuff or not laws. But most law orienting people would say that too. Did
Scott Benner 7:56
you say law orienting people? Yes, I did. Can we call the episode that? Do you think? No, there has to be something good. I hope you don't say one thing more ridiculous than law orienting people.
Gabby 8:07
I'm sure there'll be, like, 100 more ridiculous things. We'll
Scott Benner 8:11
get to it. Then, if I asked you what it was like to grow up with type one diabetes, what are the things that pop into your mind first? Um, a fear of lows, yeah, yeah, since you were little, yes, what do you did you get low a lot, and do you still?
Gabby 8:35
I have had a lot in, like the whole 26 years of, hypo seizures.
Scott Benner 8:42
Oh, you've, you've had multiple seizures, yeah, like, too many to count more than a dozen. Yes. How do you feel? Like, that happened like so, I mean, you were born, what? 9696 so do you have a sensor, a CGM, right now, yeah,
Gabby 9:02
I am currently wearing g6 and then I am truly changing my new ish tandemobi. You're changing it right now, while we're talking, yeah, it ran out of insulin.
Scott Benner 9:19
It did not run out,
Gabby 9:21
which is a thing that I'm like working on in life, to not have that ever. But it didn't at all, and it still has, like 1514, something left. However, my sight was on my thigh, and I am learning that after the second day, it's just like, Nope, we are done. So you're
Scott Benner 9:42
starting to see a high blood sugar from your thigh site, more than starting, oh, oh. So why'd you put you knew we were going to do this. Why did you put it off all morning? Let me, me act like your dad for a second. Why? Why didn't? Why didn't you do it earlier?
Gabby 9:55
Act like your dad. That's hilarious. Because I was taking my dad to his doctor.
Scott Benner 9:59
Oh, oh. Your dad needs help. He's not the one helping.
Gabby 10:02
No, not anymore. Sorry. I was in reverse a little bit.
Scott Benner 10:06
Your roles have been reversed. Yeah, seriously though, like you were out this morning doing something, yeah, and the
Gabby 10:14
horribly, purely opposite of any version of any morning
Scott Benner 10:19
person at all,
Gabby 10:22
and yet we're at the doctor at 1030
Scott Benner 10:26
Yeah, I have to tell you, I do notice that people I record with who want earlier times are sometimes more energetic people, even when I like I recorded this morning at nine, and not let me be clear, nine is not early, but that's the earliest you can get on my schedule, right? And I sat down, I was like, I don't even know if I'm awake yet to do this. And I popped on and the person was just full of life. And I was like, Oh my God, you morning people or something, yeah. And I don't, I get up early. Like, I don't. I'm not a, like, a late riser, generally speaking, no, you're not me. But I don't pop up, like, full of, like, exuberance, like I I'm happy to be awake and see the, you know, see the beginning of the day and everything, but I'm not out there looking to, like, run a marathon or record a podcast or something like that. Yeah. Anyway,
Gabby 11:13
I was gonna say you need your coffee, but not actually you need your ag one or something, right? Yeah,
Scott Benner 11:17
I don't drink coffee, so that's not helpful. Are you still doing 81 yes, yeah, but I don't drink coffee. And I do see people like, supercharge their lives with it, and I'm like, maybe one time I should I just don't. It doesn't smell good to me. It doesn't I can't imagine. It tastes good. I don't know. Anyway, it freaks me out that, you know, I don't drink coffee,
Gabby 11:37
such a weird thing. I mean, a lot of people know a lot of things about you,
Scott Benner 11:41
I know, but when you're faced with it one on one, it's strange. It's an abstract when you just sit down and record and say stuff you don't actually like, it's not like, I I walk outside, and the 1000s of people that just listen to it walk up to me and say, Guess what I learned today? Like, it's not until, like, you go online and you see people talking about it, and you're like, oh, okay, I guess somebody heard that. That makes sense. But even that's it still remains a little abstract, you know, like, but you and I are now talking, and you're just like, Oh, you don't drink coffee. And I'm like, How does she know that? Yeah, so Nevertheless, you didn't change your pump. You knew you should have earlier because you saw the site going bad. Happens mostly on your thighs.
Gabby 12:24
It just has happened, like the same thing, like
Scott Benner 12:30
a week or week and a half ago, okay,
Gabby 12:33
like, literally on the same thigh, a little bit higher or lower, in which I had a really horrible night. And I didn't even quite piece it together, like, it didn't necessarily have an exact like, all right, it's two days and we're done. Yeah, you
Scott Benner 12:49
didn't see cause and effect right away, but, but you're a dancer, you said, right? And you're doing Pilates. Do you have like, strong thighs, yeah, yeah. I think maybe it's like, yeah, but close to a big muscle, like there's reasoning behind that, like the using the top of your thighs or the sides, might be weird, but like, almost inner okay, because there's more,
Gabby 13:15
yeah, I don't know. I feel like it's less muscley, muscley, which maybe isn't even true. So
Scott Benner 13:20
Well, what other sites have you tried? Have you tried like the like your hips, top of your butt? What
Gabby 13:24
have I not tried? You've been 26 years
Scott Benner 13:27
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Gabby 15:43
yeah, well, actually, when I was so, I started pumping, when I was like 10, with, like, you know, manuals, of course.
Scott Benner 15:51
And
Gabby 15:53
because back then I was, like, in a ballet class every night wearing nothing, basically,
Scott Benner 16:00
I put
Gabby 16:02
that pump with the site that I would only leave on, yeah, lesson learned, much, much, much, much, much later that site would sit like on either hip, and that was my rotation,
Scott Benner 16:18
hip, hip, yeah.
Gabby 16:21
So that then it then it could just have the teeny, tiny sight part without the pump. When I had, like, just ballet tights and leotard I see, and it was semi invisible. Yeah, you were trying to hide it. Yeah, a little bit. But also it just, like, was more comfortable with everything, with like that, like leotard. But then how we, you know, put our leg over our
Scott Benner 16:50
head. Were you disconnecting to dance? Yeah, from like,
Gabby 16:56
then from like 10 till like, pretty much like 20,
Scott Benner 17:01
okay, and then what happened at 20, I accepted the learning.
Gabby 17:09
I was in college dance, so I was still doing all the things, but then it was even more, all the time, and not like an evening class,
Scott Benner 17:22
and also new doctors as adulting started who were like, You can't do that. You have better expectations for yourself. I was told I could. Yeah, so somebody at some point when your kid was like, well, just disconnect for dancing, but then your blood sugar would get
Gabby 17:42
high. Oh, it wouldn't even No, I would still go low. Do we get low? Still? Yes, interesting, absolutely. I would be sitting, not sitting.
Scott Benner 17:50
I would be standing, sweating,
Gabby 17:53
shaking, because we're, like, working hard.
Scott Benner 17:57
But then, I mean, not
Gabby 18:00
every day or anything, obviously. But you know, just how low is? Those happen. I would be like, doing a ballet class combination, and it's like, okay, a combination takes like, a minute, and then you have the next one in the next minute, and there's like,
Scott Benner 18:17
pause, go, pause, go. So I would stand there thinking, like, I think I'm going low, and then you just go exert go, exert yourself going low, yeah. And then, but you still kept exerting yourself and going,
Gabby 18:34
yeah. So I'd be like, Okay, I don't know, so maybe I'll do this one, and then maybe, if I know I'm low, then
Scott Benner 18:43
I'll go, okay. Have you ever had a seizure at dance class? No, no. Where did they? Where did they normally happen
Gabby 18:53
in all of childhood? It was always in sleep.
Scott Benner 18:57
Okay, night. And my last one was even though I woke up right before it.
Gabby 19:08
But others besides last one, like more recent than childhood, have been
Scott Benner 19:18
just all different, different times. So when you were a child and having them while you were sleeping, did you you did not have a CGM at that point, or you, at some points, didn't, at some points,
Gabby 19:28
didn't until, like, so recently, really, like, life would have been so incredibly different.
Scott Benner 19:34
Wait, how long ago did you get it?
Gabby 19:37
Um, I think I started trying something around like 2018
Scott Benner 19:46
Okay, and that's, does that kind of line up with you becoming more mature and trying to take better care of yourself? Or did it line up with you getting insurance? Or what was
Gabby 19:56
the oh, it was just literally like, Doc. Were like, Here, try this. And I was like, Cool. You were up for it. It was not presented to me before.
Scott Benner 20:07
You look back and think of yourself as having good health care and like forward thinking doctors before or no
Gabby 20:15
forward thinking, I don't know, good yes, in general, there is one nurse practitioner who, like, I have not seen her in years, and to this day I have, like, passionate loathing for her.
Scott Benner 20:32
Why? What did she do to you?
Gabby 20:36
She just really wanted me on the newer Medtronic
Scott Benner 20:41
and you just didn't, and I quote, tried. What do you mean? You tried. You didn't really try.
Gabby 20:48
No, I mean, I use the pump for sure, like I use that pump for, I guess, four years or more, okay, but their
Scott Benner 20:59
sensors in like 2018 ish,
Gabby 21:07
were not what they I guess maybe, hopefully are. Now
Scott Benner 21:11
you have a 20. Did you say 2018 Yeah. So what I have in front of me is right. Don't know if it is or not, but I use the internet. It looks like Dexcom had the seven plus in 2009 seven plus, yeah. Then in 2012 the g4 platinum. Then, then 2015 the g5 then in 2018 the g6 in 2023 the g7 i It's so crazy to me that you're having all those seizures, and nobody is crazy. Yeah, somebody didn't say, like, Hey, have you tried one of these CGM things? Yeah, did they know you were having seizures? Or did you not tell them? No,
Gabby 21:49
no, they definitely knew. I mean, I definitely didn't tell them about a couple, but
Scott Benner 21:52
there were so many you felt like you could hold a couple back for yourself a little bit. What do you in hindsight? Why do you think you had so many seizures?
Gabby 22:04
They were always, like, incredibly fast crashing and just the like, worst combination of all of the million variables. But
Scott Benner 22:14
like, structurally, what do you think you went like, let's go back into the middle of a day. Did you eat before dance class? Like maybe you ate Bolus, then went to dance, took off the pump, the exercise, you know, combined with the active insulin, made you low at dance. Then, you know, you addressed it. Went home, ate again, right? Bolus again, and then maybe had, like, a latent low overnight from all the activity. Is that possibly how it went?
Gabby 22:44
Yes. I mean, that is the likelihood of, like, much earlier in college years, which is, like 2014, to 18 was, did
Scott Benner 22:55
you ever try to break that down while it was happening? Or were you just like, oh, this is, like, my lot in life, how did it feel to you?
Gabby 23:04
It felt like I was trying constantly and
Scott Benner 23:09
not set up for success and not like, completely, fully supported. Not supported Dr nursing, yeah, not supported with information and tools,
Gabby 23:21
yeah, and technology and technology. Okay, it's so I only know that in hindsight.
Scott Benner 23:26
Yeah, no, I understand. But during that time, listen, Gabby, if we all knew everything while it was happening, life would go much easier. But while it was happening, were you trying to make adjustments to what was going on, or were you so busy just staying alive that it felt like, like, you know what I mean? I feel like you were drinking from a fire hose and you couldn't keep up and you were just trying to keep your head above water. There's a lot of my whole life feels like all the time. Oh, sorry, there's like, so many metaphors in there. I confused myself. So that's it. Like it's happening so quickly. You're just trying to stay alive. You don't even have time to think about, like, how could I stop this from happening? Yeah?
Gabby 24:02
Like, I feel like I always was thinking about and was trying to and was like, adjusting and checking, like a million times a day, yeah, like, I had really terrible psychology time blood sugar, like a lot of humans, but none of the like, oh, I'll just pretend I don't have it.
Scott Benner 24:27
You're having bad outcomes during college and
Gabby 24:29
trying, yes, like, trying so hard,
Scott Benner 24:34
so defeating. At least some of the other people's stories are just like, I don't know. I didn't really pay that close attention. You're like, Well, that makes sense, yeah. So it's hard, a little heartbreaking. Then
Gabby 24:43
yes, absolutely, yeah. There's have been a lot of, like, not even, besides, just like tears, like anxiety attack, panic attacks,
Scott Benner 24:53
like mental health stuff. Dad, yeah, did you say, Dad? I said Bad. Bad. I was like, Okay. How do we kind of, like, loop your father into this too? So you have a lot of would you call yourself an anxious person,
Gabby 25:07
a little bit not like, terribly in general,
Scott Benner 25:11
okay, but this whole process, I would
Gabby 25:15
say I had a really terrible season
Scott Benner 25:18
of life with very, very, very bad,
Gabby 25:25
low anxiety, and just anxiety in general, about, like, everything in relation like, literally seeing an ambulance on the street. What time of your life was that season that was basically during college, college, or, like, one of the years that was somehow the worst, especially because of a couple times during those, like, I mean, it was only, I don't know, it was probably three in those Four years
Scott Benner 25:54
that that, oh my god, brain, brain, brain, three or four times in those years that
Gabby 26:07
that I had a seizure, like three times or something. Okay,
Scott Benner 26:10
when's the last time you had one and
Gabby 26:15
you're not helping my track, I'm sorry. Last time, it's fine. I know your go to what. I know how you go to last time was June 15.
Scott Benner 26:26
Okay, explain the ADHD to people what's happening right now
Gabby 26:33
that my brain has a sentence and then just completely loses it,
Scott Benner 26:37
and then while you're looking for it, I'm trying to get you to, like, refocus and that it's less than helpful. It's not helpful. When I do
Gabby 26:45
that, sometimes it is. But then you ask something different. That's because
Scott Benner 26:50
I get, I get bored waiting for your answer. This took so long I don't even care. I'm not doing how my brain does it too. I'm definitely I'm not doing that. I'm just trying to find ways to help you get to what it is, but I don't want to hinder you and make it worse either. Do you take anything for the ADHD? So I do, and I'm not confident that it's super helping. What are you taking? Vyvanse,
Gabby 27:19
no, I'm taking Concerta. Okay, at like, a medium dose, and I felt it very strongly at first, like an hour after I would take it, I would be like, Oh, okay, we have energy. And that means that I am not gonna be the inattentive version of ADHD and like stare at a wall for 30 minutes.
Scott Benner 27:54
So
Gabby 27:55
since I've just been on it for a while, I think my body just feels used to it like too much. It's not helping. I don't know if I want to, pretty much like ask for hire or something totally different, or
Scott Benner 28:14
what So explain to people, there's there's times during ADHD that you're inattentive and so you just can't focus on anything. So you stare. Is that the kind of the idea? Yes, okay. And there are times where the Met, when the medications helping you what you've got, like, crazy energy, and you're super focused, and kind of have like that. What do they call that? Like you have, you have a lot of cocaine, kind of conversations, you know what? I mean, a lot of big ideas. Can't stop talking that sort of stuff. Not quite okay.
Gabby 28:49
It almost feels like the medication when it's like energy, but in like, a good way for the start of the day too. It almost feels like if I have like 20 things floating around my head, it like pulls at least like 10 of them together so that they either can, like, be what we need them to be, or they can be, like, put on a shelf, so that the one thing that we need to be or do, or whatever can actually be done, is
Scott Benner 29:31
that a thing that a therapist has explained to you, a thing that you've experienced, but no, but you're you're making it up, but you're making it up, like, from your experience, though, Yeah, so this is how it feels to you. I would have trouble putting anything that concrete to any of my my actions. I'm guessing that this is a thing that you've lived with for so long that you really have, like, a very intimate understanding of how it
Gabby 29:54
works. Yes, and though so long, without any like diagnosis or. Anything until very recently. Really like, yeah, so I feel like I understand it in just like how I am. And it wasn't necessarily like, I mean, it did feel like there's something wrong with me prior, but not like one thing. It was just like, Oh, I'm stupid, oh, I'm like, failing at this. Oh, I'm forgetful, oh, I'm
Scott Benner 30:25
whatever, scattered. How long did you live without a diagnosis with it?
Gabby 30:32
The official one was, like, a year ago. Oh,
Scott Benner 30:34
so you felt like that your entire life,
Gabby 30:38
to some extent, yes. Oh, I'm sorry, but I think it also like hides in a lot of people too, and I mean a lot of women, obviously, because, you know, the stereotype is like the little boy with energy, which obviously, like, literally, was my brother. But I think it was truly, like hidden and masked and everything for me, because, like
Scott Benner 31:04
a lot of people, like structure, like school hood,
Gabby 31:12
has the structure that essentially like I need to function Like I functioned so well because of the structure,
Scott Benner 31:24
and
Gabby 31:28
now without having pretty much any structure, I was like, Oh, this is bad.
Scott Benner 31:33
So getting out of college, you're like, well, Where's, where's the schedule? Yeah, yeah. And then and that got
Gabby 31:40
you college was like, you have to make your schedule, but then at least, like, it's made
Scott Benner 31:44
once you have it, yeah, oh my gosh, that sounds exhausting,
Gabby 31:48
yeah. And I didn't realize, like,
Scott Benner 31:53
Why, I guess, for a while, and you just assumed you weren't smart, not that I wasn't smart, because you're probably doing well at school. You knew you were,
Gabby 32:06
yeah, exactly, like, right structure, like I wanted to do well. And, like, I was like, oh, try hard. And, yeah, but, but also Yes. Like, how I just said, like, Oh, I forgot this. I messed this up. I whatever. Yes, my brain would go, Oh, I'm so stupid. Blah, blah, blah.
Scott Benner 32:25
So lots of my human work is like undoing that sort of your parents have this too, like, How come nobody noticed this in you? Were they living with the same thing, or were they not that involved?
Gabby 32:38
Absolutely, they were living with the same thing. And also, don't know, meaning my mom, my dad, I don't know,
Scott Benner 32:44
maybe, but who knows? My mom, like 100%
Gabby 32:53
is exactly the same as me and my sister, and I don't know, probably still my brother, because if you're diagnosed as a kid, it doesn't go away, right, right? She just does what I do now,
Scott Benner 33:11
like
Gabby 33:13
my brother got her a tile when they were like brand new, so that she could find her phone and then find her keys. And he got her key chain that says, keys I have not lost yet.
Scott Benner 33:28
Because,
Gabby 33:32
again, she's like, the smart like, mostly has it together, mostly doing well and all the things like all the degrees, and all the kids and but we'll go back in the house three times to get stuff. Will be late to everything like me now, and just all the little things that now she she'll literally be like, Why and me and my sister are like, Mom, there is a reason, actually.
Scott Benner 34:06
So it's you, your sister, your brother, your mom, your dad, and you have type one. Does anybody else have type one or other autoimmune stuff? No, nobody. Nobody has celiac or thyroid or anything like that. Nope. Do any of them have anxiety? Yes, which ones your dad?
Gabby 34:31
My dad, I don't know. He was just saying how psychologists are nothing. Wait, what was he saying that he just doesn't like believe in psychologists. Oh, your work,
Scott Benner 34:42
even though you think he has anxiety, I think he worries sometimes more than other times. So who else has anxiety? My sister and my mom for sure. Okay,
Gabby 34:59
yeah. I just reminded my dad that I have my dance degree is also a minor in psychology. He was like, oh, yeah, I don't believe in that.
Scott Benner 35:07
Yeah, thanks, Dad. Do you believe in the dance at least? No, he does at least. So that's good, yeah. How do you manage to take care of your diabetes with ADHD like is, does that not make it more difficult? Exactly, sorry. I like, I feel like I'm just here asking. I feel like I'm I feel like I'm just here asking you questions that make you feel validated. That's not
Gabby 35:33
what. No, that's correct. That's accurate, because that is also why I think diabetes has been very challenging. I'm sorry I'm laughing because I am at my dad, since I just took him to his doctor and I just overheard him yelling on the phone to a telemarketer to go to hell.
Scott Benner 35:54
I don't need solar panels, really. No,
Gabby 35:56
I don't think he would know what those are. How old's your dad? He's very old for me, at least. What does that mean? How old is he? He's 82 your dad's 82
Scott Benner 36:07
Yeah, and you're 28 Yeah, hold on. A second, 30 840-858-6878, yeah, 81 your dad? Why Your dad was 54 when he had you? Yeah, I'm 54 now. Yeah, if I had a baby right now, I would jump out of a window. I'd be like, who is I can't take care of this thing. Yeah, me too, and I got energy. I'm up in the morning. You understand, my hair is still dark, but I would not be okay. This is not so dark. Are you the oldest? No, no, you're the
Gabby 36:39
youngest. Very much the youngest of many that I haven't mentioned yet. Wait a minute, not
Scott Benner 36:46
that many are you have a brother and a sister on your Oh, do your parents have, like, a first family that they have too? Basically, do any of those kids have autoimmune type one, etc? No, nothing. His son's a bitch. It's just you okay? Yeah, so your mom's the second wife,
Gabby 37:08
yes, but my dad was also the second
Scott Benner 37:10
husband. I was gonna say also your mom's second marriage. Gotcha? Is she younger than him? Yes, by like, 14 years. Have you ever heard the phrase, it's a man's world terrible. Like, how did you know what I mean? Like, how come your mom couldn't pull a guy that was 14 years younger than her? Yeah? Oh, not fair. Okay, so you're a late in life baby for them. Yeah, my dad had two other kids first too. I see okay? Because when you're like, I'm taking my dad to the doctor, I'm like, geez, what the hell is wrong with her father? He's in his 50s, and he can't, like, get the doctor by himself, but no, okay, all right, that all makes a little more sense.
Gabby 37:48
It's mostly yes company too, and he can talk to me and admire my service dog. And,
Scott Benner 37:55
you know. Okay, so you have a service How long have you had a service dog?
Gabby 37:59
Like, a year and a few months? Yeah,
Scott Benner 38:02
this is the part in the interview with people with ADHD where Scott gives up on structure and just goes with it. I don't know if you guys realize that happens or not. I try so hard and then eventually I'm just like, all right, I'm just gonna follow the stream of consciousness. So when did you get a service dog? I'm
Gabby 38:19
sorry, like, a year and a few months ago? What prompted you to do that? This the beauties and the seizures and the fear of that. How long
Scott Benner 38:35
you've been listening to podcast a while, but I don't remember. Exactly when I started it, but back
Gabby 38:47
then, while ago, I don't know 18 or something, 2018 I don't
Scott Benner 38:52
know it was hard for me to listen because, because I would listen and get mad at people,
Gabby 39:05
no, very much, depending what it was about, like, someone's like, okay, whatever. But if it was about things that just like, I don't know, hit or about low seizures, or parents talking about their kids, like, bad lows, or, I don't know, random too, probably I would have to, like, stop what I was doing. As you do things with podcasts, listening and, like, just sit down and sometimes just
Scott Benner 39:39
cry. So if it hit a trigger of yours, it made you really upset, yeah, but then I would like, you know, move through that. What's your trigger around parenting? I don't know that there's like, one thing that I can name. Did you feel like you weren't being helped as a child?
Gabby 40:01
No, because my parents definitely also worked, like, trying very hard, okay? And my mom was constantly, like, definitely, there's a source of an anxiety part, right? I mean, honestly, still is. So give
Scott Benner 40:15
it. Give me an example of something you heard on the podcast that stopped you in your tracks, made you cry, I don't
Gabby 40:21
know, because that would have been so long ago, because now I listen to it like, every day, all the time, like, while I'm walking my dog, and it doesn't make you upset anymore. No, okay, so you were hearing once in a while, I'll get like, goosebumps, but like, that's pretty much
Scott Benner 40:38
goosebumps, like, like you're touched, or, yeah, people tell the nicest stories about it's so kind of everyone to share their life, actually, yeah, but Okay, so when you first started listening, there were pain points that it would bring up for you. You worked through them. That's awesome. Has your management changed since 2018 like, I mean, what was your a 1c
Gabby 41:02
I mean, it is. I'm like, so far from where I want to be right now, but I'm so much better than then too. And you were,
Scott Benner 41:12
have you had fewer seizures in the last handful of years? Yes, I know.
Gabby 41:20
Why do you think you're still like, I actually think I don't know.
Scott Benner 41:23
Yeah, when's the last one? Just like, months ago? When interesting? June? Wow. Okay, two months ago.
Gabby 41:34
That one, I know why. Actually, like, 100%
Scott Benner 41:36
what happened? What happened
Gabby 41:40
in my sleep. Like, I mean, obviously I woke up, but like, I do not remember the
Scott Benner 41:46
sequencing i
Gabby 41:50
I must have been somewhat high from late snacks and such, and I gave myself through my tea slim before, where I could Bolus through the pump without looking at my phone.
Scott Benner 42:06
13 units
Gabby 42:10
for being what 200 Max 300 probably, probably need Max, five units or something. I don't know how, besides that, that is a fact that happened because of the pump history,
Scott Benner 42:26
so But I gave myself 13 units,
Gabby 42:31
I guess, by mistake, somehow, of that number being my max. Bolus at the time,
Scott Benner 42:37
while you were sleeping, woke up, had a high blood sugar Bolus gave yourself way too much insulin. Yeah, got super low, woke up right before it hit you. Yes, I woke up. And I
Gabby 42:51
don't know if I saw it on Dexcom or whatever, but I woke up. I turned to my partner and said,
Scott Benner 43:00
Can you go get me juice? And the
Gabby 43:06
next story is also how he's diabetic, but so he has a cup of juice from the night before on his side, like on his nightstand.
Scott Benner 43:16
Hand it over to me. I take the cup
Gabby 43:21
and place it on my nightstand, and then that was it. You didn't even drink the juice. No, I knew that I had to put it down somehow, but you were pretty low. You were pretty low by the needed it. And then I knew that I couldn't hold it.
Scott Benner 43:36
How many of these seizures are because you gave yourself too much insulin over the years?
Gabby 43:42
Not many, definitely not. Never like that. Okay,
Scott Benner 43:46
if I asked you to tell me your level of confidence with how much of these seizures are bad tools, not good direction, versus just you didn't know what you were doing and were just randomly putting in stuff. Can you put a finger on, I guess, what's your major issue? If someone said to you, hey, you've had a lot of seizures in your life, what's happening there? Like, what's the first thing you think of?
Gabby 44:14
I mean, the first thing, I think, is that that's a really great question for a doctor, that I would love answers to you
Scott Benner 44:18
just don't have any idea.
Gabby 44:22
Yeah. And we did testing when I was, like 17, I want to say, and there was nothing, but we did all the fun, really great scans and stuff,
Scott Benner 44:33
just to have a look. Okay, but you're using a mobi right now, so using control IQ, yeah, okay. And besides you giving yourself a ton of insulin two months ago and getting low since you've been on control IQ, have you had other seizures? One, I think one. Do you remember what that one was about?
Gabby 44:52
Yeah, it was also this past February.
Scott Benner 44:59
It. It was
Gabby 45:03
literally after I gave myself one unit
Scott Benner 45:06
like, what? And you just got low afterwards, huh? One going back to the last one
Gabby 45:12
type pump site at like, a different time.
Scott Benner 45:15
And, yeah, finish that thought, why would that impact it?
Gabby 45:24
It was that I got up early to go to my early day work, to teach children dance and pump, I guess, was about to run out of insulin or something. So pump got changed in my actual woke up early for that, and giggles that I'm bad at waking up early for that or for anything.
Scott Benner 45:56
Pump
Gabby 45:58
probably had one unit of insulin left, and I think I delivered it being like, oh, it's the last, like, you know, use the gold and maybe I'll actually eat something, yeah.
Scott Benner 46:11
And
Gabby 46:14
also, normally, like, drink a little coffee will go up a little bit, one unit. No big deal. All good. Like, I probably made one unit for a coffee.
Scott Benner 46:24
Gabby, yep, I'm gonna, when I'm done recording with you, I'm gonna leave a note for Rob at the beginning of this episode so that he knows. I don't want him to take out any of your pauses. I want people to like be able to listen to what is happening in your mind while you're trying to consider your diabetes. Like, I think that's really important. Because, I mean, if you ask me after 45 minutes, like, what do you need to be more successful? You need somebody without ADHD to help you? Like that, to me, seems like most of your issue you're having trouble considering even why things are happening. Like, when I said, what, you know, what's your main problem? Be like, like, I need a doctor to tell me that, but you're a bright person. You understand your diabetes. I just think you're having trouble thinking about it. And I think that's valuable for people to hear. So hopefully they'll find this conversation as interesting as I find it, but I find the most interesting parts of your conversation when you're quiet and you're thinking, it's telling that those pauses are telling, you know, so, I mean, in my opinion, like, if you were my kid, I'd be like, Look, we need to go back to the ADHD doctor, whoever that one is, and say this stuff you given me. It's not working. I want to try something else, because I'm having difficulty with my health, because I'm having trouble concentrating on my type one. I can't see patterns. I can't take my experiences and apply them later to help myself. I need a better way to control the ADHD that just seems to me like that would be step one. Do you agree with that at all? Yeah. I mean, hearing it back is, is like, more, but I definitely agree with it, yeah, yeah. It just it feels like if you're to have a real shot at this, you need to be able to concentrate. Yeah. When I see parents online talking about their young kids with ADHD, and they're like, I'm so worried about what's going to happen to them when they get older and they move out. Like you feel like the after of that before? Yeah, yeah. You're motivated. You're working hard for yourself. You care about your own health. You're smart or, you know, you're articulate, like you have all the pieces you need to take good care of yourself. It feels to me like, you know that thing at the fair that you sit in and it spins and you get pinned to the wall, and your feet the floor drops down, you're just, you're pinned to the wall. Yeah, it feels like if you put me in that and started asking me how to Bolus for pizza, I'd be like, can I just tell you when it's over? Please? You know what I mean? Like, I feel like you're always in a state of being shook up, like physically shaken to the point where you can't think while you're trying to do something that takes a lot of thought. Do I have it? Gabby, yeah, all right. Are you gonna cry? Are you laughing what you're doing right now? No,
Gabby 49:16
I'm crying because you like have it so much.
Scott Benner 49:19
Okay, well, don't cry. It's okay if you want to cry. I'm already tapped out. I interviewed a woman this morning, like she used up all my tears already, but I'll sit quietly with you while you while you process.
Gabby 49:29
Um, yeah, it's, it's just because it's like, nail on the head, yeah.
Scott Benner 49:34
It just seems to me like that's where you got to go. It's
Gabby 49:36
like, unrecognized nail on the head. No. I mean,
Scott Benner 49:39
it's obvious, once you talk to you, if somebody, you know, if anybody would take the minute to talk to you, any doctor would hear this. This is just not how doctors appointments go. The problem is, if you go to therapy, the therapist is going to want to lean into the therapy parts of it, I don't know that you need therapy. You need somebody to, like, make the tilt a whirl, stop. Mm. Yeah, because that's my life. Yeah. It sounds like to me, that's what the inside of your brain feels like. Like, there's a bunch of diabetes knowledge in there and stuff you need to do, and then somebody spins it up, and it all pins itself to the wall, and you can't focus enough to like, put it all back together and make sense of it, yeah, let alone like, be it like, correctly? That's the part I'm spinning, because I'm low and so that's the part I'm playing in this conversation right now. Right is I'm taking the things that you're sharing and I'm re contextualizing them and giving them back to you. Yeah, that's why it's like, That's insanely true. This is why I make a podcast that people listen to. It's not about me, it's about you, and you need in some I'm gonna guess Vyvanse, like, what's the other one they gave you? Hold on a second. They gave me Concerta. Concerta. Concerta.
Gabby 50:56
It's, it's other like, science. Name is wild metal.
Scott Benner 51:02
Just stimulant, same family as Ritalin and Adderall, works by increasing levels of dopamine and neuro something, something refereeing in the brain, which helps improve attention, focus and impulse control. Has it improved attention, focus or impulse control?
Gabby 51:19
I think it maybe did when it was new.
Scott Benner 51:21
It's an Do you have the extended release supposed to last? Yeah, common side effects, trouble sleeping, decreased appetite, weight loss, headache, stomach ache, increased heart rate or blood pressure. You have any of those? I
Gabby 51:37
probably have increased heart rate when it was new, and my body wasn't used to it, but it was for like an hour, not like, nothing crazy, okay, like it felt like I had an extra special espresso shot for like
Scott Benner 51:51
half an hour. Got like, a little jolt. Okay, so what else is there? Vyvanse, Adderall. Avecco effect, oh. Avecco e, v, e, k, e, o, non stimulant options, stratara and not
Gabby 52:08
Oh, that's stratera. Is the one that I tried first. Actually Did that work? Because they always try and do non stimulants first, and then when those don't work, they try stimulants. So that didn't work. It didn't work. It also had side effects that I was like, Nope, this is not happening anymore. What kind constipation? And when I called about it, the phone lady was like, Oh, that's okay. You can keep taking it. And I was like, I will not be taking this
Scott Benner 52:38
phone lady, I haven't a week. What are you talking about?
Gabby 52:42
That's not fun. Yeah, I was like, lady, I've been vegetarian for such a long time, usually I am so good, and this is not okay.
Scott Benner 52:50
All right. So you started with strat Terra, or whatever it is. Now you went to, have you ever tried Vyvanse or Adderall? Hmm, are you gonna, I
Gabby 53:07
mean, sounds like it.
Scott Benner 53:08
Listen, I'm not a person who says, run and take Vyvanse or Adderall. But like, yes. I mean, it seems like you know, for you, you're here in mine, yeah, keeping your story in mind, I think it's worth a shot. I would hold on a second person on Concerta is not being helped.
Says, Try switching to an amphetamine based stimulant like Vyvanse or Adderall. So wait, concert is not cool. Wait, is Concerta not stimulant? It's
Gabby 53:56
definitely a stimulant, but maybe it's not
Scott Benner 53:59
mean, but I thought it was. It contains methylphenidate hydrochloride, which is the same stimulant class as Ritalin. It works by boosting dopamine in the brain, which helps to focus attention and execute function. That particular stimulant isn't a good match, and oh, so if it's not working, it's possible that stimulant isn't a good match, and the doctor may switch to an amphetamine based stimulant like Vyvanse or Adderall, or stimulants in general, may not be the right fit, and a non stimulant medication might be tried. To be clear, Concerta is a stimulant. It's an extended it's just, I guess it's just a different molecule, yeah. I mean, God, I would try something different if I could. Is, is switching like I want to know if it isn't unusually hard, though it does take some careful steps with a doctor, so there might be some tapering you have to do, and then some adjustments to find the right dose back up. I would make 1000 sticky notes that say, get your ADHD under. Troll and put them everywhere along with the doctor's phone number. And to make sure you do, those are my best friend, because I'm worried that you're gonna leave here and just be like, it'll probably be all right, and then
Gabby 55:09
never think about it. No, not at all. All right. Gabby,
Scott Benner 55:13
I can't believe this went this way. Part of me wanted to call this episode Yo Gabba. Gabba, but, uh, that's not gonna work out. Definitely total world, but tilt world is accurate. Why did you want to come on the podcast? By the way? Funny? Because I hate those. No one likes them. They're ridiculous, okay,
Gabby 55:29
but I hate anything like it, like the tea cups, even the tea cups,
Scott Benner 55:36
hey, oh, it's gonna be okay. I thought that was, hold on, a second. I need a second. I'll explain why. I'll be back in 20 seconds. I'll explain when I get back. All right, a lot of these words might not make sense. By blue mbanja Panther chameleon did not eat his super worm this morning, and the super worm was about to make a great escape out of the feeder run cup. Oh no. I don't know if any of that made sense to you or not, did, but how did it escape? Well, previously, there was a silk worm in there that he didn't eat, and the silk worms now go into a cocoon. And so it grabbed the silk and climbed up. Oh my gosh, I'm leaving it in there to see if he eats the silkworm moth once it's, what do they call it when it comes out of the cocoon, once it emerges, emerges maybe, yeah, yeah. Anyway, he is the weirdest eater of the of the chameleons. He stares at his food for hours. Oh, wow. And then eventually he goes, okay. And then he eats it, huh? It's just, I have one that, like, make sure, oh, I have one that would just eat anything. Like, if you put a rock in there and it wiggled, they'd be like, cool, done. I'm eating that. Not him. He's just, like, he is so particular about when he eats. He doesn't like anybody seeing him eat. He's he's the closest I've come to like, wanting to pull my own hair out
Gabby 57:01
because that the one that's afraid of certain colors?
Scott Benner 57:05
No, that's like lack of color. Now you're making me tell people, I have three chameleons. I hope you're happy. Gabby, no, the the one who's the one who's afraid of my white socks. He's just staring at me right now because he had, like, a huge approach this morning that he loved. And I think, I think he's waiting for another one. I think he's like, Hey, let's do that one more time. Yeah, so, and he just took a great poop the other day, so he's probably super excited
Gabby 57:33
to eat anything like, so, lunch, right? What's that? He's like, Arden, like, lunch, right? Like, lunch, yeah? Like, it's time for lunch. Like, you're gonna make me lunch? Yeah? No, he's
Scott Benner 57:43
looking at me, like one of my kids, and he's just like, somebody has got to bring at least one more of those roaches over here. So, yeah, the roaches, by the way, people should know who are listening, are not the kind that, like you would. They could infest your house there. Very much. No, they don't
Gabby 58:00
see you every night in Philly.
Scott Benner 58:02
Oh, oh, you're in Philly, yeah. Oh, that's right. How about that? Go birds. How about the Phillies are on a run right now, huh? Yeah, exciting. Everything's going well. What have we not talked about that we should have?
Gabby 58:22
Oh, how bent the cannula is that I just took out of my thigh.
Scott Benner 58:25
Oh, so it's not your thigh that was the problem. Or maybe, oh, wow, you pinch up when you put it in. No, well, why not? Gabby, you've had diabetes for 26 years. Pinch. Why? There's nothing to pinch. Is that what you said? Yeah, I mean, maybe my thighs are too muscley. I don't know. Is this a humble brag about your thighs being strong? Is
Gabby 58:49
there stuff to pinch elsewhere? Apparently, what especially like now in life, there's, there's more to pinch.
Scott Benner 58:56
You're calling 28 Wait, you're calling 28 um,
Gabby 59:00
I don't know if it's pinchy I'm, they're not small at all. But,
Scott Benner 59:06
uh, Gabby, if you think 28 is the now part of life, you're going to be in trouble.
Gabby 59:12
As you said about Arden and like, Oh, if complications in 30 years means that she's 3032
Scott Benner 59:20
uh, yeah. But I'm saying, like, if you think, like, oh, like, you know how, how it gets when your body's run down when you're 28 like, you're gonna look back at 28 one day and be like, Oh, my God, I can't believe I said
Gabby 59:31
that. Well, I don't mean run down. I just mean that I'm thicker than before. You're thicker
Scott Benner 59:35
than before. Okay, yeah, I almost asked this a couple of times, but this is such a, what I would call, like a science based question. But there was part of me that wondered, do you have any reason to try a GLP medication?
Gabby 59:49
Yes, but also I don't really have any resistance,
Scott Benner 59:53
because I was wondering there's like, look, this is apropos of nothing, and nobody should listen to me. But there have been a few people on who have talked about, like, starting a GLP, seeing a reduction in inflammation and other things in their life getting better. And there's part of me that, like half wonders, like, if you had a chance to try it, if you would notice something different about your attention, or ADHD, or anything like that. Like, how much is ADHD actually related to, you know, I don't know, inflammation, yeah, maybe I'm not sure. I mean, I listen also, that could all be just crazy. But I just wondered, like, because so many people are seeing these secondary quality effects from glps by mistake, right? They start because their weight, and then they, like, pop up later and say, Oh, I had a real, like, turn around in this or this, or like, with me, with, like, my digestion. Or, like, you know, there's that lady on recently who said that a lot of her kids, like bipolar, like issues kind of dissipated with it, like, crazy stuff like that. So I don't know, but do you need to lose weight? Like, could you talk somebody into it for that, just to try it? I, kind of want to give good insurance. I could, could lose some and also, like,
Gabby 1:01:17
one unit of insulin me
Scott Benner 1:01:19
over. So that's your other concern. Is that, like,
Gabby 1:01:23
I also think that's like, why a doctor would be like, No, I don't want you to
Scott Benner 1:01:27
be more insulin sensitive, yeah. But, um, I mean,
Gabby 1:01:31
sometimes I feel like I'm resistant, but I'm also like, maybe I just need to push my basal up because I gained a pound. Like, what's your total daily
Scott Benner 1:01:39
insulin use? Do you know it's somewhere around 50, okay, that's not nothing, yeah. What's your basal then, like around, what a point nine ish, yeah, yeah, because you're eating, you said you're vegetarian, yes, yeah. So you only use in about 2025, units a day for food. Yeah, it's mostly, what, mostly like proteins and and, like, you don't probably get a ton of fat either, right? Or, do you, I
Gabby 1:02:12
don't know, I think I get a good amount because I still eat, like, dairy. So,
Scott Benner 1:02:15
okay, are you like, a vegetarian? Are you like, one of those people who's like, potato chips? Vegetarian? Yeah, I
Gabby 1:02:28
only hesitate because I'm now more like potato chips, but only because, like, as a child and teenager and such, I like, never had potato chips, so after, I don't know, adulting, I was like potato chips. Maybe
Scott Benner 1:02:42
I just, I laugh, because I know a couple of vegetarians who like when, when you say vegetarian to like a third party, well, they, they think, when you say vegetarian to most people, like, oh, you eat, like, beans and lentils and salads and carrots and, you know, roots and and then you meet a vegetarian, they're like, Oh no. I just, you know, cookies and, you know, like, but there's no meat in it. So, like, I just wanted to know where you fell on
Gabby 1:03:04
the on the cookie, but after you have, like, your lentil vegetable soup, okay,
Scott Benner 1:03:08
I just want to know where you fell on the spectrum. That's all.
Gabby 1:03:11
I don't know. I feel somewhere medium ish, now,
Scott Benner 1:03:14
yeah, well, I mean, listen, if you don't think you have a lot of insulin resistance, I don't know if a GLP would decrease your need for insulin, so I don't know there's a lot there.
Gabby 1:03:26
Oh, like you're saying it wouldn't
Scott Benner 1:03:27
have that effect that much. What I feel like I'm seeing when I'm talking to people, obviously, I'm not talking to everybody, but I feel like I'm seeing people who could end up with what they call a dual diagnosis at some point, right where they kind of have attributes to type one, they have type one, and then they have attributes of type two, usually in the form of, like, insulin resistance, PCOS, like stuff like that. Yeah. There's been, you know, one specific doctor on here in the last year who said, Look, you're going to start seeing a lot more of these dual diagnoses for people. Now, if you're a person who has type one, but doesn't have any attributes to type two, but you have weight to lose, then I wonder, like, would it just decrease your appetite? Would it, you know, like you'd obviously have to change your insulin for those reasons. But it might not be the magic pill that it is for some people, like when you inject them, and then your insulin needs suddenly go down by 20% and so there's a world where, if it could help you with weight, it would, I mean, your insulin needs would go down as your body mass decreased, and it would go down if you ate less, obviously, but you could that you could keep up with that adjustment. And if it didn't touch, like, if it didn't have, like, a magical 20% decrease for you, then that wouldn't be an initial concern. And then do you get to see if lowering the inflammation in your body changes anything about your ADHD? That's all, but I don't know. There's a lot in there. To, like, unpack, I would maybe worry
Gabby 1:05:03
good. You'd maybe what I
Scott Benner 1:05:05
think I'd go for the vivent or the other drug first to see where that gets you.
Gabby 1:05:10
Well, logically I or logistically, I will talk to that doctor before a primary doctor. So
Scott Benner 1:05:19
those two things are worth bringing up. Like, if you've got a reasonably thoughtful doctor, they might, you know, maybe do some research with you and see if there's value in that. And what I'm saying is, if you have good insurance, just based on body mass index, if you qualify for, you know, we go over your set bound or something like that, the doctor doesn't have to make the case for the rest of it. You can just tell them, like, let's just track that to see if we see improvement in my, you know, in my ability to focus and stuff like that. Yeah, who knows? Worth a shot. It's better than what's happening now.
Gabby 1:05:53
Yeah, right, absolutely. I also have a theory now that I might be hypothyroid,
Scott Benner 1:06:04
and that's not a
Gabby 1:06:05
thing. You have to theorize, only a theory, I know, but I do have to get tested. I'm like, I can't go get tested. Like, in the next
Scott Benner 1:06:12
hour, when did you have this theory? You said, since when? Yeah, when did you have the theory the first time? Oh, well, the theory, like, crystallized, I don't know, became confident
Gabby 1:06:31
when I had this really weird symptom that I was like, I know I shouldn't Google stuff and, like, get anxious about it or something, but like, I gotta Google this, because it was really weird. I had like orange, like dark, rusty orange discoloration on just one my left hand on, like my thumb, where I pick and destroy my cuticles, where the skin right there on that thumb, like on that day, was like, raw. I knew it was healing. So there it was, like orangey. And I was like, oh, no, did I? Did I like, make my finger bleed, like in my sleep. But it was not blood at all, for sure. And it was like, just through some other fingers in, like my left palm. And it wasn't like, all over, like a ton, but I was trying to, like, wash my hands so much
Scott Benner 1:07:33
and it
Gabby 1:07:36
it like was dissolving, but over the whole day, not at all from like one hand wash at all, okay? And when I Googled it, wait, what did Google tell you? It was like, you ate 12 million carrots, obviously. And I was like, I am a carrot vegetarian, but I have not eaten 12 million carrots yesterday, okay? And then it was like, hypothyroidism. And I was like,
Scott Benner 1:08:05
Okay, do you have any other hypothyroid, like, symptoms? Have you gained weight recently? Is your hair falling out? Are your nails brittle? Are you tired?
Gabby 1:08:13
Have been brittle for my whole life? I
Scott Benner 1:08:16
don't think my
Gabby 1:08:18
hair has, like, fallen out more. It's just been relatively thin for a while,
Scott Benner 1:08:25
but my fatigue
Gabby 1:08:29
and sort of brain fog, but especially fatigue more recently.
Scott Benner 1:08:35
Well, maybe this doesn't have as much to do with your jewel. Yeah, exactly.
Gabby 1:08:39
So I don't know what it is, but then I had that orange and was like, was like, maybe that's it. Well, my fatigue was, is still is, like, ridiculous. Well,
Scott Benner 1:08:50
Gabby, then, if you have ADHD, and then you layer the fog of hypothyroidism over top of it, then you need to, like, peel that onion apart and get these things taken care of, like, so just you got to go to the doctor, lay all this out and say, I need a blood test. I need you to do a thyroid panel. That's first, right? I have an autoimmune disease already. It's not crazy to think that I this could be too. Let's check, right? Yeah, and tell them. Like, if, if you see a TSH over, you know, 2.1 then I want to try to medicate these symptoms. We'll do that that's only going to take a couple of weeks on the thyroid medication to see if you're going to get value out of that. Then you can re assess your ADHD medication. Is that helping? Or do I need to switch to something else, right? Yeah. I mean, these could be quick fixes for you. Just got to get in there and get in there and get somebody
Gabby 1:09:43
moving on it. Yeah, I'm set to see a new primary in the beginning of September, so
Scott Benner 1:09:48
hopefully,
Gabby 1:09:50
I don't know the dude, but hopefully he'll be cool and be like, Yep, all right. Test. Here we go.
Scott Benner 1:09:55
Write it all out beforehand so that you don't walk in there and see. Like a scattered mess, right? You know what I mean? Just say to him, like,
Gabby 1:10:05
actually, I've been working with a naturopath doctor, and she basically has been doing that with me. I mean, lots of other stuff. And she does cranio sacral therapy, which is
Scott Benner 1:10:15
very cool, but
Gabby 1:10:19
one of our main things is organizing, like, literally, in document form, so that I can walk in to the primary doctor and be like, This is what I want and need, and this is what has been killing this and that and weird and yeah, you,
Scott Benner 1:10:37
of most people that I've spoken to like you would benefit from writing down your thoughts, loading them into chat GPT, and saying, Hey, can you turn this into a document that I can hand to a doctor? I'm afraid that I'll be all over the place if I try to speak this out, and then it'll give you something back that you can give right to the doctor. Yeah, yeah, because you don't want because I think you're lovely, and I've had a great time with you, but I'm making a podcast with you. Like, if you walked into a doctor's office and I was a doctor, I can see where in the first couple of minutes before I even got to know you. I don't mean this in a bad way, but, like, it can be exhausting dealing with somebody who's got your problems, yeah, and so like, the other person can just be like, like, I know it's turning into a good podcast, and I know that people will benefit from it. You know, I have a lot of reasons to keep having my conversation with you. If we were, like, sitting at a party and I started talking, I'd be like, oh, boy, I can't, I can't, I can't do this with Gabby. Like, it's a lot here. But before I let you go, did you say your boyfriend has diabetes? What kind? Oh, we don't know. Maybe you don't know. Well, I think Lata, I'm not an endo. So what can I say?
Gabby 1:11:50
He was diagnosed with type two, and that was a while ago, and I don't know that he's had antibodies run like again.
Scott Benner 1:12:01
So how old is he? 35 a man's world again. Why is this? How come he gets a shot at a 28 year old? Gabby, not fair. I mean, it's only like, what? Six years? Well, I mean, that's seven years, and that's a lot of time. Imagine when you were one he was, I guess, because I'm about to be my birthday, yeah. Imagine when you were one years old, he was eight. I know we talk about that all the time. Well, when you were 15, he was 23 What can I say? Creepy? You know what? I mean? I'm just kidding. You're older now. It's fine, but no, like,
Gabby 1:12:33
it's he also did slide into the DMS, quite literally. But like, also about diabetes. And was like, let's chat about that so, and then the slide worked.
Scott Benner 1:12:44
He got you that way. Yeah, you didn't have to go to a hinge or something like that. No, especially because it was during covid. Is that how people meet people now tinge right?
Gabby 1:12:55
Well, yeah, actually, he saw me on Tinder, and then I guess my Instagram was like, on there in that moment, and so I never actually saw him on Tinder, but
Scott Benner 1:13:09
saw his message on Instagram. I don't know how kids date like, it's crazy to me. It is, yeah, yeah. The whole thing sounds insane to me, like he just used to go out, like, find a pretty girl and talk to them, and if they didn't act like they were mortified by you tried talking to them more. That was pretty much it, yeah. All right, listen, what's
Gabby 1:13:30
that? That's how it was after the Instagram text. All
Scott Benner 1:13:34
right, Gabby, I need you to go take care of yourself. You have a list you know what to do? Yeah? Are you sure, Kevin, you know, if you want me to, I can ship over your file. Have Rob edit it now. He'll send it back to me. I can literally take the transcript from it, put it through chatgpt and tell it to put together, like walking orders for you, like things that you should do and things you should say to your doctor, and it'll spit it right back out.
Gabby 1:14:03
I mean, that would be interesting to at the least. Yeah, sure.
Scott Benner 1:14:07
How about if I do that? Oh, now I'm giving myself more work. I gotta make a note. Hold on a second interesting Gabby,
Gabby 1:14:16
just to see what it has to say.
Scott Benner 1:14:18
Chat. Doctors ask. All right, okay, well, Rob's gonna get away with one here, because I'm gonna tell him he doesn't need to edit out any of the gaps. And he's gonna be like, Oh, thank you, Scott. And then you have no idea, like, your episode. I'm gonna guess a lot, he would get back to me and say I had to make like, 600 edits on that. Oh, my God, trust me, and you weren't bad. I've talked to some people before that. I was like, oh, Rob's gonna like, quit. I send this one over nevertheless. Okay, all right, you were terrific. I will do that. I'll package it together with a blog post that'll accompany. Your episode when it comes up, but I will send it to you ahead of time earlier, so that you have it well before September. Okay, cool. All right. Thank you very much for doing this. And of course, let us all speak well that the Eagles and the Phillies win their respective championships this year as as should be, of course, right? That's all I know the Cubs fans are excited. They're having a good season at all, but screw you. It's our turn again. That's pretty much it. That's how I feel about that. I just won a World Series. That's all I want. I mean, how great was it to win the Super
Gabby 1:15:32
Bowl? Great. I mean, it was crazy. Yeah, it was about
Scott Benner 1:15:37
the best thing. And how great was it to watch Patrick my homes look sad. Yeah, yeah, awesome. Have you ever been to a game at the link?
Gabby 1:15:47
No, just a Phillies game, like last year.
Scott Benner 1:15:49
You should try an Eagles game. They're they're pretty awesome. I should go to an Eagles game. You should. I haven't been in a while. I'm gonna get Eagles tickets. I just decided. Look at you, Gabby. You're fixing my life. Thank you very much. I'll talk to you soon. Hold on for me, I need to tell you some stuff after we're done recording. Okay, okay, all right.
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#1629 Jump Kick
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Brian’s adopted son Lucas, almost eight, was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes just a year after joining their family.
+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends and welcome back to another episode of The Juicebox podcast.
Brian 0:15
My name is Brian. I'm a dad to an aspiring athlete who happens to have type one diabetes and He's seven years old.
Scott Benner 0:27
If this is your first time listening to the Juicebox podcast and you'd like to hear more, download Apple podcast or Spotify, really, any audio app at all, look for the Juicebox podcast and follow or subscribe. We put out new content every day that you'll enjoy. Want to learn more about your diabetes management. Go to Juicebox podcast.com up in the menu and look for bold Beginnings The Diabetes Pro Tip series and much more. This podcast is full of collections and series of information that will help you to live better with insulin. Please don't forget that nothing you hear on the Juicebox podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan or becoming bold with insulin. The episode you're about to enjoy was brought to you by Dexcom, the Dexcom g7 the same CGM that my daughter wears. You can learn more and get started today at my link, dexcom.com/juicebox us med is sponsoring this episode of The Juicebox podcast, and we've been getting our diabetes supplies from us med for years. You can as well us med.com/juicebox or call 888-721-1514, use the link or the number. Get your free benefits. Check and get started today with us. Med, the episode you're about to listen to is sponsored by tandem Moby, the impressively small insulin pump. Tandem. Moby features tandems newest algorithm control iq plus technology. It's designed for greater discretion, more freedom and improved time and range. Learn more and get started today at tandem diabetes.com/juicebox,
Brian 2:12
my name is Brian. I'm a dad to an aspiring athlete who happens to have type one diabetes, and He's seven years old.
Scott Benner 2:23
Are all of our sons and daughters aspiring athletes? Do you think?
Brian 2:27
I think so. I think so, especially after, after we get into they have high hopes and dreams. I
Scott Benner 2:36
guess you could say, Yeah, no kidding. Do you have other children? I
Brian 2:40
don't, I don't, he's, he's our only. He's actually adopted too, which, you know, we adopted him when he was, like, four months old. So for all intents and purposes, he's ours. So it's pretty, pretty interesting kind of his backstory and stuff like that. But Brian, I'm adopted as well. Oh, nice. Nice. What led to you adopting? So my wife and I, we had been kind of struggling with having children of our own for a while, and we decided to kind of go down the route of like in vitro and all those things, which wasn't very successful. It was funny. It was like Thanksgiving, I guess 2017 and because he was born on October 2017 and somebody, a friend of mine, is like, hey, he texts me. He's like, are you interested in taking care of a child? I'm like, what? So it happened to be his his girlfriend's daughter that had a child, and she couldn't keep the child for various reasons and things like that. So we ended up fostering him through state of Florida for geez, it took about two years going through court, court and things like that, until we finally were able to adopt him. So
Scott Benner 4:00
you fostered him as a newborn,
Brian 4:03
yeah, four months, yeah, yeah, it's
Scott Benner 4:06
interesting. So he never went into the system. It's because somebody knew somebody, and they were able to, like, settle up that way, exactly, exactly. So your buddy knew you had been trying to have kids. Yes, had you ever, like wondered out loud about adoption in front of your friend, or is this just happenstance?
Brian 4:24
You know, I think it was just happenstance. He kind of, he was in, he was actually in a church group of mine, and he kind of saw our struggles and things like that. And, you know, he just, he said, You guys were the first on my mind When this happened, and coincidentally, I think two months prior to Lucas, who's who's our son, prior to him being born, we actually miscarried. So it was kind of like everything all happened at once, and we're like, Okay, well, here's the emotions. We were actually in the Detroit airport eating lunch when he called me, and we're like, bawling our eyes out at. Dinner. And here it is, you know, like people are kind of looking at us a little bit strange and stuff like that. But yeah, it was, it was really interesting.
Scott Benner 5:07
Well, they didn't know how much you spent on in vitro. So, right, yeah,
Brian 5:11
right. I mean, jeez, yeah. How old is Lucas now? He's seven. He'll be eight in October. Awesome. So,
Scott Benner 5:19
well, that's awesome. So what do you know about his background? Like, I imagine a fair amount, is there type one diabetes or other autoimmune issues in his family?
Brian 5:28
So we do, we do stay in touch with his maternal grandmother, just kind of, she's kind of on the outside looking in, you know, sending pictures and stuff like that every once in a while. But what we did here is his grandfather's half brother actually had type one diabetes. So, I mean, could it be genetic, probably, but, you know, we're not, we're not sure, right? Yeah, so it's, it's really interesting,
Scott Benner 5:57
when was he diagnosed? How old?
Brian 6:00
So it was July, July of last year. So it was July 1, right before the Fourth of July. We had just come home from vacation. And, you know, typical, I mean, typical. Now I can say that I didn't know what the heck it was, you know, going into it, but, you know, he was extremely thirsty, he was tired all these things, and when we got home the next day, on Monday, my wife took him to a kid's Pool Party, and he collapsed at the pool. Thankfully, one of her really good dear friends of ours is a pediatric ER doc, and she kind of went into the, you know, emergency mode and said, hey, well, you know, what are some of his symptoms? And she's like, Yeah, you know he, he was thirsty. He wet the bed. He hasn't done that since he was, like, six months old, yeah. So she, she called up the hospital in Tampa and said, hey, you know the this family is going to come visit you guys, and I think he has diabetes. So that's, I don't know if we were ahead of the game, because, you know, I've listened to your podcast and we've had things on there about, you know, having bad medical experiences. But for the most part, it was really, really like, despite all the chaos and emotions and stuff like that, I mean, they took really, really good care of us, like, immediately, yeah,
Scott Benner 7:27
listen, if everybody had a pediatric ER doc with them when something happened, then they'd be doing, they'd be doing awesome. I know. I know, right? So when you got to the hospital, how far along was he in the process? Like, was he in DKA? Or, you know, where was, yeah,
Brian 7:44
yeah. So he was, he was in DKA, he read, I think his sugar rose, like, right around 807 8800, somewhere around there, he walked inside the hospital, and the doctors were like, I don't know how he did it, but I guess, you know, kids are resilient, but, you know, I guess that's a cliche thing to say, but, but when the docs kind of told me, you know, a couple hours later that, you know, we were within hours of him going into a coma, that's when kind of things kind of sunk in there, right? Yeah. So,
Scott Benner 8:15
so how does this all Brian intersect with, like, because your notes are interesting. Like, how does this all intersect with your journey and what's been happening to you? Can you kind of give me a little bit of that and we can blend them
Brian 8:26
together? Yeah, yeah. For sure, for sure. So, you know, I am a Army veteran. Served over in Germany, Bosnia. I did counterintelligence. It was fun times, but I like to tell people it was just like a Jason Bourne movie, except for less explosions and more paperwork involved. So, you know, it wasn't as exciting as the movies, but it was. It was kind of interesting, you know. But I was, you know, 1920 21 years of age, didn't really think much of it until, you know, later on life. It's opened a lot of doors and things like that as well, right? So one of the things, you know, per my notes, is, you know, we, I enjoy doing martial arts with Lucas, and I taught some of the classes with his class and all this stuff. And we were doing a warm up exercise. And part of the warm up exercise was doing these jump front kicks to bring the cardio up, right? I landed absolutely wrong way or the right way, depending on how you look at it, and I tore both my ACLs at the same time. Oh, so, yeah, yeah. How did that feel? Like I'm being serious, like, what's the level of pain there? It was kind of a shock, like I remember thinking, you know, time slowed down, obviously, but I felt like that can't be good. It was a strange feeling. Another instructor in the class, he said it sounded like two gunshots going off, and I just kind of like shuffled myself to the to the side of the wall. All, I tried to stand up. I couldn't stand and I remember calling my wife. I said, Hey, you got to come pick Lucas. And I up. She's like, why? What happened to your car? I'm like, well, it wasn't my car. It was my knees, and I don't know what's going on. So, yeah, it was a lot of pain. It was somewhat embarrassing too, because, you know, there was anywhere from seven year olds to teenagers in the room, and
Scott Benner 10:24
you suddenly, yeah, like the old man. The old man tried to jump up in there and look what happened to him.
Brian 10:29
Yeah, how were you at that point? Yeah, I was old enough to know better, but yeah, I'm 51 now. So yeah, 50 at the time. So doing, yeah, doing 20 year old moves at a 50 year old. Yeah, Brian,
Scott Benner 10:43
let me tell you something. There's a video making the rounds today on the online, and it's a light, like, like a lightweight plane crash landing on a golf course. I think it's an it's an Australia so, you know, from this one perspective, people are filming, and this plane comes in, and it's startling, you know, comes in at like, he doesn't quite get it down smoothly. It kind of, kind of plops down a little bit. And this guy, who, you know, I'm gonna guess, somewhere between 50 and 60 years old, up on this rise, uh, happened to be next to the person holding the camera. So the camera continues on to the plane, while this man is like, I'm gonna go help. He jumps over like a curb, goes across a little bit of grass, starts heading down an embankment. You know, he takes four or five steps going down the hill, and his momentum gets ahead of how quickly his old ass can keep up with the momentum, and his hat flies off. He goes over, tumbling down the hill. And I'm like, I don't know where the bigger tragedy was here today, because I think the people on the plane are okay. This man probably broke every bone in his body, like falling down this hill, you know? Like it was just horrible. But what struck me as I kind of like walked away from the video, is about what you just talked about, which is, in his mind, he could do that. You know what I mean? Like, it wasn't like, there wasn't some horribly steep hill, you know, it's probably a thing he's run down a million times in his life, but just not at his age. And the last time he did it, he probably doesn't remember anyway, I imagine you in that same situation, like, jump, kick, no problem. Oh, bang, what the hell. And but then that tumbles you into a medical
Brian 12:22
issue, right, right, right. So we went to the ER and of course, they're like, Okay, well, let's do X rays. Nothing's broken. They brace me up. And they said, Okay, see a orthopedic surgeon in the morning. I'm like, awesome. Okay, yeah. Like, thanks. So I had, I had some crutches. I've never had to walk on crutches in my life. So it was like, you know, usually you have like, one good leg and one bad leg, but when you have two bad ones, it's kind of like, yeah, what do you do, right? Yeah, yeah. I had no idea. So, yeah. So fast forward a couple of weeks. I did some PT to kind of reduce swelling, all those things. Saw the orthopedic doctor. He said, Okay, well, we have to do the surgery if you want any sort of mobility back. I'm like, yes. I'm like, go ahead, do them both. And he's like, Well, actually, we don't do them both at the same time. I'm like, okay, so what does that look like? So it was just a lot of PT, getting me at least some strength back up and things like that. And then in April, I had my first surgery. Fast forward the whole summer, so going through, and we'll get to that too. But you know, going through all the diabetes journey, and then in August, having to have the second surgery, it was a load of fun, I
Scott Benner 13:39
tell you, surgery, diabetes, second surgery. That's kind of how it went. Yep, exactly. She's exactly. And you're not, like, first of all, they ever explained you why? Because you hear this all the time. Like, even when you go to the dentist, you're like, hey, I have a cavity on this side and on that side, yeah, there's two different visits. I'm like, why? Like, oh, what? You get so numb you'll bite your tongue. I was like, what if I promise not to? Like, you know what I mean? Like, can't wait, but so, but I understand, like, there's, there's reasons behind it that I'm not jiving with, I don't understand with the surgery though, like, you're laid up one way or the other. Like, what's one non surgical still bum leg good for I have always disliked ordering diabetes supplies. I'm guessing you have as well. It hasn't been a problem for us for the last few years, though, because we began using us Med, you can too us med.com/juicebox, or call 888-721-1514, to get your free benefits, check us med has served over 1 million people living with diabetes since 1996 they carry everything you need, from CGM to insulin pumps and diabetes testing supplies and more. I'm talking about all the good ones, all your favorites, libre three, Dexcom g7 and pumps like Omnipod five, Omnipod dash tandem and most recently, the eyelet pump from. To bionics, the stuff you're looking for, they have it at us. Med, 888-721-1514, or go to us. Med, comm slash juice box to get started now use my link to support the podcast that's usmed.com/juice, box. Or call 888-721-1514, this episode is sponsored by tandem Diabetes Care, and today I'm going to tell you about tandems, newest pump and algorithm, the tandem mobi system with control iq plus technology features auto Bolus, which can cover missed meal boluses and help prevent hyperglycemia. It has a dedicated sleep activity setting and is controlled from your personal iPhone. Tandem will help you to check your benefits today through my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox, this is going to help you to get started with tandem, smallest pump yet that's powered by its best algorithm ever control iq plus technology helps to keep blood sugars in range by predicting glucose levels 30 minutes ahead, and it adjusts insulin accordingly. You can wear the tandem Moby in a number of ways. Wear it on body with a patch like adhesive sleeve that is sold separately. Clip it discreetly to your clothing or slip it into your pocket head now to my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox, to check out your benefits and get started today.
Brian 16:24
I don't know, you know, looking back, I'm like, because it's interesting, the first surgery on the left knee is still the knee that bothers me the most. The right one was like, Okay, well, that was surgery. Went through it. It feels pretty good now, okay, but yeah, the left one's still giving me issues. You know, a year and a half later, I don't know the reasoning, but yeah,
Scott Benner 16:46
you do the surgery, then there's the recovery, then there's the gap of time, and then another surgery and a recovery. What keeping the diabetes at it for? For a second? How long are you laid up for? And what's the impact on you being laid up that long?
Brian 16:59
Yeah, so the first surgery, you know, I really didn't know what to expect. I never really had any surgeries in my life, except for maybe, like, ear tubes as a kid or something like that. So I didn't know. I mean, I thought I was gonna die in anesthesia. So I'm, like, telling my wife, hey, if I don't wake up, you know, do this and that it was a good, like, two weeks, and you go from, like, being laid up in bed to,
Scott Benner 17:29
I mean,
Brian 17:31
not being able to use the bathroom on your own. My wife had to, like, help me shower. Got this strange bag you put on the surgical leg so that you could kind of take a shower and feel somewhat human like but that was like four or five days after the surgery. So, I mean, you can imagine it was, it wasn't very pleasant. But that being said, probably after a week, the doctor really wanted me to at least start putting weight on it and start moving and things like that. So he was an athletic orthopedic surgeon. I mean, he had many, many years of experience. In fact, he said, out of his 28 years of experience, I'm like, one of less than five that have done both at the same time. So I'm like, Hey, does that make me an elite athlete or something? He's like, No.
Scott Benner 18:20
Makes you elite at falling, is what it makes you. Yeah, makes it makes you the guy tumbling down the hill at the at the golf course,
Brian 18:28
exactly, exactly. So it was, it was a lot of fun. And I'm using finger quotes. So I had a walker. I started using a walker for a little bit, which actually the Walker was better than the crutches. I felt like I could maneuver a little bit better on a walker. So if you can imagine, like grandma with the tennis balls, well, here's this 50 year old guy. I have two broken legs pretty much on a walker trying to get his coffee in the kitchen.
Scott Benner 18:54
So yeah, are you able to work during that a
Brian 18:58
little bit? So I work from home most days. But thankfully, I work for a really good company that's got a great culture, and they totally understood, like, this is a life changing type of thing you're going through. And I was able to take a good amount of time off and then kind of weave work in there as I could. Yeah, the first surgery, it was a good three weeks before I could kind of get my mind back to things and stuff, because, I mean, you're on narcotics and all sorts of fun stuff, right? So
Scott Benner 19:29
my daughter is on like, day 11 of her, like, tonsil surgery. She's 21 and I have to admit, in the beginning they were like, look, you're, you know, she's gonna be laid up for two weeks. And some people don't go back to work for two or three weeks afterwards. Even I was like, Listen, I'm like, kind of baby can't get back to work after having their tonsils taken out, but now I'm watching it happen to her. My God, it's hard on you. And, oh yeah, not just difficult and incredibly painful, but then, like you said, you're taking the meds to deal with the pain, and you're kind of half out of it to. Begin with. And I was like, Oh, this is why people can't do this and go to work at the same time. Kind of obvious in hindsight, but it was one of those things, like, they're like, we're just going to take our tonsils out. And I was like, okay, like, that doesn't sound like on its face. Is like, terrible. And even, like, going through surgery for an ACL like, as we're talking about, I'm thinking, like, maybe you can't do two of them because, like, maybe your body just can't, like, rebound from something like that. You can manage diabetes confidently with the powerfully simple Dexcom g7 dexcom.com/juicebox, the Dexcom g7 is the CGM that my daughter is wearing. The g7 is a simple CGM system that delivers real time glucose numbers to your smartphone or smart watch. The g7 is made for all types of diabetes, type one and type two, but also people experiencing gestational diabetes. The Dexcom g7 can help you spend more time in range, which is proven to lower a 1c The more time you spend in range, the better and healthier you feel. And with the Dexcom clarity app, you can track your glucose trends, and the app will also provide you with a projected a 1c in as little as two weeks. If you're looking for clarity around your diabetes, you're looking for Dexcom, dexcom.com/juicebox, when you use my link, you're supporting the podcast, dexcom.com/juicebox,
Brian 21:25
head over there. Now, yeah, yeah, that's probably what it is. Because, I mean, there's a very structured PT thing that they do. I mean, they start with the basics of like, raising your leg. And if you can't do that, then they do, like electro stem on it. And thankfully, I did have the ability to raise my leg, like, literally, the day after surgery. So, I mean, I didn't feel good by any means, but I was able to still use my muscles, which was good a lot of people those type of injuries, the muscles just totally shut off. And there's a lot more extensive stuff they have to do with PT. So
Scott Benner 22:05
before we started recording, you kind of alluded to this for a second. But did this put weight on you?
Brian 22:11
Oh, yeah. Oh yeah, a lot. So I was always been fairly active. I mean, I was in military, ups and downs like any, anybody, right? But just the, you know, feeling sorry for myself and a lazy boy that, or actually was like one of those lift chairs that we got from Amazon. You know, you feel sorry for yourself. You start eating bad, all that stuff. So I put on a good, like, 50 pounds through that whole thing, up until probably last November, when my doctor is like, well, you know, your cholesterol is up and you're all that. I'm like, yeah, no, no, crap. I mean, I've been in a lazy boy this whole time. Yeah, he suggested the GLP meds to to help with that, because he's like, you know, you're otherwise healthy, your knees aren't going to do any good with all this extra weight. And, you know, I think some of that weight gain and stuff like that was, it was hard to recover from a lot of that stuff, because I gained so much
Scott Benner 23:13
weight, so there's a lack of mobility. You're not eating well, you're a little bummed out about, I mean, it's got to be a bummer. Just just not be able to walk around and be using a walker for months and months at a time, and then in the middle of it, your kid gets diabetes too, right?
Brian 23:26
Yeah, yeah. So, I mean, you could understand, probably, the mental gymnastics that that places on people and right based off of people that you've talked to. And you add, you know, another medical complication in the mix, and it's, it becomes more
Scott Benner 23:41
than you can kind of overwhelm on your own. So Exactly, yeah, tell me your How tall are you?
Brian 23:47
So I'm 510 okay, I was pushing 250 injury, I was right around 200 and now I'm actually back down to like 180 which is, I haven't been 180 since probably the military. So it's, it's felt really, really good, yeah,
Scott Benner 24:03
I was gonna say 510, two, hundreds, even a little extra. So, yeah, yeah. So wow, you were, you were probably 70 pounds overweight. Then, yeah, yeah, easily, easily. And how long has this process been since you started the GLP till now?
Brian 24:17
So I think early November. So, yeah, not even a year. Yeah, not even a year. And I, I don't know what it is, I think it's sometimes. I think it's like, the the military kicks in and be like, Okay, well, they're giving me this medicine. I just, I gotta do it, and I gotta stick to the plan and go, go, go. And, I mean, between that I was doing PT twice a week, and then going to the gym all that stuff, it just started coming off like crazy, which is amazing, but, yeah, so
Scott Benner 24:49
it is odd how quickly can happen. I'm down just 70 pounds too. It took me two years, though. Yeah, yeah. So you have your first surgery, then the story we heard about your. Child being diagnosed, is there? Like, talk to me about the layering of the diabetes on top of your life. Like, what, what did you find to be the biggest adjustment for you personally, and how did your son handle
Brian 25:14
it? You know, it was, it was definitely, you know, at first it was a shock. Like, why is this happening to us right now, you know, like, can it, you know, if it's going to happen, why can't it happen a year from now? You know, but you know, it doesn't, you know, diabetes doesn't really have any say in when it, when it gets to somebody, right? So, so I think it's the shock, and I think a lot of it, too, is kind of a, it's almost like a grieving process, right? Like, you're like, Okay, I had all these aspirations for my son, and now he's got diabetes. What does that mean? And, you know, you go down rabbit holes of internet. I had no idea, really what type one diabetes was. And I'm like, you know, like everybody else, I was like, Hey, he's fit, you know, He's skinny. How? How did he get it? You know? Was it the Chick fil A milkshake he had the day before, you know? And, and obviously it wasn't right,
Scott Benner 26:08
but it was, but it doesn't stop your mind from racing through all that, right, right, right?
Brian 26:13
So, you know, we get through the first three days at the hospital, which, again, awesome. Care. In fact, he didn't want to leave because he was like, excited about picking his own meals on the on the screen, and then they had, like, an Xbox in the children's hospital. So he's like, Yeah, I just want to sit here and play NFL. I'm like, No, dude, you we got to go home now. Okay. Well, this is this bag of stuff you guys get to take home now. And now you have to give injections, and now you have to do these, you know, mental calculations and correction factors and all this stuff. And, you know, I'm a it nerd, right? Like, I'm like, Okay, well, this is an engineering problem. I can solve it. And, you know, I still, I mean, he's on, he's on a pump. Now he's on the Omnipod five, and I think I've got it tweaked about as good as I can at this point. But, you know, like yesterday, he was, you know, 90% in range. Today, he's 60% in range, you know, it's, it just depends, right? So, yeah, in the hospital, doing all this stuff, you know. And I'm walking into the hospital at this point, like, in a cane and, you know. And here I'm like, I, you know, I'm kind of a humorous person. I'm trying to joke. And I'm like, Well, you know, I'm in the hospital too, because I just tore both my ACLs. And of course, you know, you're talking to doctors that are not orthopedic people, and I don't think they appreciated, you know, my medical stuff going on at the same time, but I don't know. I was trying to make light of the situation, which was a very difficult situation. So no,
Scott Benner 27:52
I mean, it's got to be a lot, right? So do you and your wife kind of split the diabetes care, or does one? Does it kind of lend towards one of you more than the other?
Brian 28:02
Yeah, so it's interesting. Now it's, it's both of us. I mean, we have to, otherwise it's overwhelming. You know, we equate it to, like, if you know, when he was a newborn and he woke up in the middle of the night screaming, Well, right now, that's the sugar pixel going off, and now it's time to get up and give him some juice or something, because he's 45 going straight down, right? Yeah, you know. So there's that, and we kind of tag team the alerts, and we kind of have a general understanding, like, if it's a work week for me, she'll try to get up. But, you know, I can't help not getting up. Like, I'm not gonna, like, lay in bed and be like, Oh no, you go get him, right? So a lot of times it's both of us getting up interrupted sleep, checking the sugar, making sure it's good. For the weirdest period of time, I think it was earlier on in the year with the Dexcom. The Dexcom was like 100 points off, so he'd be low. But actually it was, like, 125 and we're like, okay, that's weird. You just got a 125 blood sugar high, yeah? Like, I'm like, he's perfect. But can you imagine, like, all right, I didn't if I didn't do a finger stick, like, Okay, now he's in the 300
Scott Benner 29:16
to drive it up. Yeah. Listen, I have Arden. We've been making adjustments to ardent insulin, as she's done with the surgery, and, you know, and things are getting different. And like last night, I said to her when she went to bed, I'm like, I think we're good now. I'm like, but you still might get low overnight, I'm not sure. And then, yeah, two o'clock, you know, the low alarm went off. And you know, she's still whacked on the pain meds. So I went in to help her, and and she's looking at me, and she's kind of going slowly because her throat hurts, so she's eating slowly. And there's part of me that's like, well, I'll stand here with her make sure she's okay. And then there's the other part of me wanted to go, like, Hey, you're all right, right. Like, can I I gotta go lay back down. So she just she looked at me, and even in the dark, she's like, are you all right? I said. I think I'm getting too old for this. I really do. And that's me and my 21 year old. You have a seven year old, right? You're not that much younger than me. You
Brian 30:08
know? Yeah, it's, it's definitely interesting. There's the mental gymnastics too, because, like, if he's low, we've discovered he gets like, really, really, like, angry, right? And, you know, who wouldn't I mean, people react differently to low and the high blood sugars, right? But I mean, it took us a while to realize that, though we're like, why is he flipping out? Like, what? What's going on? And, oh, well, he's 55 right now. Okay, so get some sugar in on all that stuff, and he's, he's back to his normal Lucas self, right? It took us a while and still, like my wife said to me the other day, she's like, Oh, I think, I think he hates me. I'm like, No, he doesn't hate you. He's having a you know, but, I mean, you're, you're a dad, you know how it is, right? It's just it stops and the downs, that is really a struggle, right?
Scott Benner 30:58
Also, the the low blood sugars and the balancing blood sugars are hard on you. We haven't happened an episode called altered minds that discusses how you know just your blood sugar being low changes your personality. Yeah, yeah. I try very hard not to judge anything that's happening during a low blood sugar, that's for sure. And you got to learn how to not take it with you when it's over too, which is not always as easy as it sounds. Yeah, when he comes out of the hospital, is it injections? Are you? MDI, are there CGM? So there are not. How did they start you through the process?
Brian 31:29
So, yeah. So they started us with the insulin pens, long term insulin, with the, you know, regular insulin, carb ratios, all that stuff. But he didn't come out of the hospital with a CGM, which that made it a little weird, but I kind of understand, like, I think their philosophy, or his original endocrinologist, you know, her philosophy, was essentially, you know, let's, let's get him the basics so they understand exactly how to do it. Should the technology not be there? And then, after about two, three weeks, then he was on the Dexcom g7 and even with that and injections, it made it a lot easier to manage. Oh, sure, yeah, absolutely. But, yeah, it took him about, or I think it was about three months. We got prescribed the the Omnipod, which is it's been, you know, he got on the Omnipod right as he was entering first grade. And that's, that's another story to the first grade nurse at the time, she actually had type one diabetes, which was awesome, right
Scott Benner 32:35
for you, not for her, but, yeah, yeah.
Brian 32:40
But you know, we love her dearly, like, if she listens to this podcast, like, Hey, we love you. You know all that stuff, but you know his low blood sugars weren't like yours. He doesn't need 30 carbs, you know? I mean, he would take maybe, and still, if he's 55 or 45 we can give him 10 carbs and he's back to where he needs to be, but he's little, she would get scared, and she'd give him a juice and, like, Ritz crackers and gummies and all this stuff, and all of a sudden he's back up to, like, 275 and it's like, Ah, come on, you know? But you know, I think her thing was like, Hey, I don't want him to, like, go into a seizure in the school so, plus school nurses, I have realized aren't, you know, personal care for my son, right? She's got other students to take care of as well. So, right? So, yeah, it's, it's interesting.
Scott Benner 33:32
Yeah, you start to get it, you know what I mean? Like you have these expectations every time something happens, and then you see how it really is, and you go, Okay, this is a good person trying their hardest. And exactly, yeah, exactly, she got other things to do too. But when on day one, you think, Oh, it's great. There's a nurse there, like, just for him, and it's going to be awesome. Yeah, exactly, everything's a learning curve. It really, just genuinely is as much as you want. You know, things to be one way doesn't always work that way, you know, like everything's not perfect,
Brian 34:03
not at all, not at all, yeah, so he's actually on his as of this year. He just started second grade. It's his third school in two years. And that was an interesting thing too, because last talking about things stacking up, you know, when it rains, it pours literally. So hurricane Milton, you know, I'm in Florida, Tampa area, you know, we had some home damage, and then we had to move. So that was one of those other fun moments as well. And it wasn't like our house got swept away by the water, but it was, you know, it came through the roof. We had mold issues, all this stuff. And I'm just like, Okay, well, it's time to move to a better place that doesn't get impacted as hurricanes do. I mean, we're in Florida, we're gonna get impacted, but it's we're way more inland right now than we were. So time
Scott Benner 34:57
to get out of there. Well, in your note. You talk about the resilience that you had to find in yourself, and I was wondering if you could kind of go into what led you to start thinking about that and how you made your way through it. Yeah, I think,
Brian 35:12
you know, you go back to, there's a quote I read from somebody the other day like, and it essentially goes like, hey, you know, you can choose to think your situation sucks, or you can choose to have your situation be awesome. And it's really a choice, right? And, you know, looking back, it's like, Okay, we have this diagnosis. You know, we could sit here and post all about, you know, the bad parts on on Instagram and and have everybody, you know, I guess, what do they call that? People? I don't know. It's a term, right? Or we could say, hey, you know, let's make the best of it. And it sucks. It's a crappy thing that can happen, especially to kids, but as a dad, you know, I have to be the one that kind of like leads the family, or lead by example, right? If I'm down on my on myself, which, I mean, I had plenty of reasons to be, but then that kind of trickles down to the rest of the family, right? So, guys, we always like to try to fix things, and, you know, I guess you just try to try to get through it and fix what you can and realize that, you know, you got to lean on your doctors. You got to lean on your community, you know, people around you, and stuff like that. So
Scott Benner 36:37
would you say that prior to your your jump kick, which, by the way, is that what you call it a front kick, what you call it
Brian 36:44
front jump so if you imagine the original Karate Kid, where he's doing the Crane Kick, and he, like, jumps up and down. So it's just like that, although I didn't do the arms and the air type of thing. So it's just, you know, well, thank God you had jumped
Scott Benner 36:57
up on your head. So prior to that, things just went right for you, right? Like you, you weren't having you and your wife didn't have medical issues until the you couldn't conceive. You didn't have any issues at all, even the the issue with the conception, the miscarriage, you get, the you know, the adoption, even that kind of turns out well, because there's Lucas, everything's great again. Like, so like, is that the idea that, like, you get to that, that injury, that it's not just, like, it's not a 10 day illness, right? It's not the flu or something like that. Like, this is a long haul. It brings you down. It makes you question yourself. And then in the middle of it, this thing happens, the Lucas, with the diabetes, and then you get the next surgery, and it's just, is it like a weight? Like, do you do you feel depressed? Is it like, you know, can you explain to me how you felt in that time?
Brian 37:47
Oh, yeah. I mean, obviously there's, there's depression involved and things like that. But you know, if you can't get out of that, or you start feeling sorry for yourself, then what kind of example are you setting for your kids too, right? So I think that was the key. And then also, like, with my wife, I was like, you know, we've gone through stuff like this before. I mean, not diabetes, but like, we've miscarried, we've lost children, you know, we've
Scott Benner 38:16
you've been through hard things in the past. You know how to do it, right? Yeah, right, right. Were you saying to me earlier that, like, there's an ability, because of the internet, to get like, like you can, I don't know, find a bunch of people in a similar situation, and get in like, some sort of a misery loop, or, like a victim bonding thing, or and let yourself go into that direction, and you willfully and meaningfully avoided it.
Brian 38:44
Yeah, yeah. In fact, my wife joined, like, a moms of type one diabetes group, and she was like, I just, I just can't keep looking at this stuff. She's like, I feel so bad for all these people, but you know, and rightfully so, right? I mean, I'm not discounting the role of motherhood by any means, or the ability to grieve for the disease or anything like that, but I think if you quit yourself in that situation, then you start to find reasons to also get into that loop as well. Yeah,
Scott Benner 39:18
it becomes, there's a word for it. I don't know what it is when people get in a group and they start kind of just like, describing what happened to themselves and reliving it over and over again, and the rehashing happens over and over without, like, without moving forward, without, without their it just it turns into a pity party for the lack of like, a better term. And you can get caught in it's almost like, Oh, what's that movie that my kids are always telling me, like, it's some movie where the characters end up in a nightclub, and the nightclub, like, slows down time and keeps you captured there, because you're happy forever and like, it's almost like the the the opposite of that, like, You're so sad, you just kind of it. It's like quicksand, like you can't get out of it then, right? And then the more people that come in, you feel like you have a community. But it's not really as much of a community as it is. You all just become like, I don't know, you all become like each other's anchors, and you're and you're you end up holding yourself in there. And then the opposite happens. So are you in my group, have you tried that one? I haven't yet. No, that one's not like that. If you're looking forward, still point your wife towards that one. There's, there's people in there trying to find answers, not trying to stay stuck. You know
Brian 40:33
what? I mean? Okay, yeah, okay, yeah, yeah. And that's, I think that's what draw me to your podcast, too, is it was, you know, more educational, informative type of stuff, rather than, you know, pity party. I guess you could say,
Scott Benner 40:48
yeah, maybe whatever. I don't even mean to, like, I'm not trying to undervalue the sadness or the real burden of type one, or for yourself or for a loved one. But there's a moment I feel like this is what I heard you saying. Like, there's a moment where you got to just, like, pick yourself up and be like, All right, we got to get the moving here. Like, that's yes, it's enough, absolutely, yeah, right, absolutely, yeah. So you were able to do that for yourself. But why? Like, that's my last question around this. Is that, where did you draw your strength from? Like, there's the reason I asked Brian is it occurs to me, as I'm talking to so many people, that people have a much easier time doing stuff for other people than for themselves. Oh, yeah, so I'm looking for like, what your motivation was to say, Hey, I'm getting out of this nightclub, out of this tar pit, and I'm gonna get moving again.
Brian 41:37
Who are you doing it for? Definitely the family. Being in the the military, I have PTSD and all that fun stuff. And I think some of that, like tools that I use to get through that I think sometimes translates to, hey, you know, I've got this going on in my brain right now. I don't, I don't want them to kind of go through the same type of thing that I am right now. So I think it's, I don't know exactly, like, a two, yeah,
Scott Benner 42:07
you have experience or training with being in a terrible situation and realizing I can't stand here anymore, I gotta move exactly. Yeah, exactly, yep, when you train for the military, is that, like, quite literally, like live fire training, right? Like you did. You have to go through that.
Brian 42:23
Yeah, there was, there was some of that. I actually was, I did, essentially counter intelligence, anti terrorism stuff. And I guess the short story is, you know, we dealt with war crimes and seeing some of those things. And then after the military, I was actually working for a state police agency doing I was on a federal task force doing crimes against children, and I think, you know, PTSD definitely from the military, but also, you know, seeing the worst of human behavior on two sides of the spectrum. You know, the military and civilian life, I think really kind of makes it like, hey, I want something, something better for for my kids. I want them to not experience those things, some deep stuff, I guess so.
Scott Benner 43:15
No. I mean, you have a blend of interesting experiences, like you've gotten to see people willfully trying to hurt other people? Yep, yeah. And you know that there's often just a group of other people who are willfully trying to stop them. It's the only thing between, you know, between them and reaching their goals. And then you see it like on that state police level with kids, that's even, I mean, I mean, it's less shocking to hear that, you know, politically and you know, around money, people are trying to do what they're trying to do what they're trying to do, but when they're trying to hurt kids, then, I mean, all common sense, like anybody who's reasonable is, like, I don't this shouldn't be happening, right? Like, right. But it's not just happening once. It's happening constantly. I know, yeah, you're faced with it over and over again and and then, I guess then you start seeing your kids. I'm trying to put this all together, but I guess you start guess you start seeing your kid put into a situation where you think, like, wow, you know, could his life be less than what he deserves? I got to do everything I can, like, the world's already a bad enough place, or it can be like, we can't have this on top of the rest of that. Is that what you're trying to tell me,
Brian 44:18
yeah, yeah. I think, I think you nailed it there. I think it's, you know, you want the best for your for your kids, or most rational parents, too, right? Yeah. And when you see the worst of people, I think it makes it maybe easier to get to a place where you can make it better for somebody I don't
Scott Benner 44:38
know, you know. So, I mean, I would think for most rational people who don't have feelings like that, or don't involve themselves in hurting other people or taking advantage of, you know, large groups of citizens, you know, or anything in between, it just all sounds crazy. It's like the news comes on and you're like, you're hearing about a war here and a war there. And you're like, No, Can we all just stop? Yeah, yeah, exactly. Take the. 12 year old inside of you comes out, like, and you're just like, hey, I think if we all just stop hitting each other, this would be better. Oh, yeah, 100% right? And then, but then you realize, like, that's not going to happen, right, right? And now guys like you and women like you are out there trying to get in between that and the rest and trying to slow it down a little break your job is not even to stop it, right? It's just to slow it down a little bit. Yeah. And I think that's the feeding, right, right?
Brian 45:26
And, you know, innocence is lost in children so easily that you go through something like that, and then all of a sudden, you know, type one diabetes pops up. And you're like, Man, this kid's got to grow up super, super fast now. And thankfully, he's good at math, but my goodness, you know, I I can't imagine what a seven year old brain is doing right now, like thinking about all this
Scott Benner 45:49
stuff, no, it's until you really understand your entire like backstory and everything, that it didn't quite make sense to me, until I put it all together like that, like you've, you've seen what the world can be, and you think at some point that kid's gonna have to deal with this world? I need to put that off for as long as possible. Exactly. Yeah, exactly. So you get up and get yourself moving, and pull yourself out of wherever you are and start figuring all this out, and put him in the best case scenario, like you even moved him out of the house and poured took him somewhere. Oh, oh yeah, yeah, you're on, like, a whole little reclamation thing, Brian, it's nice.
Brian 46:22
Yeah, absolutely, yeah. Look at you. And then, and then there's little league. Oh my goodness, yeah.
Scott Benner 46:29
So go ahead, tell me, by the way, because those people, they exist in Little League too. And Brian, I don't know if you know this about my family, but my son played baseball from the time he was four until the day graduated from college, and Arden, had she not gotten hurt when she was about 14, was probably on her way to playing in college too. As a matter of fact, I've watched Arden. She was two games shy of reaching the Little League World Series in softball, so about nine years ago. So I have a ton of background in this. I can't wait to hear what you're experiencing.
Brian 47:00
Yeah, so it's so before diabetes, he was on a team in our in our old town, near Tampa, and he was doing well, extremely supportive people and all that. So we moved and I'm like, Hey, I gotta find the closest Little League to us. So I did, you know, and you know, met with a coach and all this stuff. And you know, from the beginning, I just didn't get the right, like, the right vibes, you know, just my my senses just went off, you know. And I said, Well, you know, he really loves baseball, so let's put him in there. And I said, you know, he does have type one diabetes, but you know that shouldn't limit him and all that. And then I just started seeing the, okay, well, he was last on the roster to go up for bat. He'd be sitting on the bench. Because, you know, well, we can only put, what is it, 10 players on the field at a time, and he was player number 11, and then, okay, well, he can go in a catcher, because I don't want his blood sugars to go bad. And I'm like, Okay, well, let me deal with that part of things, you know, if he goes low or if he goes high, you know, we can handle that, but we never really were able to kind of communicate with that individual about, like, hey, you know, let him just play. He's a kid. But then there was also, like, the they were taking it way too serious for like seven year olds and and it was just it was terrible. So hindsight,
Scott Benner 48:26
they were worried about the diabetes without any actual background, kind of helping, in quotes, the wrong way. And then on top of that, you realized you were the bunch of people who thought all their kids were like the next
Brian 48:40
coming of Derek Jeter, exactly. And I think, you know, I even said to this individual, I said, I don't think they really appreciated it when I did, but I said, Hey, none of these kids are going to be these kids are going to make the major so just let them
Scott Benner 48:57
have fun. They don't want to hear that. Oh, wait a second. I don't want to hear that for sure. Listen, I've said this a number of times. I'm happy to say it again, that if you would have gone to when my son was 12, and maybe even till when he was 14, and assessed his entire team and said, I want you to pick the kid on this team that's going to play college baseball for four years. In a million years, you would not have picked my son. There was always a kid that was bigger or appeared stronger or appeared faster or something, and you thought like, oh, it's going to be that one. It's going to be that one. It was and it was none of those, the primordial goo that has to come together to turn you into a college athlete. It also has something to do with like your your mental makeup, right? I watched a kid make it to a school as a pitcher, and couldn't have felt better for the kid, you know what I mean. And one day you hear like he's pitching, like you can watch it on ESPN. I was like, This is crazy, and I flipped it. TV on, and I was like, Oh, my God, good for him. Look at him there. And five minutes later, I watched a ball leave that stadium that he pitched, and it went so far that, I think it knocked him right out of the school and took him right home again. You know what I mean? Like he was in over his head. He took a spot that, like he wasn't going to be able to compete in, but thought he was lucky and everything. And instead of just saying, like, oh, I don't fit here. I should have gone somewhere where I fit better. He shot the moon. He threw a half. I mean, one half of an inning where they shelled him so hard they literally, like, kicked him off the team. Wow. Like, that was another person who, at four years old, started playing baseball and made it all the way to the thing, and then one day it was just like, Now, get out of here. And, wow. So that's the one kid that made it. My son made it. Played the whole four years, and then, by the way, covid happened in the middle of it, and just a horror for kids playing school sports and in college at that point. The bigger issue is that it's unless you're just a giant and you're and you're just gifted in a way that literally just feels like it's handed down to you. You You know what I mean? Like, like, God, decided you're going to be a baseball player. If you're not one of those people, and very few people are, then the things that have to come together for, and you still have to love it, you have to not get hurt and, like, all this stuff has to happen. It just, it's not something you can plan for, right? Right? If I had five seconds to talk to those people, those people you tried to speak to, who, by the way, probably just thought you were, you know, a loser for saying that not everybody, of course, they're all going to make it, yeah, you know, like, like, if I had five seconds to talk to them, I'd say, Listen, you know, I watch professional baseball. You know, every day there's 30 some teams on each one of those teams. There's five middle reliever pitchers that suck, which means that there's like, 150 guys in the league who suck, but they're still the best that's going Yeah, exactly. And you think your kid, there are these two people. I wish I don't know them. There's no way they're listening to this. But I've never met two shorter people in my entire life and the entire time through Little League. They were a little younger than my son, so you kind of got to watch them, like, through the rear view mirror a little bit. And they acted like that kid was just the second coming of anything. And I kept thinking, like, he's going to be very tiny. Like, you're tiny people, he's going to be tiny too. Like, this doesn't work. Like, go turn your television on, you know. Do you see a lot of five, four guys playing professional baseball anywhere, you know, but they still, like, they burdened that kid and tortured him, like, and everything that could have been fun about that experience was a horror for that child. So, yeah, you know, he could have just had a great time playing baseball while he was a kid, and instead, yeah, he got told that he had a job to do, and he failed at it. I'm like, Yeah, you guys are misunderstanding parenting, that's for
Brian 52:51
sure. But so, yeah, it's so now we're doing basketball tryouts are in a week from now, and that was a interesting story how that all came about, too. That actually happened at friends for life. Really, it was, yeah, it was the last day there's a organization that was working with Medtronic called diabetes, doing things. Oh,
Scott Benner 53:16
Rob, yeah, of course, yeah.
Brian 53:19
So it's Rob and Gary Forbes. And then there was a female WNBA player as well, and I can't remember her name off the top of my head, but Lauren Cox, Lauren, yes, yes.
Scott Benner 53:33
Well, that was right off of my memory. Hey, I'm taking a victory lap on there. Like I'm so bad with names, I'm so impressed with myself. Okay, so go ahead.
Brian 53:40
Yeah. So, so we went through Lucas. And I went through this like, hey, you know these professional athletes, they have type one diabetes phase, and he's got cards from, you know, all the famous people. Like, now, of course, none of the names are coming at the top of my head, but yeah. And so I signed him up for this basketball thing, and Gary, it's amazing, like, so Lucas goes right up to Gary, and he's like, Hey, Gary, you're my favorite basketball player of all time. And he's like, he's like, Oh, well, well, thanks. And I think Lucas was like, on his Instagram and stuff like that. And it was, it was really cool. But Gary actually came talk to me, and I kind of told him the baseball story and all that. He's like, get him that F out of that and put him into something that he enjoys. I'm like, okay,
Scott Benner 54:34
but did your son not enjoy baseball? Or did he not enjoy what came with it?
Brian 54:39
I think it was what came with it, right? Like he enjoyed being out there. He was proud to wear his hat. You know, he would wear the baseball hat to school every day, all this stuff. But I think it was the he had a hard time hitting the ball. Like we went from machine pitch to coach pitch, and, you know, he had the timing right on the machine. But then. The coach, who knows, you know, how they pitch, right? And I think it was just a lot of variables, plus then you add the type one on top of it as well, and, you know, he's up and down depending on, you know, the day. So I think there was a lot of that. If
Scott Benner 55:17
you're not very naturally inclined to baseball, it's a lot of work, and it doesn't pay you back right away. Yeah. I mean, yeah. And there's a couple of people who, when you really stop and look at it, at that age, the kids that are are excelling are just physically, usually larger or stronger, and then they can overwhelm the pitching, and that's why they end up being successful when they're younger. There's always some kid who grows to like their full size by the time they're 10, and they just are dominating the whole thing. And then you look up three years later and they can't play, yeah, because then everybody grew past them, and now they're dominating them. So if your son's a little smaller, or a little, you know, or hasn't just been doing it every second of his life, you know, it's, it's just difficult to do, man, like, there's nothing harder than hitting that little ball. Like, it really, it really, it really, is hard. So, so why not do something that lends itself to some, you know, a more immediate enjoyment and success, and, you know, I mean, lets him Have fun. Because that's really what it's about, is having fun.
Brian 56:19
Yeah, absolutely. And he's, he's very tall for his age, too. And, I mean, just the other day he was practicing, and he's drilling like normal free throws, like, like a mad man. I'm like, wow, this is really good. So hopefully he keeps up with it, right, but enjoys it. You know, the the arcades where they have the basketball hoops that you play those, I mean, Chuck E Cheese, or any one of those places, right? He'll be drilling those like all the time. So I think he's got a natural ability, at least as a seven year old. But you know, like I said earlier, an aspiring athlete is probably a good definition, not necessarily, I guess. You know, time will tell.
Scott Benner 56:58
That'd be fun. Every year I'd say to my son in the off season, I'm like, Look, you don't have to do this. Like, if you're not enjoying this, tell me if you're like, This isn't for me. It's for you. If you don't, if you want to keep doing it, keep doing it, if you don't say something, like, you know, it's a lot of work. You know, especially baseball, there's a lot of failure in baseball. And you know, you can make this simple, like, statement that, like, Oh, it's good for you. Like, it builds character and stuff like that doesn't not for everybody. Some people just feel like they're failing, right, right? Do you really need to make a seven year old feel like they're failing? Like, it's just, it's just supposed to be fun, you know what? I mean? Yeah, like, it, trust me, if your son grows into a collegiate basketball player, or if he grew into a professional baseball player, like, you're not going to know that right now. Like, it just anybody who thinks they know where these kids are going, like, they're going to be sadly mistaken, like, at some point, and they're going to realize how much time they gave away to something that, in the end, didn't, you know, maybe do much more for them than it could have done if they would have just taken it less, not seriously, but just, you know, not treated it like it was life or death, and just let people have a good time. So, yeah,
Brian 58:07
yeah, I think you hit, hit the nail on the head, I guess there, because I think it's, you know, you want them to have fun. And look, I mean, being a kid is hard enough, right? And then you throw diabetes on top of it, and then the pressure to perform. You know that some some parents put on their kids and look, I want them to do well, right? And I'll probably be yelling at him if he misses a shot or something. But, you know, at the end of the day, if he's not having fun, like, Let's do something else, right? So
Scott Benner 58:37
I could endlessly tell you story I watched the one boy be just chastised, like, screamed at in his car every day after practice, like, I mean, like you could see from a distance the screaming that was going on in the car from the Father. And, you know now this many years later, that kid is 26 years old, and you know what he does for a living. He's not a professional baseball player, I can tell you that much, right, all right. And I could tell you that on the last day my son played college baseball, he was a center fielder who has been who had been told by numerous professional scouts that he graded out defensively as a professional baseball player, who also pitched sometimes, and had a 93 mile an hour fastball. And you know what my son does for a living now, he's 25 he is not a professional baseball player. In case you're wondering, if I said to you right now, Hey, your seven year old will one day be 21 and have a 93 mile an hour fastball, you'd say, Oh, they're going to play professional baseball. It's not necessarily the case, and it's not because he wouldn't have wanted to, or he didn't know how to work at it. It's this idea of best way I've ever been able to explain it to anybody trying to play baseball and probably any sport, really, if you aspire to college. And you know is that it's like a pyramid. So if you can imagine the fattest part of the pyramid at the bottom, the most people fit around the edge of the pyramid. And so like, you know that year, my. Kid starts playing Little League. I The number, I think, is 4 million American boys started playing Little League baseball that same summer. Yeah, and they all fit around the bottom of that pyramid. And then you take a step up, and there's a little less pyramid, and you take another step up and there's a little less and a little less, and one day, there's so little room that you and your amazing talent and your 93 mile an hour fastball and your ability to play both ways is literally not as good as the people who are left over next to you, and then they all step up and there's nowhere for you to hold on to, and just slide down and you slide off. Yeah, and it doesn't make you not good. It just makes you trying to do something that only a few 1000 people in the world do like. So, you know, at some point you have to be a giant freak of nature who also has all those same skills. Yeah, that's when you realize, like you're you've got yourself involved in something, that there's no way that when your kid was seven or eight years old, you would have known how it was going to end. Right, right? I as I look at it in the rear view mirror of my life and all I saw with other people's children, like so many kids would have benefited if everyone would have just said, like, this is just fun. Like, let this just be fun. You know, instead, you go find those kids now, and their memories are not positive, generally speaking, of their time playing sports, and that's a shame, but anyway, I'm sorry. Ron, good, no, no,
Brian 1:01:24
no, that's That's exactly right. I think, you know, I've even watched it when I was growing up, I was on the swim team, and there was a swimmer on the team that could have made the he went to the Olympic trials, and he actually told us he purposely tanked his trial because his parents pressured him so much to be this athlete like his. I mean, it was, what, 17 years old at the time, right? And the pressure, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. So has every record, you know, in the city, probably still to this day. But you know, when it came to the Olympic trials, he just blew it because you didn't want to do it anymore.
Scott Benner 1:02:02
Yeah, so just wanted to get away from it. Arden tells me, she's like, I She's like, I'm not happy I got hurt. But she's like, I am glad that. Like, she's like, I don't think I would have enjoyed playing softball in college. And I was like, right? She said, but she could have. And I think that becomes, like, one of those things, like, you get to the point where you're like, Oh, I guess if I could have done it, I would have done it. And, like, would I have done it because I wanted to do it or because it's the thing I do? Because I spent so many years being the person who does this, you know? Like, that's the one worry I always have about my son. Like, I don't know. Like, did he? Did he just think that that's who he was at that point. You know what I mean? Like, of course I'm doing this because I mean, there's arguments to be made. He got into a good college because of of it. He got a better education because of it. He didn't pay as much for that education. Before I do it, I will tell you that that money we saved on his education just got spent somewhere else learning how to play baseball, right? That's, that's a wash, really. Yeah, you know, you just always kind of wonder if it's, you know, if we don't get a little too caught up in the whole thing, and and then once you you see other people taking it that seriously, you feel like, well, if I don't take it this seriously too, then I'll be on the outside, and that'll be it, like, I'll be on the bench, or they won't ask me back on the team, or, you know, whatever people end up thinking. And I don't know, I just tell people always the same thing, like, there's so much travel sports now, if you're not starting and playing, you're the one keeping the financial part of it afloat. You're either the check or you're a player. And if you don't know which you are, you're the check. Yeah, the most important thing about your kids playing sports is that it's fun, it's close to your home, and it's not expensive, exactly, not really, exactly. That's what I would tell you, is the best thing to do. Yeah, y'all are gonna not listen to me or Brian. You all think your kid is, uh, is the next coming of something, and God bless you. Have a good time. But I've lived through it. I just hope they
Brian 1:03:56
get in a good college, because that's a lot of money, travel ball and all that stuff. So
Scott Benner 1:04:01
no idea, like, the, I mean, listen, some of it was fun, like, I'm not gonna lie to you, and some of it was a great experience. And just being together with my son and doing that stuff and with Arden and doing that stuff was awesome. But, like, it didn't need to be to the level it was. He was always gonna grow into the player he was. He didn't need to go to Atlanta and play one summer. He didn't need to go to Florida and play. He didn't need to go to tournaments. And, you know, like, you know, everybody's like, Oh, you got to play better teams so that you can get better. Never once made them any better. To do that. Like, it's, you know, you got to have a certain amount of skill, and you got to want to play. And that's what makes you better. Just, it's repetition. I mean, you people are listening now, like, well, you know, if you're hitting bad pitching, how do you know if you know if you can play I'm like, I mean, take your point. But there's not pitching that much better in Florida, and when it is that much better, right? Nobody can hit him anyway, right? Right? Because you're down there playing against some kid who is going to be playing minor league baseball in 18 months, and you know, you're 15, and he's throwing nine. 91 and you're just like, yeah, like, I'm not getting better doing this thing. We this, this one situation where Cole's team went to Florida and they were told, like, you know, like, look the team you're playing on the first day. Yeah, there's going to be some scouts out there looking at their pitcher. And man, I'm going to tell you right now, there were 25 scouts there. The backstop was lined with guys with, like, guns, like measuring, this kid's pitching. And my son was like, I've never seen anything like this, like at the time, I think he was like, 15, and this kid's like throwing, like, 92 miles an hour already, like we're talking before the game. And he goes, What am I supposed to do? And I just, I gave him what I thought was good advice. I gave him what I think ends up being good life advice. I said he throws way harder than you're accustomed to. You're probably not going to hit it. I was like, but don't change who you are. Like, get in there, use your swing and put it on the ball and just try to compete with him. And if he, you know, and I said, and look at the strike zone and swing at the strikes, that's pretty much it. And he went in there. He didn't change his approach. He didn't try to speed up. There were kids who tried to speed up. There were kids who tried to, like, do little things to touch the ball, you know. And instead, he took three swings, he fouled off a ball, he struck out. Eventually, he came over to me after the game, and he's like, Hey, I fouled one off. And I was like, Yeah, that was awesome, like, and that ended up being a win for him, like he touched it, you know what I mean? And instead of putting the pressure on him that what he needed to do was go hit a 92 mile an hour fastball, which is not a thing that he had ever seen before in his entire life. And like, and putting that pressure on him, I just said, like, Just be true to yourself. And like, this will come along. And, you know, three years later, my son had hit a 92 mile an hour fastball, like, it's nothing, but like, yeah, there you go. That wasn't the day to teach him to do it. And but I saw other guys pulling their kids aside, and they were like, what they thought was, if you hit that ball off that kid, then these scouts are going to care about you too. And, yeah, that is not how any of that works. No, yeah. So anyway, I could bum you all out about youth sports for longer, if you needed me to, but we're out of time right now. Oh, my goodness, Ryan, is there anything that we didn't talk about that we should
Brian 1:07:22
have? No, I think you know, if I were to say anything to the dads out there, you know, just hang in there, right? And find other like minded dads. I know there was a great group at friends for life that all got together over some drinks and stuff like that. Take care of your family. Unfortunately, we can't figure everything out, but, you know, do the best you can. So,
Scott Benner 1:07:46
yeah, hey, man, listen, just in the end, like, you know, maybe not much different than what I just said is, like, you know, be consistent. Be yourself. Go out there and try to help other people, and that's your kid or your wife or your other kids in your family, like, just put other people first and and make decisions that you think are going to help them. And I think remember that this is going to get easier as it goes, that you're going to get better and better at it, that, you know, child or your life is not going to be some terrible failure or, you know, horrible let down because this happened. There are plenty of people out there living perfectly lovely lives with type one diabetes. Yeah, I think to Brian's point earlier, like you can choose to sit and wallow in it, or you can choose to get going. And, you know, so it's that movie, son, again, we can get busy living or get busy dying, right? Like, I don't know what, I don't know a movie that's from, but you know, just choose motion, move forward, you know, as best you can, and it really does work out so absolutely. All right, man, thank you very much. No, thank you as a pleasure. Hold on one second for me. Okay, all right,
today's episode of The Juicebox podcast was sponsored by the new tandem Moby system and control iq plus technology. Learn more and get started today at tandem diabetes.com/juicebox check it out. Arden has been getting her diabetes supplies from us med for three years. You can as well us, med.com/juicebox, or Paul, 888-721-1514, my thanks to us, med for sponsoring this episode and for being longtime sponsors of the Juicebox podcast. There are links in the show notes and links at Juicebox podcast.com to us, med and all of the sponsors. Today's episode of The Juicebox podcast is sponsored by the Dexcom g7 and the Dexcom g7 warms up in just 30 minutes. Check it out now at dexcom.com/juicebox, I can't thank you enough for listening. Please make sure you're subscribed or following in your audio app. I'll be back. Back tomorrow with another episode of The Juicebox podcast. I created the diabetes variables series because I know that in type one diabetes management, the little things aren't that little, and they really add up. In this series, we'll break down everyday factors like stress, sleep, exercise and those other variables that impact your day more than you might think Jenny Smith and I are going to get straight to the point with practical advice that you can trust. So check out the diabetes variable series in your podcast player or at Juicebox podcast.com if you're looking for community around type one diabetes, check out the Juicebox podcast private Facebook group Juicebox 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 Juicebox podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook. The episode you just heard was professionally edited by wrong way recording, wrongway recording.com.
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#1628 A River in Egypt - Part 2
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Patty, living with type 1 diabetes since 1987, reflects on denial, resilience, and decades of management—sharing how acceptance, support, and learning transformed her journey. Part 2 of 2.
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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Patty 0:00
Juicebox podcast is good for you. Whether your diabetes is one or two, take some time to listen in. You'll gain so much knowledge, and that's a win.
Scott Benner 0:14
Welcome back, friends. You are listening to the Juicebox podcast. You
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, you check out my algorithm pumping series to help you make sense of automated insulin delivery systems like Omnipod five loop, Medtronic, 780, G twist tandem control IQ and much more. Each episode will dive into the setup features and real world usage tips that can transform your daily type one diabetes management. We cut through the jargon, share personal experiences and show you how these algorithms can simplify and streamline your care. If you're curious about automated insulin pumping, go find the algorithm pumping series in the Juicebox podcast, easiest way. Juicebox podcast.com, and go up into the menu, click on series and it'll be right there. Nothing you hear on the Juicebox podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan or becoming bold with insulin you
I'm having an on body vibe alert. This episode of The Juicebox podcast is sponsored by ever since 365 the only one year where CGM that's one insertion and one CGM a year, one CGM one year, not every 10 or 14 days ever since cgm.com/juicebox the episode you're about to listen to is sponsored by tandem Moby, the impressively small insulin pump. Tandem Moby features tandems newest algorithm control, iq plus technology. It's designed for greater discretion, more freedom and improve time and range. Learn more and get started today at tandem diabetes.com/juicebox today's podcast is sponsored by us, med, us, med.com/juicebox, you can get your diabetes supplies from the same place that we do. And I'm talking about Dexcom, libre, Omnipod, tandem and so much more. Usmed.com/juicebox, or call, 888-721-1514, and I said, So my feeling about this person is, is that they they're just here for the money, and that was my expectation and but I said, again, never spoke to them. Don't know them. Haven't written to them. I don't know. I couldn't say for sure, it's my vibe. And the person said, I appreciate you sharing that with me. It's also my vibe. And then told me a number of kind of things that they had been dealing with that were not pleasant and underhanded and etc, and that they had just come out of a meeting where they said, Hey, we think this person does not have the best interest of people with diabetes in their heart. We think that they just see it as fish in a barrel. They have a skill. They know how
Patty 3:37
to do it, yeah, as a money maker. And that's, you know, in fairness,
Scott Benner 3:41
the next thing the person said was, like, Listen, what they do is good. Like, it works, and people like it, et cetera, but we've decided we don't want to be a party to it. And so I was like, Okay, great. Like, it was weird conversation to be in, but it reminded me, because then afterwards, this person said, Scott, we know you're out there trying to help people, and that makes this feel better for us. Like, yes, it's a business, and yes, we're trying to get people to look at our thing, but we like that they're finding our thing and being supported by you and that community that you've built on Facebook and and and and, you know, and they the end of that conversation was, we think you've taken a number of valuable things and brought them together for people, and we're watching people be better off for it. And if we're going to spend money in this space to try to get people to see our thing, we'd like it to be in places like this. Not that I'm the only one doing it with people who are well intentioned, you know, at the start, and I was like, oh, yeah, that's good. I'm glad you're, you're thinking of putting your money there, so it was pretty much it, yeah,
Patty 4:48
yeah. I'm glad, I'm glad that you know, yeah, because you know, and it's, you've talked about it, and people have talked about it on the podcast, about. You know the insurance companies, and you know the bottom line for them is the money. And you know, these are people's lives that they're playing with. And, no, it's
Scott Benner 5:15
always been my, I'm going to ask you about your about your life, obviously, in a second, but it's always been my intention that, like, Look, somebody is out there trying to they're marketing right for pumps and CGM and insulin, all the things they're trying to sell. And that's going to happen one way or the other, if I can take some of that money that they're planning on spending to reach people's ears and use it, and the way I used it ends with you coming on and saying what you said about finding the podcast and helping yourself, then I found a way to make something good out of a thing that was going to happen one way or the other. And, you know, some, you know, high minded people might be well, just do it for free. And, you know, that's sweet, but you don't know what it takes to do this. There's a small army of of time and ideas and that, you know, effort. Oh,
Patty 6:01
no, you have to value what you're doing. And you know, money is the way that. You know the world works.
Scott Benner 6:10
If you could pay me in food and heat and gasoline, I'd be fine too. Yeah, I don't care how it happens. I just
Patty 6:16
right food, especially, yeah, nowadays, and I gotta stay
Scott Benner 6:19
alive too. And my kids got diabetes, which, by the way, like, when you, if you think it like, I get anything for free, I don't like, that's not how this works, you know, yeah. So no, anyway, so you Yeah, I appreciate it. So here you are. You're growing up. We went a long way around. But, oh my, yeah, you are, like, in your 30s, 40s, and then you've had diabetes for like 10 years, then you get cancer, yeah. What happened
Patty 6:46
there? Crazy? Huh? Yeah, oh, that. That was really crazy. I actually, I had just gone to my first education with a Medtronic pump, and that was back in 99 and I was going to start pumping, and then I go to the doctor because I had a little bump on my left breast. And I was like, Ah, it's, here's the denial again. It's a mosquito bite, honey. Like, well, you know, it's not really, it's not going away. I think I'm going to go and, well, sure enough, yes, it was a breast cancer. I was 42 I went back to my Endo, and I'm like, I had the pump, you know, I paid a lot, even though we had good insurance. And I said, I can't do this. I I just have to stay with what I know, you know, MDI. And in a way, I think it worked out well for me, because with the treatments and the steroids that were given, you know, to me, You know what steroids do to people with, well, to everybody, but especially people with type one, because I was on long acting and I wasn't eating anything because I was so nauseous from the poison that was put inside My body to kill that little, tiny mosquito bite was killing everything else. My blood sugars kind of
Scott Benner 8:27
were okay, yeah, the MDI helped you get through it. You think? I think
Patty 8:31
it did. You know, because I couldn't eat after my treatments, I would go home, I would take some Ativan and sleep for two days, and by the second day, I would wake up and kind of get myself going again. So because I was on the long acting I think, you know, in my crazy mind, it kind of kept me from, you know, going too low or going too high because I wasn't eating well, I just was,
Scott Benner 9:05
yeah. I mean, that would have been your first pump, yeah. So, I mean, probably not a great time to be learning, like you knew how to do it. You knew how to do it with MDI at that point. So, yeah, right, right, right. Maybe not a great time to start something slap it on, yeah, yeah, yeah. That would be like, if you slapped on a new Omnipod five and then ended up in the hospital later that day for two weeks, which is just, which is, by the way, it's just a message to one person who's listening, and it actually ended up working out really well for them. But in the moment, you're like, oh no. Like, you know, gosh, I just, I, this is the day I'm switching. And then, you know, 12 hours later, you don't realize it, and here you go into another at least. Yeah, listen, I wouldn't made a big switch at that point. Did you eventually get a pump or you still?
Patty 9:50
MDI, no, no, no, I'm on tea. Slim, no, I What happened was, I had that point. I'm sorry, yeah, after, you know, I was like, Okay. Pump. I had this pump brand new that I had gotten just before my breast cancer diagnosis, and it was in the box, and I just kept looking at it and going, now, you know, I'm just going to keep doing MDI, MDI. But then I was getting a lot of lows at night, the endo said, you know, I think if you start on the pump, it might even things out just a little bit better. So by then, that pump had gone out of warranty. So it was, like, four years later, and I still hadn't, because I am kind of stubborn, like I said,
Scott Benner 10:38
we've mentioned it, yeah, yes,
Patty 10:42
and so then I put in and I got a Medtronic pump, which I was on Medtronic for, gosh, probably 18 years different Medtronic pumps. And then I was so disgusted with the CGM and everything, I decided with in my endos office, he brought up I was getting ready to leave my endo after a long time, because I was the patient who, you know, my a one, Cs were pretty Good, like, you know, seven, maybe I got a 6972, so I didn't have I didn't give him much trouble. And so after all those years, he was like, Hello, how are you? Here's your graph. You're looking good. And I'd have questions, but he'd be walking them backwards out the door. And I was like, this isn't cool. Wait a minute. I got a, you know, got a question. I was looking to change, and I really was going to change, but he brought on an amazing nurse practitioner who really listens, oh, my God, and you're a good listener. And she listened to me, and I was so happy that he brought her on, and she said, Why don't you try this tandem pump? You know, it's, I think it, I think you might like it. And so I did, but again, I strapped it on. You know, I got the basic education at the office. I, I didn't do my own due diligence, okay? Because here again, you know, it's like, oh, life goes on. I I'm busy, you know what? I guess I'm not a detail person, you know, until it smacks me really hard upside the head, and just like to get going. Yeah, and my my husband, was like, I don't think you should have tried. You should have changed to this pump, because I didn't know all the good things about it. I was just thinking it was like, you know the pump, I had the Medtronic, and it wasn't so anyway, through listening to you and doing, you know, a lot of my own homework now, you know, I really like it, except that, as I said, the infusion sites are becoming less and less viable for me after all these years, and, you know, I'm just wondering, like, do you when you hear that from other people, what do other people, you know, go off the pump and then, you know, start doing, you know, different things, like a Pres.
Scott Benner 13:39
Well, yeah, I mean, what do you what are you talking about, about your sites? Or, like, are they just not working any longer, or you just all beat up? Or, yeah,
Patty 13:46
you know, like, it takes a couple of tries. I'm on the true steel. The other day, I had to take it out and put it which I love, that feature, you know, take it out, put it in a couple of different spots until I could see that it was working, that I was getting the insulin that I needed. And so it is, I think, you know that I have a lot of scar tissue, and you know,
Scott Benner 14:15
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Patty 16:35
Yeah, exactly. And it's like, okay, well, I tried my arms. My arms are so skinny, you know, that's where I put my Dexcom. I'm still on the g6 which I love. I know the g7 smaller, but, you know, I'm stubborn. I don't want to change. Like, where the hell I have really small boobs and and, like, I see women that put the infusion sets in their boobs, and I'm like, Oh, that would not work at all. And especially, having had breast cancer,
Speaker 1 17:04
I'm running out of spaces,
Patty 17:08
you know. And I'm thinking, you know, as I'm hearing about a pres and, you know, I don't know it sounds, sounds good. So
Scott Benner 17:20
Well, there's plenty of people who use it to love it. And, yeah, I don't know if it's in in concert with their other insulin, that they think of it as, as really well, or if people are using it just with a, you know, a basal injection and and then a pres for meals and for highs, I don't know. Like, I've, I've talked to people have used it, really enjoy it. Still use it. I've talked to people used it. One guy just told me last week I got that cough, and I was like, oh, no, I'm good. I need to stop, you know. Like, so I talked to somebody who said that, you know, I know how to inhale it with, you know. So it kind of goes in in a way that, you know, that won't happen. A lot of people have theories about it and everything. I mean, could it hurt to try or to talk to somebody about it, just to but, I mean, the point is, is you're not going to stop putting your pump in anyway, right? Like you're going to use it in concert with it. So that's not going to really make up a difference with
Patty 18:15
maybe not, yeah, maybe not. Maybe I would just, you know, get off the pump take a little break, which kind of thinking, you know, I
Scott Benner 18:24
wonder if that would help, or if the scar tissues, if it's too far along, or if a break would help. Yeah, I don't know. Have you ever tried giving one place a break to see if it got better? Like, you know what I mean? Just like, I know you're already low on spot, yeah?
Patty 18:39
Like, I haven't used my stomach in years and years, and I've, you know, I've tried, and it just doesn't seem to work. It absorbs for like a day, you know, with the true steel, which, you know, you got to change it out every two days. And here, you know, it's exhaust this. So back. Okay, I'm, I'm sorry I'm going all over the place, but what you were saying about Arden and you know, yeah, you've got all the the managerial art down the amount of time and energy that some days it takes to just get the insulin going in and absorbing finding the right spot. When I hit a right spot, I'm like, yeah. Finally, I also do a lot of yoga. And my husband's theory is, you know, I'm stretching the areas and the the infusion sets getting moved around in my body, and, you know, all these things I don't know, but you're tired of thinking about it just seems to take a lot more work now than it did. You know? I. Years ago, you know, when I, when I was working full time running the school, you know, it was like,
Scott Benner 20:07
oh, you know, you were younger, and your body hadn't been abused as much.
Patty 20:12
That's the other thing, right? Yeah, yeah, being younger and having more energy and being able to tolerate like, now when, when my blood sugar is over, like, 161 70, ah, yeah, it just makes, makes me upset. You know, it's like, Oh, I gotta get that down. You feel bad
Scott Benner 20:35
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Patty 21:45
yeah, it just makes, makes me tired, you know, and I'd much rather treat a low than chase a high. That's you in quotes, because that was also another thing I think I I also was afraid of giving myself too much insulin, and now I'm not, you know, and I don't overdo it. You give yourself what you need. Yeah, here's the other thing, listening to you, getting my knowledge up to date on the device that I'm using my last day 1c, and I know it's just a number, and my everything, my variable is low,
Scott Benner 22:32
six. Oh, no, that's wonderful. Good for you. Congratulations. Yeah, yeah,
Patty 22:36
I'm, you know, I'm real happy about it, if it goes a few points up above, but, but I don't think I'll ever, and I hope I won't, you know, go back up to seven, you know, just with this technology, which also can prove to be anxiety ridden. How so? Oh, how So, all the alarms I have everything shut to vibrate. I I don't even my phone. I don't like having dings going off. So I have turned so many alarms off because I have developed anxiety over the years, you know, with managing this, I have been depressed. I been to see therapist, you know, to kind of help. I all okay. Here's the other thing. I was also my mother's caregiver in our home for five years. My mom just passed at the age of 97 and a half. I'm sorry, thank you, but she was ready, and she She was a beautiful mama, but just having that also, you know, extra, it was a lot, and it was a lot. I was in a real bad place, like seven months, seven months ago, eight months ago, and I was like, you know, I'm going to enroll in that blue circle health, because I need to talk to other people that have diabetes, you know, and and again, such a fabulous resource, awesome. Oh, I'm glad it helped. And, yeah, and unfortunately, I I missed a lot of opportunities because of the care that I had to be involved with towards the end. But the other thing is, you can sign up again after a year, okay, if you want to go through the program again. I mean, come on, can
Scott Benner 24:54
I ask you, at your age, was losing a parent any different than you imagined it was? Have been at a different age, like, did it matter that she lived that long and that you're in your 70s? Was it just as sad as it would have been if you were 3040, 50? Do you think I
Patty 25:09
think it was sadder? I believe that, my gosh, not many 70 year olds still have their mommy around. Yeah, all her grandchildren had her, you know, they're all in their 30s. They had their grandma, okay, and my dad lived to almost 102
Scott Benner 25:28
Jesus, yeah. Did you still utilize them like parents? Like, did you like, even in your later years? Can you think of a time in your 60s that you went to your parents for advice, or did it change the relationship?
Patty 25:44
Yeah, no, just the cover, no more of a comfort, no, but, but here's the kind of crazy thing. We moved in 1989 from New York to Florida to be close to my parents, who were like in their late 50s, early, you know, late 60s, we wanted to make sure we could be close by when they needed our help, right? They were very vibrant up until their 80s. 90s, both my parents, I get cancer. Oh, yeah, they move into my house to help you, to help me with our two sons, my husband, you know, everything and so, you know, looking back, yes, we we had made so many great memories with them, and our Kids had them for, you know, so long. And I believe that having them for as long as we did made it even harder, you know. I mean, she is so close to us, in in our hearts and in, you know, every memory you know, I understand, yeah, gosh, I'm sorry. Well, it's okay. She lived a good, long life. She did and she was ready. She kept telling us the last month, I'm done.
Scott Benner 27:18
I've seen the prices, right enough, this is over.
Patty 27:20
Yeah, Turner, classic, that was her favorite classic movies. Yeah,
Scott Benner 27:25
that's something, yeah. Well, God bless her. Okay, that's really lovely. And I mean, here you are probably thinking, I got 30 more years.
Patty 27:33
Oh, no, I do not want to live. No, I No, no, no, no,
Scott Benner 27:40
tell me, if you could put a time on it, where's the sweet spot? I'm okay,
Patty 27:45
you know. Well, maybe another year or two, hey, I'm okay, you know? I mean, I say it, you know, I am a very faithful person. I'm have a very strong relationship with God, with Jesus and but I'm also a realist, and practically speaking, you know, I don't want to be suffering. I work really hard to to keep myself healthy. I don't want to go. I don't want to have some okay, my husband, he he don't know. I mean, he does know a bit about my care with the pump, and
Scott Benner 28:29
he doesn't really understand what it's like. No,
Patty 28:33
no. You know it's like. It takes a lot to keep this body going.
Scott Benner 28:39
So you're saying when your health wanes, you think that's the end of life, like for you, like you. You're not looking to suffer to stay alive. Oh,
Patty 28:48
I'm not. I'm not. It's no, no, there's not. No, there's wouldn't be a quality. I don't want somebody having to to take care of me and change the diaper or whatever. God forbid. Yeah. So I am practical about that even, you know, like some people say, might say, oh, that's awful. You know how you know that's how you feel, yeah, it's how, it's how I feel, and it's okay, it's okay. I've lived a good life. I have beautiful family, most amazing friends. I love my yoga. I love teaching yoga. It has, it has also really helped with my manage, management of all the, yeah, the mental, emotional stuff, okay, comes up with the diabetes, you know, being able to meditate come back to your breathing, to move. And, you know, move with your breath. And you know, I'm not saying I stand on my head, but especially at 70. But the practice. Is a very deeply spiritual practice, and it's very helpful for people with chronic illnesses to be able to just kind of set that aside for half an hour and just be present in your body and learn how to use your breath to bring down the anxiety that comes with having to, you know, having this on you, 24 hours a day, seven days a week for the rest of your life, to try to be a major organ. You know, it's like, oh, today, I wasn't I didn't really act that good as a pancreas. I missed that, or I did, you know, I was tired, or whatever. I mean. What other organ Are you in charge of? Okay, yeah, and have to be in charge of for the rest of your life. I Is there one like, you know, the heart they took hook you up to a heart monitor, but you're not going to go in there and start pumping your own heart. Or, you know,
Scott Benner 31:09
you know, I used to say to people that try to imagine that breathing was a thing you had to think about in, out, in, or your heart pumping, that it was your job to that's what it felt like raising Arden, that it was my job to say, breathe in, breathe out, breathe in, breathe out. And if I didn't, if I, if I wasn't focused on it like that, that it might not happen. That was kind of one of the early that's
Patty 31:33
overwhelming, yeah, for Oh my god. When I was running the preschool, a woman came in frantic. She had had her two year old at another school, and he had been diagnosed with type one. He almost died this poor kid. Oh my gosh. And the people at the preschool, they we can't, we can't, you know, help him. You know, we've got 20 other three year olds, you know, it's going to take too much, yeah, and somehow or other, she found us. And I was, like, so thankful that she did. I mean it, he was newly diagnosed. He was all set up with his Omnipod is, you know, he had everything hooked up, and she was right there, you know, like sharing from afar. And I just said to her, we got this, don't worry. Yeah, he's in good hands. And he was, and I
Scott Benner 32:41
didn't ask you a question earlier. I'm sorry, yeah, you said you adopted, right? Yes, your heads are one
Patty 32:50
two boys, men now from South Korea back in 1986 and 1988
Scott Benner 33:01
was that a reason? Could you not have children? Or did you just want to adopt? Or I
Patty 33:05
couldn't. No, I couldn't. We had been trying, you know, which was fun, for seven years. And then I had a procedure done, and, and the doctor said, Well, you'll have a 30% chance, you know, of getting pregnant and and my husband and I, you know, we both come from fairly large families. I'm the oldest of five, he's the sixth of seven. We and we love kids, and we wanted kids, and we were like, I can't wait any longer. Let's just take this into our own hands. And we adopted two beautiful babies from South Korea who are now almost 39 and 37 years old.
Scott Benner 33:51
Wow, that's That's wonderful. Did you keep trying and it just never happened?
Patty 33:56
Yeah, yeah. Kept trying. Never happened. Oh, yeah. Do
Scott Benner 33:59
you think you have is it? Do you do you have any idea where the problem lies? Do you have PCOS?
Patty 34:05
I had a lot of endometriosis. My fallopian tubes were blocked, you know, all sorts of scar tissue and there. So, yeah, you know, it just it. I mean, it just wasn't going to happen, right? So, and that's fine, because we lucked out two brilliant men, you know, hard working, yeah, good, good parts, you know. And we're very proud of them.
Scott Benner 34:35
That's lovely. Are they, yeah, are they local? Do you get to see them? Or are they
Patty 34:40
spreading? Well, actually, our younger son just stopped by Monday. He, he lives in Gainesville. They, they both graduated from University of Central Florida in Orlando. Our oldest son, he still lives in Orlando and works in. Orlando and our younger son moved from Orlando to Gainesville, which is in the middle of the state, and he's been there about 11 years. And he was in he was up in Jupiter, Florida, and he came down to visit us in Point Beach. Did they have their own families? Not yet, not yet, not yet, no. So we'll see.
Scott Benner 35:30
Yeah, that's something else. Well, your your life's been something it's really, really great story.
Patty 35:36
Everybody has a story, right? Scott, I believe you've heard a lot of them,
Scott Benner 35:40
I'd like to hear some more. I'd like to hear some more, because I think the more I hear, the more I understand about myself and everybody else. And
Patty 35:49
that's so true. Yeah, that is so so true.
Scott Benner 35:53
You guys are helping me a lot, so I appreciate it. You know, it's a weird journey that we're that we're all on together. Interesting, how new people come in and out of it all the time. Like, would you say you started listening a couple
Patty 36:07
years ago? Yeah, probably just like two years ago. Wow,
Scott Benner 36:11
it's had that much impact on you already. And I was making it for nine years before that,
Patty 36:15
right? Imagine, and I know, no, I mean, and I, and it's so funny when I, when I listen to the older ones, it's like, wow, he has really, you know, you just get good at get better and better. I mean, you were good at it when you started, you know, because you were coming from that place of really wanting to help other people. So everybody gets that. But then the longer you've been doing it, just like any you know, just like a yoga practice, people think they're gonna, you know, start they never did anything. I can't touch my toes, you know. And they think the first time they go to a class, they're going to do that. I'm like, No, it's a practice. You got to do it every day.
Speaker 1 36:56
A lot of lessons in that about patients, yeah, yeah, you know. So I
Scott Benner 37:00
even wonder, if I went back, how well I do listening to myself. I've never, I've never really, I've never tried it, but
Patty 37:07
you don't have enough time. I would imagine
Scott Benner 37:09
also again, talking about being insane, if I started listening to my own podcast, that'd be crazy as well. But no, I wonder how annoyed I'd be by things I used to do or didn't do or, you know, right kind of stuff, yeah, yeah. Also, I'm always worried that I'll look back and think I was better at it back then. So anyway, Oh, that's funny, yeah. So Patty, I just want to thank you. This was really terrific. I appreciate you taking the time it can I ask you the last question, what made you want to do this?
Patty 37:42
I wanted to share my story because I love listening to you interview the professionals in the field. You know the Pro Tip series, you know the bold beginnings, all of that. But when I hear other people's stories, and, you know, they just inspire me. And I, I always learn something. And so I thought, well, I'll give it a try. I was really excited. In fact, my blood sugar is a little bit higher because I, I just have been excited to meet you and talk to you, so that's why. But I also, you know, I've been a preschool teacher for many, many years, and I, I love to sing, and I love to make up songs, so we're of the same kind of peer group. Did you used to watch Saturday Night Live? Of course, yeah. So one of the comedians on there, I forget what his name is, but he used to come on and say, I wrote a song about it. Want to hear it. Here go. So here's my song for you.
Scott Benner 38:57
You have a song for me? Oh, hold on a second. I thought you. I thought you were gonna say I was a preschool teacher, so I was ready to handle you, Scott, but this is different.
Patty 39:05
Well, that too kind of but this is, it's a very short song. It's very short. And here it goes. Juicebox podcast is good for you, whether your diabetes is one or two. Take some time to listen in. You'll gain so much knowledge, and that's a win.
Scott Benner 39:30
Oh, my God, that's wonderful. Thank you. Listen, Rob. You got to pluck that out and play it at the beginning of the episode, like before, before anything happens before I even say hey, like, Hello friends and welcome back to the Juicebox podcast. Play, play. Patty song first.
Patty 39:48
Oh, wow, thank you. I tell you, I wrote a song about it. Just last night. I was like, I gotta write him a little song.
Scott Benner 39:56
Awesome. Great patty. You could have been on Lawrence wealth back in. Day for sure.
Patty 40:03
Oh, my God, he's laughing. His grandmother loved Lawrence. We used to have to sit there every Saturday night and the one and the two,
Scott Benner 40:13
no kidding us too, like they drag his wife out. I was like, Oh, here we go. Yeah, no one knows what we're talking about right now, but, yeah, I suffered through that too. I just sit on my my grandmother's Davenport and shut my mouth and watch Lauren's walk. There he goes. A lot of old there's a lot of old words I'll throw right together for you. What else did she used to have? What she used to call the ottoman. She called it a passick. Maybe,
Patty 40:41
yes, a hastic, yes, we had one. Yeah, we had one.
Scott Benner 40:45
I know a lot of words, yeah, oh, that's true. How old are you? I turned 54 last weekend.
Patty 40:52
Oh, you're young. Come on, 54
Scott Benner 40:55
I just remember a lot of that stuff. That's all
Patty 40:58
Wow, when you were a baby, when you were watching that? Yeah,
Scott Benner 41:01
no kidding, I was, but I remember it because it was painful. And
Patty 41:05
so, Hey, Scott, can I just throw one more thing in there? I'm sorry. Go ahead, all this stuff. Jordan, the the nurse, head on, yeah, yeah. Ah, you like that. I I'm so glad that I listened to those episodes about the ER, because honestly, I I have, really, I haven't gone, and it's the one thing I like. I should have gone a couple of times. I know I was in DKA and but I'm so stubborn. I stayed home and I treated myself when I really should have gone to the ER, but I have such well, and also having, you know, gone through breast cancer. I really don't care for doctors and all of that stuff. But anyway, he just reassured me. You know it was, it was reassuring that, Okay, you go in there, and I do, I have all my settings and everything down and all and so it made me feel a whole lot better hearing what he had to say about, yeah, yeah, going to the hospital so, and I made my husband listen to that one too. So
Scott Benner 42:23
we're hoping to have Jordan back. He it's a little on him to come up with topics, yeah, stuff that he's passionate about, wanting to talk about, but when he has time, he just had his I don't think I'm, I think I'm, I think Jordan just had his fourth baby recently. He didn't, I believe,
Speaker 1 42:38
I believe his wife a lot of kids. I remember I was like, Wow. I believe his wife
Scott Benner 42:42
had the baby. But like, you know, yeah, he was, yeah, yeah. He might be busy at the moment, is what I'm
Patty 42:48
thinking. I think so, yeah, I think so, but, but he was good. And then you had another gal who, she's probably around my age, but she, she was in she was a psychologist, I think I can't, Sandy. Remember Sandy? Yeah, she was awesome as well. I really liked, I really liked listening to her, yeah, yeah, like I said, I, I really enjoy listening to I love hearing people's stories. And we I
Scott Benner 43:17
appreciate that. Let me tell you. I what I appreciate about it is that you in your 70s can hear somebody in their 60s or 50s, 40s, 30s, 20s, you know, down to little kids talk about diabetes and that it somehow is valuable for everybody. Like, I don't think, I can't think of another scenario where it would be valuable for a 70 year old to listen to a 20 year old. Do you know what I mean, like, or vice versa, or whatever, but there's certainly, I, there's certainly as much value in your story for somebody in their 30s as their 20s, 30s, 50s, etc. Like I, this is a very unique situation where it's really, really a good idea to listen to, yeah, all the different, you know, again, spectrums of people and ages who have had lived through type
Patty 44:04
one. So
Scott Benner 44:07
it's just really, yeah, it's great. Okay, well, I'll thank you very much for doing this, and thank
Patty 44:12
you was delightful. I'm so glad we got a chance to chat. You be well and enjoy your vacation.
Scott Benner 44:19
Thank you. And you beat me to calling you delightful. So thank you. Hold on one second for me. Okay, okay,
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