#517 Meet Arden
This is Arden's first appearance on the podcast.
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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. Welcome to Episode 517 of the Juicebox Podcast.
In August of 2006, our two year old daughter Arden was diagnosed with Type One Diabetes. Much like all of you, this took us completely by surprise. We didn't know anything about autoimmune issues, even though now with hindsight, we can see different ones. In my wife's family. I'm adopted, of course, so I don't have any medical knowledge of things like that. But we were blindsided on vacation at the beach, at a big family gathering. Our daughter was just wasting away and dying. And suddenly we know what was happening. I don't think that our life has ever really been the same since then. It's much better in some ways, and there are obvious deficits. Anyway, I'll tell you a little more in a second. But remember, while you're listening that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan, or becoming bold with insulin. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor. It is also sponsored by Omni pod makers of the Omni pod dash. You can find out more about the Dexcom and get started@dexcom.com forward slash juice box or to learn about the Omni pod promise. And see if you're eligible for a free 30 day trial of the Omni pod dash go to Omni pod.com forward slash juice box. Before we get started, I want to remind you that Arden has just turned 17 that she's never been on a podcast before. And that I asked her before we started for one thing I just said please just be honest, be yourself. The goal here with this episode was for you to get to know Arden a little bit. Before we got started with a series where I'm going to talk to her about things that I'm hoping she'll do for herself and her health. As she gets older and goes off to college. I didn't want you just to not know who she was because Arden has a very sarcastic sense of humor. She's dry, she doesn't have a filter. I know some of you may have expectations of who Arden is. But by the time this is over, you'll know for sure. Hope you enjoy this episode. I really enjoyed sitting with my daughter and making it I have to say that this podcast has afforded me a lot of wonderful things. And to sit down across from my daughter and talk like this is one of them. I hope you enjoy getting to know Arden I really love talking to her. If I'm being honest, I don't think she ever but here we go. Alright, you recording now ask your question again. No, snap for that and just keep going. I'm going to ask, I'm going to answer you now.
Arden Benner 3:29
No, I don't know. I don't want this used.
Scott Benner 3:36
So if you want to curse, you can curse and it gets beeped out. But that's stupid. Why would I curse then? People can still tell what you say. They don't I just so the reason I don't have cursing on the podcast is because children listen. No, they don't. They do. And because it would preclude me from being in certain countries on iTunes. So those are the two reasons. Do you want to introduce yourself?
Arden Benner 4:02
No. Y'all know who I am? We can proceed. You can drag it out there with the water cuz I need hours.
Scott Benner 4:14
Alright, so first, let's be honest with people tell them while you're doing the podcast,
Arden Benner 4:19
I need a parking spot at my school and I have no community service hours. And and I you know I should get community service for being alive. But that's not enough. So I'm here.
Scott Benner 4:29
Okay, so we went to Your what? We went to the school and we asked them if being on the podcast would count. And they said yes.
Arden Benner 4:37
Yeah, a little bit. Yeah. They said that's fine. Yeah, that was very nice of them. didn't have to do that. Yeah. I mean, Paul didn't have to get community service for being related to me, but that happened.
Scott Benner 4:45
So you're saying when Cole was in high school, he got some community service because his sister had diabetes.
Arden Benner 4:50
Yeah. Which seems you know, horrible. But
Unknown Speaker 4:52
whatever. I think maybe his his guidance counselor was just trying to help him out but you think why are you talking to me like I'm full
Scott Benner 5:00
I'm not talking to you like your, this is gonna be so strange. So two things. First of all, I've never interviewed somebody face to face before. So it's a little weird for me. Hey, look at the wall. I don't know what you're doing here. But of all the people in our family you and I talk the most though. Right? We're the chatty is that before? Yeah, right. Okay. So like when we get in the car, we drive somewhere we talk the whole time. No, but all right. We talked last night, we took Samson at home in the rain.
Arden Benner 5:29
That was a, you know, different scenario. But all right, what scenario was it? You know, breaking laws? Oh,
Scott Benner 5:35
you just driving through some floodwater? It was fine. Okay, so I'm gonna, here's my plan for this. It's a very loose plan. We're gonna get to know you in this one. Okay, around diabetes. And then we'll talk in future episodes. And I will be you and I will be talking together about the idea of sort of transfer of power, like diabetes power from me. And Mom, to you. Right. And that process? Okay,
Unknown Speaker 6:10
yep. Sounds good. Okay.
Scott Benner 6:11
And on a scale of one to 10? How excited are you to do this
Arden Benner 6:14
about a three? Okay, not at all? Easy. That was way higher than I'm actually thinking.
Scott Benner 6:21
So let me ask you about that first, then. Is this just something in general, you wouldn't do? Like if someone else asked you to be on their podcast? You'd be like, I don't want to do that.
Arden Benner 6:30
Yeah, I don't see the point in this. You don't think anything? I have no knowledge about anything. I'm just the name.
Scott Benner 6:37
So this is very interesting. Okay, because everyone who comes on this podcast, I'm seriously everyone later will say to me, hey, if you don't want to use that episode, I understand. I know, we didn't talk about anything. But I've used every episode that I've ever recorded, with the exception of a couple because of like other personal reasons for people. But the point is, is that everyone share something that's really helpful to other people. So you might not know that you have some good information, or something to share. That'll be valuable, but you do. Okay. Yep. All right. So, first serious question. Do you What's the earliest you remember having diabetes?
Unknown Speaker 7:22
What's your question? Is that I don't know. What's your first memory of it? I don't know. Do you remember having it when you were two?
Unknown Speaker 7:31
I don't even know
Scott Benner 7:32
what I would think. No, I'm just asking the question.
Arden Benner 7:34
Yeah, I don't know. I remember yesterday, like, I don't understand what type of question this is.
Scott Benner 7:38
Do you remember when you were five? Like, that's kindergarten? Do you remember having diabetes in kindergarten? I don't think about it like that. I know. That's what we're trying to get to. I think that you consider diabetes in a much different way than a lot of people do. So that's what we're trying to get to. Okay. You understand what I'm saying? All right. You're combative witness here. You don't have to be combative. Just answer the questions. If you don't know, say, I don't know, it's fine. Here's the question for you that will answer at the end of this episode. Try to think of on this podcast. What word has most frequently came after the word artists? It's art and and then second word? It those two, these two words are used most frequently together? One of them being your name? Yeah, I know what it is. What is period? You got to quickly
Unknown Speaker 8:32
you have someone right now. You have your period right now, you wouldn't ask me that. I wouldn't know my period right now.
Scott Benner 8:40
Okay. All right. So let's not ask you about how far back you remember, diabetes instead. Let's, let's talk about the way you think about it. So in the course of a regular day, when's the first time you think about diabetes?
Arden Benner 8:56
I don't, I don't think about it. Ever, literally ever. I don't think about
Scott Benner 9:01
it. If I asked you to do word association, and I said, Arden is you would never say diabetic, right? No, but you know, you have diabetes, obviously. Yeah, no, no, I have no idea. But you just don't. You don't see yourself that way. No, I don't see myself that way. So it's not a weird question. Because a lot of people do. or more importantly, a lot of parents are afraid that that's how their kids are going to see them. All right. So did you know when you were a little kid, and you would come home from school? The first thing I would say to you is what's your blood sugar? No, I have no idea. You don't remember that. So that's a really impactful thing for me. Because it It took me a little while, but I realized that I wasn't even looking at you. I was just worried about the diabetes. And so I consciously stopped myself from asking about it when you got home even when there were times when I thought thought your blood sugar might be low or that you could be in some sort of trouble or something like that I would stop myself. I'm sure I wasn't listening to a word you said when I got it. I think this is important for people to hear. Cuz I had a lot of anxiety around it at the time. And you now are how old 17? And you have no memory of it whatsoever. Yeah, memory, a lot of stuff that happens. So do you remember anything in your life? Like, I don't remember very far back in my life, I'd never have been able to fit some pieces. I don't know. Yeah, but you have a very good memory for like, present day stuff.
Arden Benner 10:33
Joe, losses, tests and quizzes.
Scott Benner 10:38
Because, like, you'll get up in the morning and have had like a really weird dream or something. And you'll tell me about it in really like specific detail. Yeah, that's probably a psychological thing. Like, I'm just, I don't have any problems like that. Yeah, yeah. You seem like you're gonna be okay. So far. We've been looking at this timer. Don't look at it. Don't watch that. We're just talking. Trust me, that takes people 15 minutes just to relax. Okay. So, back to my original question. So when's the first time you think about insulin or diabetes? Or do you not even think of it as diabetes? Just think of it as I'm going to eat? Yeah, I don't think diabetes. Okay. Yeah. How frequently do you think you use the word? Literally, never. I don't think I do either. Like outside of this podcast. I don't think I say diabetes in my personal life. Yeah, such a long word. They could have named it something better. Don't you think the beats that would you would call it No, no.
Arden Benner 11:43
But wait, what? If you're diabetic and you have a fat ass, you're diabesity
Unknown Speaker 11:49
that's what love tells me. Your friend tells you that if I ever,
Arden Benner 11:53
you know, get sick, I'm a diabetes now, okay. In the winter, you know, like when you put on weight?
Unknown Speaker 12:00
Like so? Like, like a bear? You're gonna go into a cave and Hibernate for a while. Everyone gets bigger in the winter. Okay,
Scott Benner 12:07
so what so you brought up your friends? You brought up live? How much do your friends know about? Uh, do you think?
Arden Benner 12:16
I know nothing? Nothing? I don't know. They? I honestly have no idea. I cannot tell you. I don't even know if they know I'm diabetic.
Scott Benner 12:25
I know that they don't appear to have any even general knowledge about it. Yeah. So I think parents listening would then wonder how that happens. Because their concern is that other people might see their children as only like a person with diabetes. But you have a close group of friends. And they don't. They don't even understand anything about it. Right? Yeah. Have you ever said to them like, this is my chivo hypo pan. This is how it works. You know what that means? So you so you have no idea what the hell? Okay, so you know, you're carrying glucagon?
Unknown Speaker 12:56
Yeah, it's in my purse, right? Yeah, I throw pasta purse. But you don't know what it's called? The in the package, right? Yes. Yeah. I don't even know how to use that. Okay. Well, now's a good time. They're not gonna think you're a great dad outside of this. Well,
Scott Benner 13:10
I it's a hypo pen. It's this. Alright, you don't need to teach me right away. Fine. But in front of everybody. This is important. You know, I've showed this to you. Right?
Arden Benner 13:19
Yeah. I just have no recollection of how to use it. Okay, because I won't get in that situation.
Scott Benner 13:24
Well, this is super okay. You don't think it'll ever come up? No. You don't think you could have like a mistake or a problem or something could happen now? I'm completely fine. You're completely fine.
Arden Benner 13:33
Yeah. I've gotten to 20 before and, you know, strong brain I have. I can keep myself awake. Your brain. Your brain holds up? Yeah.
Scott Benner 13:43
Okay, so But seriously, for people listening. I've showed this to you. Yeah, I can't get up off.
Arden Benner 13:49
I'm aware. You showed that to me.
Scott Benner 13:51
Okay. But you didn't remember? No. So this is so this is? I'm very glad you're honest. Okay. I seriously, um, because I think that that's could be one of those things that people right now are like, Oh, my God. You mean, my kid might not remember this. I explained this to them. It's super important. If
Arden Benner 14:08
your kid is older than 15 when they walk out the door, they're not listening to you. Just so you're aware. I I went on my first drive after I got my license mom screaming stuff in my ear. And I was like, Yeah, that sounds good. Okay. You don't know. I was out the door. I don't even know what she was talking about. She told me not to drive into a tornado. And I was like,
Scott Benner 14:29
so it's interesting, because mom doesn't want you to die generalized. She's just like, Don't crash into anything. That's her worry. And I really am more concerned that you're what a lot. What's the only thing I said to you when you left?
Unknown Speaker 14:42
Check your blood sugar. Yeah, and make sure you're I always do that.
Scott Benner 14:45
Yeah. And make sure your Dexcom is not silenced. Right.
Unknown Speaker 14:48
Yeah, well, I mean, it's connected to the car. It's not it's gonna laugh at me. So I was really loud when it's on CarPlay
Scott Benner 14:54
now that was a lie. But um, but I but I do. It makes no sound at all. Which is it because your phone is muted. Now my phone's not muted. Well, it must be because so this is another interesting thing that we go through all the time. You kids in general, you don't like your phones to make notification sounds. Yeah, cuz of school. Right. But then it stops the Dexcom for making notification sounds to
Unknown Speaker 15:20
it was making them all day in Buffalo Wild Wings in Buffalo Wild Wings. Yeah. Because, like, so loud.
Scott Benner 15:26
So I think it's important for to, especially while you're driving.
Arden Benner 15:31
Yeah, I'm completely I'll check. I mean, you know, I'm not supposed to go on my phone while drive but like, I track it.
Scott Benner 15:38
So you understand, but you understand why though, right? Yeah,
Unknown Speaker 15:41
I'm aware. Okay. Yeah. Okay. Being like interrogated. We're just talking Really? Okay. It's not It's not an eye contact with me.
Unknown Speaker 15:53
There's a lot of eye contact. Yeah, it's weird. Let me drink some water. He was saying no. He was such a pretty singing voice though. Okay.
Scott Benner 16:05
Okay, so you don't really identify at all with diabetes, but you're not embarrassed that you have it.
Friends, you can get a free 30 day trial of the Omni pod dash if you're eligible. By going to Omni pod comm forward slash juice box. Omni pod would like to make you a promise also, that there is no need to wait for the next big thing. Because with the Omni pod promise, you can upgrade to Omni pods latest technologies for no additional cost as soon as they're available to you and covered by insurance terms and conditions apply. But I think you hear what I'm saying. Find out all the details at Omni pod.com forward slash juicebox. While you're there, check out the Omni pod tubeless. Insulin pumping is way cool. The Omni pod even though not sure where we're at in the episode right now the Omni pod or Omni pod. I guess as Arden must have heard about it when she was younger, is it's been a friend to us. My daughter's been wearing it since she was four years old. You're hearing her today having just turned 17 that is a long time with the Omni pod. And it has been nothing but a friend this whole time. On the pod.com forward slash juice box tubeless insulin pumping, wear it out. So everybody can see it or hide it under your clothing doesn't matter. Whatever you want to do. Beyond the pod is there for you. You might also want to look into the Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor. Why? Well, seeing which way your blood sugar is moving is super important. And I guess if you're ever going to have a kid one day like mine, you're going to want them to be able to see their blood sugar right on their cell phone. As a matter of fact, not only can Arden see her blood sugar on her Dexcom app, but so can my wife, myself, and up to 10 followers on our phones. These could be androids or iPhones. It's pretty amazing. up the middle alerts, seeing your blood sugar in real time, what direction it's moving, how fast it's moving in that direction, and what number it is knowing your blood sugar is 85 if you're testing with your you know with a meter, even a great meter like the Contour Next One still just tells you that right now your blood sugar's 85. You have no idea if it's going to be 80 in a couple of minutes, or 110 and a couple of minutes because there's no directional arrows. But a Dexcom CGM will show you just that dexcom.com forward slash juice box learn more today or get started if you can't remember these links, but you should be able to buy now dexcom.com forward slash juice box on the pod comm forward slash juice box if you can't remember them, go to Juicebox Podcast COMM And click right there. I have links right there. They're also in the show notes of your podcast players. It's time to get back to Arden. I don't want to give anything away but she's going to say more things that are both funny and strange. And I'm think I still have a fair amount of beeping to do. girl loves the curse.
Arden Benner 19:45
I i don't i don't think about it like at all. Yeah, I don't care.
Scott Benner 19:50
Like if somebody at school said no one at school says anything. Right? But if they did, you'd have no trouble being like yeah, I have diabetes.
Arden Benner 19:58
Yeah, no one I can say that like, I'm aware people at my school are intimidated by me. Um, so I've been told, so no one really approaches me. And if they do, I'm actually very nice person. They're very nice. Yeah,
Unknown Speaker 20:16
yeah, I should probably be given metal for that. But, you know, why would these people think you're not approachable?
Arden Benner 20:22
At my school? Yeah, I'm very quiet. You're quiet? Yeah. No, you know, like, I don't talk unless I want to talk. Once when class is over. my headphones are in and I'm out the door. Okay.
Scott Benner 20:31
Are you like serial killer? Quiet? Do you think they don't talk to you? Because they're afraid of you. Now? Oh, maybe I'm not maybe that's good. Okay, but hypothetically, if someone came up to you in school and was like, mocked you or tried to make fun of you,
Arden Benner 20:46
I cannot see that happening. Okay. I'm taller than half of the guys at my school. No one's doing that to me.
Scott Benner 20:51
I say. What if a nine foot person amen? Would you? Would you just be like, yeah, I have diabetes. Leave me alone. I don't care what you think.
Arden Benner 20:58
I wouldn't. I would walk past them. Okay. Yeah, I wouldn't say anything. Okay. mock me. Do you
Scott Benner 21:04
think? Yeah, like, what if somebody tried to so there was a woman on here once, who shared with me that during the AIDS epidemic, she was younger. And like her, like, there were kids at school that would call her like, diet aids or something like that, like make, like, really try to come out or about diabetes through like the AIDS thing. But like, if that happened, you wouldn't would you not be upset?
Unknown Speaker 21:28
I put you would think it was kind of funny. I really diet AIDS. That's horrible. I'm gonna do name.
Scott Benner 21:34
I know. I thought so I forget exactly what she said. But when she told me I did think that's like such a bad thing. Like who came up with that? Alright, so do you know your laid back? What? Are you aware that you're a laid back person?
Arden Benner 21:48
Oh, I think there's crazy people in the world. And there's not crazy people in the world. And I don't think I'm crazy.
Scott Benner 21:52
You just think you're not a crazy person. Yeah. Okay. But you don't see that in general that your attitude is relaxed. No, I just I feel normal. Well, yeah, you're you. Yeah. Here's a different way to think of it. When you look at me and you look at Mom, do you see that your personality might be more like mine. And like mom's? No, you don't think of it that way?
Unknown Speaker 22:13
No, I think I work more like mom. You work like mom. Yeah. What about your sense of humor? I'm my own person, dad. Yeah. Thank you very much. You
Scott Benner 22:21
don't want to identify with me at all in this conversation? Oh,
Arden Benner 22:25
I know, as you get older, I don't really want to say that my sense of humor is like yours because it's getting worse.
Scott Benner 22:29
You see, you think my sense of humor is getting worse? Yeah,
Unknown Speaker 22:32
I think ranking in the family. I'm now above you. You're above me. And I think me and the dogs are only one of the dogs. But mom and Cole are nowhere near
Arden Benner 22:41
Yeah. Wow. It's like, you guys never want them on this. Ever. Your mama put her gas station voice on. She'd be super sweet. It'd be really sweet and nice. Yeah, yeah. And then we'd finish and she'd be like, Oh, my guys, cable.
Unknown Speaker 23:00
And she wouldn't say that. Not really what I should be talking about you about me? Okay, great. Very
Arden Benner 23:06
nice. People. I mean, you. You have a lot of leaping to do on this just kind of comes out to me. I understand.
Scott Benner 23:11
Yeah, I can see you getting more relaxed. So that's good. Okay. All right. Well, I find what you're talking about interesting, because I've spoken to so many people who don't feel this way. And yet, I think that you are tackling it from a common sense approach. As far as I can tell. I don't see why. Why you should identify yourself as a problem, or an issue or a size or height or hair color, anything like that. So hair color. Yeah. Like if somebody your hair changes color sometimes. Yeah, it's gonna say. But you don't mean like, I don't think that ain't mean if somebody called you, Blondie and you had blonde hair. I don't know how you could get your feelings hurt by that, like, so I don't understand. So there's a I'm with you. I don't understand either. But I do know that there are plenty of people who feel that way. And it's very real for them. And it's an issue for them. So I was just wondering about you. So people listening might assume that because you were diagnosed so early in your life, that you really don't have any knowledge of not having diabetes.
Arden Benner 24:16
I literally I don't, I could not tell you. I literally have no knowledge of anything. I don't know. Like, I just don't think about life like that.
Scott Benner 24:25
Yeah, at all. Okay, no, I understand. I hear you. So of the things that you do know, let me ask you this question. If I if I if I just disappeared, right? I just pooped off the powwow. Right? Like the snap happens. I'm gone. Mom's gone. I'm gone. But they keep sending the diabetes supplies to the house is called gone. Doesn't matter for this scenario. I think it does. You think you can take care of yourself. Okay. Yeah, probably. I'll be fine. Yeah. I'm thinking about going On the way to college, what parts of it?
Arden Benner 25:02
Oh, the only part that I'm gonna up is alarms when I'm sleeping. That's it. That's, that's my only problem. Okay. I do not hear anything at all. I have a problem if I do hear, I just keeps. So even if you work so even if you weren't here like last night, I was like mid sleep and it was like Barbara robot and I was like, oh, someone will get it. Someone will get it. Yeah, I didn't feel good. I went to bed. Yeah.
Scott Benner 25:28
So you're sure your blood sugar was like too low last night for a couple hours?
Arden Benner 25:31
Yeah, I hear a beep in my room. And then I hear a beep in your room. And I think Whose turn is it? Dad's?
Scott Benner 25:39
Have you ever once gotten up and done something?
Arden Benner 25:41
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Well, that I haven't gotten up. I just haven't gone to sleep yet.
Scott Benner 25:46
Okay, so if you think I'm asleep, and you're still awake, yeah, then you'll do something
Arden Benner 25:51
all last summer. Like when we were like COVID like we cannot leave the house I used to call doesn't know this. But I used to like really late at night. I'd be up to like three in the morning and I was like binge watching the Percy Jackson movies. And I would text called be like call my blood sugar solo. Please get me a drumstick. And some toast Tito's like I really don't feel good, this whole thing. And he'd like run downstairs and get them in my blood sugar was completely fine. That's horrible. Yeah, don't talk. I am so bad. He doesn't listen to this. Because I want to try that again. No, don't do that. Dad. Come on.
Scott Benner 26:25
I don't know. It seems efficiency, efficiency for me. Bye. But to my original question. You'll hear
Arden Benner 26:33
me the first couple of times it was low.
Scott Benner 26:36
Right? Oh, and then I was like, Oh, looks like it's working. Okay. All right. So but wrapped around that idea? I mean, you're thinking of going to college? Right? Yeah, if I can get in? Yeah. So you're not thinking of going to college somewhere locally? Where you live here? No. So what are you going to do?
Arden Benner 26:58
I don't understand what your question is. What am I under? About? What?
Scott Benner 27:01
What are you going to do if your blood sugar gets like dangerously low?
Arden Benner 27:05
Take care of it. I don't. This isn't a worry. Like, I don't understand what the big deal is about this.
Scott Benner 27:11
It's interesting. So you don't remember having a seizure? So you're gonna say no, but not. You've been using an algorithm for a while now. That stops your blood sugar from getting super low. You don't remember?
Arden Benner 27:25
I do remember what it was like without it? Yeah, didn't haven't had it that long. Okay. Yeah, I'll be fine.
Scott Benner 27:30
Yeah. Wait, are we still gonna? Cause? Well, so there's a good question, right? What if the, what if that just what if the loop just disappears?
Arden Benner 27:41
That, you know, it doesn't seem like it's gonna happen? Okay, why? Wait? There's a lot of reasons it could happen. Oh, I think you're wrong about that.
Scott Benner 27:50
It's just people on the internet making a thing. Okay. And it needs like other stuff to work? What if this? What if the company's not making the stuff? That was
Arden Benner 27:58
that company making money? They're not making that. Okay, so you're not worried about losing the algorithm? Everything? I I'm such a mellow person, whatever, go with the flow, you'll be okay. We'll be fine.
Scott Benner 28:11
Are you? Do you know that I'm, I'm thinking that you should try the Omnipod five when it comes out. I have no idea what that is. Okay, so on the pod is gonna have their own algorithm that's gonna come out. And I was thinking we should try that. Because that would take away the orange link. Okay. You just want it to work.
Arden Benner 28:32
I really don't care about any of this, like all this, that this that like, if people who listen to this understand what they're doing and listen to this for like, like the knowledge of diabetes, I don't understand why. You're not gonna I could never do that. Okay.
Scott Benner 28:48
Well, but what? So the question is, then, you realize, I forget in the moment, but do you realize that one day, you're going to need to understand that? How this works? Yeah.
Arden Benner 29:03
I think I understand this better than half of these people.
Scott Benner 29:07
know any of these people? I
Arden Benner 29:08
know. I don't know them. But you know, but well, but you gotta listen for a reason. I know, some people just listen because they like, I don't think that's true.
Scott Benner 29:16
You believe that no one could possibly be listening to us because they enjoy it. Do you think they're just getting answers? And that's it? Yeah, I think that's not right. I think you're not right. So let me tell you what they tell me. Okay. All right, is that there? There can be this loneliness that happens for some people, okay. There can be loneliness that happens where they don't know another person that has type diabetes, like no one else. So if they have a problem, or a fear or something like that, there's no one to talk to, and no one to to get answers from. So this can actually serve as like a community for them here because people come on and talk about their diabetes. That's the Last thing I want to talk about, you don't want to talk about that. That's fine. If that's not what you want to talk about. But is it nice to think that if one day you did that there'd be somewhere you could go to find? You know, because
Arden Benner 30:09
I, I genuinely don't think I would ever do that in my entire life.
Scott Benner 30:13
We don't think you'd want to talk to other people. Like
Arden Benner 30:14
you could all be really nice people. I The last thing I want to talk to you about is diabetes.
Scott Benner 30:19
Okay. So you just want to if you met some of these people, you would just talk about something different.
Arden Benner 30:23
Yeah, I am not a diabetic or you're like anyone else. Like, no, no, no.
Scott Benner 30:28
So so you don't I? So listen, first of all, I find this very interesting. I know this about you. But I mean, we've never said it back and forth to each other. I'm, I mean, I was gonna say proud, but I don't even think there's anything to be proud of, I think you're just acting like yourself. Like, I think this is how your personality adapts to this situation. I think if, if, if if I had diabetes, I would react differently than you do, and just as everybody else would. But it's it's, I don't know, it's very interesting, because the algorithm, as an example, is not easy to get set up. Which is one of the reasons why I would like you to go in on the pod five, and I'm hoping I fingers crossed that it's going to work well for you. Because I don't think you're going to be the kind of person who's going to want to sit down and make an app and upload it on your phone for the rest of your life. And when you do, though, don't you have make an app? You certainly sat here with me while we've put the loop app onto your phone through that computer? Yeah, I
Unknown Speaker 31:31
go to sleep on the ground. Like, I'm not part of that you just lay on the floor with a turn. So you're unaware, I don't even
Arden Benner 31:36
know what your turn means. I don't know what I do to contribute to that. I think I put my passcode in. And I don't even know my passcode
Scott Benner 31:47
I'm trying to decide how people listening are feeling right now. If they're if they're like, Wow, my clay might hate me. Well, they might I don't think they're gonna hate you. But So listen, if I had to guess I think most adults with type one will hear you and think this is a very relaxed attitude that will take you a very long way with diabetes. And I think some of the parents might be thinking, wow, this is cool, you know, to see that she's not burdened by that is probably their biggest worries that their kids are burdened. You know what I mean? Because some people really are. And there's nothing wrong with that. It's just It's how I mean, you're lucky that you don't have like, an anxiety disorder, for instance, because you would feel completely different. Maybe. So,
Arden Benner 32:25
yeah, I can't I don't know. I can't speak for them. First of all, idea.
Scott Benner 32:29
No, I know. I understand. Alright, well,
Arden Benner 32:32
they gave me two other disorders. You know, I'm good. What else you got going on over there? A bunch of stuff. That's why Cole said to me, he goes, you're not wearing your mask anymore. And I was like unvaccinated and the chances that I get COVID vaccinated with three other autoimmune diseases. I was like, I don't believe in God, but like, he's not doing that.
Scott Benner 32:53
You think you think that you've had your share of tough luck? And yeah, nothing else could happen. Yeah, you know, that's not how COVID works, right?
Arden Benner 33:00
No, I'm aware of, I'm not an idiot, but I am vaccinated. Okay, you should all get vaccinated. So
Scott Benner 33:05
you're vaccinated. And you have
Arden Benner 33:08
one of the celebrities that they like pay to like be vaccinated. I don't think they pay them. Most definitely pay those people.
Scott Benner 33:17
See what else you have hypothyroidism? Yeah. And what else? He said three things.
Arden Benner 33:23
Yeah, I do some I don't even know I have something else. And I don't know what it is. Oh, iron deficiency, iron.
Scott Benner 33:29
Well, no, but we think that's not that. I don't even know what's wrong with me. Right?
Unknown Speaker 33:34
Yeah, it's cuz it's so hard to keep up with a lot of blood comes out of me.
Scott Benner 33:41
So I think what we've, what we've kind of landed on for you is that your iron was getting very low. Because your your period was really
Unknown Speaker 33:51
why are you giggling? It's because I say
Scott Benner 33:53
Ardennes period a lot. I've never said it in front of you before. If you have not while someone else was
Unknown Speaker 33:59
recording to us right now. Alright, so fine. Let's feature them. Okay.
Scott Benner 34:03
So you're, you're sort of, I guess people will know this anyway. But you were bleeding for like a really long time every month. Yeah, I still believe but but. But not for 11 or 12 days at a time anymore. No.
Arden Benner 34:17
Yeah, I forgot to take birth control, by the way.
Scott Benner 34:20
You forgot it today. Yeah. Oh, today. Yeah. Oops, whatever. So Arden's taking like a low dose of birth control now, which regulated our periods and allowed your iron to come back up.
Arden Benner 34:31
This is time for all the men to just skip the portion like oh my god, no,
Scott Benner 34:35
it's important because because iron issues with people with type one are kind of common, as are like thyroid, celiac stuff like that. So
Arden Benner 34:45
yeah, I know, like 100 people who have iron deficiency, do you really live has it? Okay. Yeah. I'm just told that if you stand up and you're like seeing whatever, you have iron deficiency, and that's like half of my grade apparently.
Scott Benner 34:59
So how After your grade stands up and gets woozy are there drug addicts? I don't really. I'm not sure if they could be drug. So either this generation are doing you think either their iron is low where they're on the smack Is that right? Okay. Yeah, whatever floats their boat is heroin big in the high schools? I actually don't know. It's good. Don't do any drugs.
Arden Benner 35:20
I don't do any drugs. I'm drug free other than whatever have insulin I take and all that super interesting.
Scott Benner 35:27
Do you know what your your insulin is called? No, I don't know. But you have to
Arden Benner 35:32
know cuz you switch it on me and then you try to mess with my head. But
Scott Benner 35:35
the one so we tried fiasco. Yeah, I hate that you don't like because it burns? Yeah, but it works really? Well.
Unknown Speaker 35:41
I disagree. Okay. What's the other one called? I don't know. Pick your best guess. I don't
Scott Benner 35:48
know. I'll tell you. It begins with an a dad. I don't know. You really don't know the brand name. I have no idea what it's called. Alright. So your insolence called a pietra?
Arden Benner 35:59
I also wasn't aware that it was an omni pod until like two years ago, I thought was ami
Scott Benner 36:05
he thought it was ami pod? Yeah.
Arden Benner 36:08
I don't care. Like I'm not looking at the logo on it like this the last thing? Yeah. So apparently, I've been telling everyone I'm wearing the wrong thing. But
Scott Benner 36:16
whenever you didn't know there was an end in it.
Arden Benner 36:18
No, I know. I was Oh, am I? I don't even know what Omni means. I think it means one. Yeah, well, they don't teach us at school. So.
Scott Benner 36:30
Okay. Do you know what version of the Dexcom you're using? Nope. Come on. I don't know. I literally have no idea. G and then a number. Okay, great. Doesn't matter. Yes. No, just pick a number. No. I'm gonna see I don't want to be part of this. Whatever game we're playing, I'm it's not a game. I'm interesting. I'm trying to find out what you what you know, and what you don't know. So you have a Dexcom
Unknown Speaker 36:56
don't seem to know anything.
Scott Benner 36:57
You know more than you think. So you have a Dexcom g six. Okay, great. Yeah, he's an omni pod. Omni Omni pod. Right?
Arden Benner 37:06
So I didn't I heard you say at once. And I was like, What the hell is he saying?
Scott Benner 37:11
Oh, you thought I was saying
Arden Benner 37:12
I thought you were saying it wrong. Because you say a lot of things wrong. But like, like water is water apparently.
Unknown Speaker 37:19
Where do you say water? Water? Water? No. Say to go? Water. Water? No. All right, I'm gonna try to copy it this time. Grab Water, water. I do it play sounds. Okay. It sounds wrong when I do it. Everything sounds wrong.
Scott Benner 37:34
Okay. Omnipod and sompom? Dexcom. g six. All right. The the glucagon is called the G vo hypo pan
Arden Benner 37:42
i would i i'm looking at the time I think we talked about that, like 20 something minutes ago. I have no recollection of that. Okay,
Scott Benner 37:49
this is good for people to know. Alright. I don't know what your meter that's called. You know what your meter is called? The meter? It's called the meter? Yeah. Okay.
Arden Benner 37:58
It's not called anything. It's called hand me that. And if I need someone who doesn't know what it is, we'll be like kameena. Like the longer black thing like this and like, no.
Scott Benner 38:09
So that meter is super accurate. It's the best one you've ever had. But you don't know that. That's fine. I'm not judging you. I'm asking questions. Alright, let's think of all the other stuff that you don't know. All right. Tell people more stuff. Could you give yourself an injection with a needle if you had to?
Arden Benner 38:27
I could write I will. I choose not to?
Scott Benner 38:30
Yeah, you don't want to? Okay. You're okay. You know how to put your army pod on? No problem. Yeah, yeah. And you can put a Dexcom on.
Arden Benner 38:40
I'm not flexible like that. I don't know if I can turn
Scott Benner 38:43
because of where you put yours. Yeah, but if you put it somewhere where you could see you would have no trouble diet. Yeah, maybe? Who knows? Yeah. You put one on me, right. Did I don't like kitchen? Yeah. You know,
Arden Benner 38:54
I don't know. Like, I literally when that stuff happens, I erase it from my memory. And then I'm off and I go watch television.
Scott Benner 39:00
Okay, so is. So being clear. Like I'm trying to find a is is the are the things you do around diabetes? More like wiping your butt? Like, I have no idea what that means? Like it stuff you do during the day, but you don't think about it or retain it. No, I think about it when I went my ass. No, I don't mean like you're just stabbing around hoping to get to the last part. I'm just saying like later if I said to you, Hey, did you wipe your butt today? You go I don't know. Right? I wouldn't know. I'd say yeah, I think I went my ass. So do you know that your pods getting low on insulin right now?
Arden Benner 39:38
Yeah, I do know that. Okay, why do you know? Because it popped up on the thing like it was off insulin. Okay, and what I did nothing. Okay.
Scott Benner 39:51
Do you know how long a Dexcom lasts for
Arden Benner 39:53
a week? I think 10 days. Oh, yeah. Well, close enough. Whatever. who's counting?
Scott Benner 40:01
Well, I am, because that's how we know when to put the new Dexcom on.
Arden Benner 40:05
Don't just be that you like? Yeah, I guess that's how I know to put the new Dexcom on. Okay,
Scott Benner 40:10
so let's say for a minute that it's important for you to have a deeper understanding of some of this stuff. I disagree, because that's what this conversation is going to be about. So I didn't know what you were going to say today. I'd absolutely not one idea in the whole world I there. I really didn't even think about it. I didn't try to wonder I just thought I'll let you say whatever you're gonna say. I didn't know you're gonna malign all the sponsors at once. But that's fine.
Unknown Speaker 40:37
That's kind of what my line was. I mean, I did the word I don't know.
Scott Benner 40:45
I don't know what that thing in my bag is I just move it from purse the purse. I thought it was an arm. Yeah, well, thanks for saving my life. But like, that's enough. But But as you're talking, I started to really feel like just let you say whatever you're going to say, first of all, which I was always my intention, but then it might be really important for people to hear this. Because I'm now wondering how many adults out there like, I don't know what version of the Dexcom I'm using either. Scott. Like, I wonder how many people just have your feeling about it. And I don't not understand it. You don't even see diabetes is like a dire medical issue, right?
Arden Benner 41:26
Yeah. I don't I don't see a lot of stuff as a dire medical, as you know, what I saw as a medical issue most thrown up in the car. That was a medical issue that needs to get away from me.
Scott Benner 41:34
Do you want to tell people about that? That was hard. It's never been on the podcast before.
Arden Benner 41:38
It was horrible. All I know, is I was going 75 and a 25. And I still had my permit. And I was like, Oh, God, that wasn't the worst part. The worst part was that she she threw up. Right? She turned her head towards me. Like that was the way to do it. I tried to put the window down.
Scott Benner 41:58
Shouldn't like that. Nicole and I were in Seattle. Yeah. And Ma and you texted you texted me. It felt like it was like two in the morning. My time.
Arden Benner 42:08
It was 3am. And she was when she woke me up from my my perfectly nice sleep, by the way. Okay,
Scott Benner 42:14
so maybe it was more so it was 3am here. So it was more like midnight where I was. Yeah. And you texted me and you said I think I'm taking mom to the hospital.
Arden Benner 42:23
My mom texted you first. I listened. I didn't know we were going to the hospital till I was like up in the car. Okay. I didn't know it was what I thought she was messing with me. When she woke up to she woke me up and Netflix was still on the TV. So I thought I'd fall asleep for like 15 minutes or something. Okay. And then she was like, we're going to the hospital and I was like, the hell are you talking? But no, we're not. And then I looked at what time it was. And I was like, Oh, okay. All right. So then I just got my wisdom teeth out. So that was horrible. Tastes like throw up in my mouth. Like, Oh,
Scott Benner 42:55
my God. And you did not have a driver's license that No I did not. And mom was retching and paint. What was it a kidney stone? I don't know. Yeah, it was a stone of some sort. Yeah, she had a kidney stone, apparently. But she didn't know that at the time.
Arden Benner 43:08
Yeah, I thought her appendix was about to burst. That's Yeah, yeah. She's like, I'm in trouble. And I was like, yeah, it's really nice getting yelled at when you're trying to help someone wishing you? Well, I, I was told to go over the speed limit, which I did. And when we hit a bump, she was like, Oh, my God, what are you doing? And I was like, What? What? What?
Scott Benner 43:32
So I think, you listen, it's hard for people to see themselves. I've interviewed a ton of people when I'm done talking to them. And they're like, I don't think I said anything valuable. I'm thinking how do you not realize how valuable what you just said wasn't? And similarly here with you? I think that if you wake a lot of 16 year olds at the time, right, you were 16 you're 17 now Happy birthday. Yeah, a lot of 16 year olds up out of a dead sleep in the middle of the night and yell Hey, you're driving me to the hospital. And then that, but you so here's the part like you've been teasing along and we've been joking a lot and everything but I haven't been I know you. When you left for the hospital. tell people what you brought with you.
Arden Benner 44:15
Well, first, I got myself a toothbrush. That was the first thing I got. It was on toothpaste. A charger I got I don't know what I got. I was carrying a lot of stuff. I like threw a toothbrush to please charge your phone. You know other things that keep you alive and I went downstairs to pack some insulin pod blah, blah, blah, blah. Because I had no way of getting home legally. does not mean I wouldn't have driven home legally. But like, I had no way of getting home so that I brought all that
Scott Benner 44:47
so you brought all of your diabetes supplies with you? Yeah, and extra stuff in case you needed it. I think I brought insulin. Yeah, you brought pods. Yeah, you bring a Dexcom transmitter or sensor
Arden Benner 45:00
Probably I don't know. I don't know. I was home later that night asleep. So
Scott Benner 45:04
then in a panic situation in the middle of the night, you pulled yourself together and remember to take care of yourself. Yeah. Okay. And make sure you didn't have bad wisdom teeth breath.
Arden Benner 45:15
Yeah. She was still throwing up and I was like, Where's the bathroom?
Scott Benner 45:20
brush my teeth. You even brought a bag for the car for mom to throw up it right?
Arden Benner 45:23
I brought two and she dropped the first ones. Thank God, I brought a second one. Oh, my God, that would have been horrible. Because I was not gonna come I was gonna make hard clean. Get back out there. Go ahead.
Scott Benner 45:32
So you thought to bring two bags? Because she thought she might throw up? Yeah. Okay,
Arden Benner 45:38
and I don't do throw up. Right. I will not be a nurse. Oh, also, if you're under the age of 18. Just guilt trip nurses.
Unknown Speaker 45:47
So easy. How did you get mom help tell them
Arden Benner 45:51
diabetes, and I have two dogs and my dad's not here. I don't know what to do. I just only why it's so easy. And then just you know, you're fine after
Scott Benner 45:58
because they wouldn't come in and help mom right? It was Yeah, too long. Yeah. You guys should probably fix the system. I don't think the people listening are in charge of the system. One of them's gonna be a nurse if one of these people made the matrix or something. I mean, maybe. Would that be odd? You just gotta be like a billionaire. I'm coming for your song. I think there's a billionaire listening.
Arden Benner 46:24
Maybe what? Well, I don't know how you feel. Listen, at least a millionaire. A Millionaire listening to this. All right. You're the one who can follow me on Instagram, the rest of your data in your declined?
Unknown Speaker 46:35
Do you decline a lot of diabetes people who try to follow you
Arden Benner 46:38
if I don't? It's only because it says you follow my dad. If it does not say you follow my dad when it pops up. Goodbye. Now you're gone.
Scott Benner 46:47
Do you remember but you okay, but one of your very good friends. You met because of diabetes? I don't know how I met her. I thought back then you told me you thought she thought that you were me?
Arden Benner 47:03
I don't actually know. I don't remember All I know is that like I have her. I know her. I don't remember how we got in touch with each other.
Scott Benner 47:13
How long have you known each other?
Arden Benner 47:15
I can check. Okay, good. Good luck. I can check on Snapchat. I have no idea how long I've known her. I added her or she added me or something on Snapchat February 25 2017.
Scott Benner 47:30
That's like four years ago, plus maybe four and a half. But you met like it's been longer than that though. Like it's because I think you met on Instagram. You haven't had Snapchat for as long as you've had Instagram. I don't I do want to say hi to her. She's almost into this. How do you know?
Arden Benner 47:47
I'm well aware she's not listening to this. Okay. I mean, I don't actually know. But like, I know her. I don't think she knows. Just in case she's listening. Now she's not.
Scott Benner 48:01
You know, a lot of people listen to this, right? Yeah, I'm aware. Okay. wasting your time. clean the dishes. They can clean the dishes and listen to them.
Arden Benner 48:11
I don't think people are really great at multitasking. So they are not these people. I'm just kidding. I don't know most of you. But some of you gotta be bad at it. What?
Scott Benner 48:19
You just think a general portion of the population can't multitask.
Arden Benner 48:22
Yeah, for sure. Especially men. All right. No, I take it back. Women to some girls are really stupid. You should probably edit all of this out.
Scott Benner 48:32
You think I should just be about anything you say this controversial?
Arden Benner 48:34
Yeah, like a minute straight. It's just like i'm not i'm not cursing. I just, you know? Yeah. pretty blunt.
Scott Benner 48:42
So on online, you're not? There's no identification around diabetes for you. Yeah, no, it's just because you have a very uncommon first name. Probably the people can find you.
Arden Benner 48:52
which apparently I don't there's a girl who goes to a school near her girls My name so follow her.
Scott Benner 48:57
Do you know there's a girl? I think her mom listens. Who has your first name and your last name? And has diabetes. That's crazy, right?
Arden Benner 49:08
Is she younger than me? I think so. Hmm. So we copier on my hands? Trying to be like me fix you.
Scott Benner 49:16
Do you think she got diabetes on purpose? Yeah, I see what's happening here. Well know that
Arden Benner 49:21
why don't you get this juice box tattooed on you with my face on it. This? I'm coming to your house and erasing it.
Scott Benner 49:28
Well, we took your face off of it a long time ago when you ask Do you remember asking? Yeah, I don't want my face out there. Yeah. Remember the thing you said to me? No, I don't want to look like a baby on the internet. Yeah, that's very valid. I didn't think it was invalid. As soon as you told me I took care of it. Well, kind of I fast as I could.
Arden Benner 49:46
It was a drawing but you know,
Scott Benner 49:48
I moved to a draw and now it's gone. We don't use it for anything anymore. Interesting. It was a very nice picture of you when you were a baby.
Arden Benner 49:55
I bet there's a lot of nice pictures of me.
Scott Benner 49:57
Oh yeah. You're very photogenic. No. Okay, so you were not, so you're not identified online at all through that we can get even in your crack my neck once you get closer to them like
Unknown Speaker 50:11
okay, proceed, okay, you're very cranky. Yeah, that's another problem I have we found out would result in early death. It can result in early
Scott Benner 50:20
people have a sense of humor. Yeah, they do, you're gonna have to figure out that you're joking. Yeah. We did learn that your cortisol level is higher. I have no idea what that means either. Which is why you're taking magnesium now. Sure. So, you're telling me that you think that most kids have this level of understanding?
Arden Benner 50:41
I don't know what they understand what am i their mother? Well, generally, you should all understand what your kids under. I'm sure they do my job. But you
Scott Benner 50:48
so it's funny, you're coming off about the way I expected. Like I you're not surprising me at all. Which is partly why these next recordings are going to be like valuable because we are actually going to talk about how to take care of you in the coming recordings. So it'll almost be like diabetes school. That'd be fun, right?
Arden Benner 51:08
I don't know how we're gonna do another one of these. Another one. We're gonna do a few more. Okay. Actually, at least three because that'll get me up to 15 hours. So
Scott Benner 51:19
well, whether you whether you mean to or not, what you're doing is gonna help people.
Arden Benner 51:23
Yeah, I bet I have a very soothing voice. You have a soothing voice. I'm just canes very manly.
Scott Benner 51:29
You think you have a manly voice? I do have a very deep voice for a girl get closer to the microphone and try to get the I'm not getting get deep voice so wrong. It doesn't just feel like say something like with a really deep voice.
Arden Benner 51:40
Know what? What? No, I don't want to be the next internet joke. Think you're gonna be an internet show one of those people that needs to know how to edit.
Scott Benner 51:51
What is your favorite social media app? You don't really care. You
Arden Benner 51:58
know? I'm okay. If you told me I had to delete all social media right now. Never use it again. I'd be like, okay, that's whatever. That's fine.
Scott Benner 52:05
Do you have friends that couldn't do that? They couldn't do that. Um, do you think they'd all be okay, well, I
Arden Benner 52:13
think that I'll be fine. Without it. I think you would be bored. I'm on board with it.
Scott Benner 52:22
Yeah. Were you bored before COVID? Or has?
Arden Benner 52:26
Yeah, life is very boring in New Jersey. I see why it's a joke in movies to live here.
Scott Benner 52:33
What do you what would you like to be doing? I'd like to be in the city. Doing why making money. Oh, you want to be an adult? You want to get a job? Oh, yeah. Let's get out of here. Get going? Yeah. What are you gonna do with your money?
Arden Benner 52:46
I think I'm just too intelligent for this town. You think so? too bright for the people here? Oh, my God, especially people who drive here at the speed limit is 40 don't go 30. Like, come on. You live in Jersey.
Scott Benner 52:57
You don't think that that people basically drive the same everywhere? No, I do. Know. I think it's some places.
Arden Benner 53:06
I had to merge today. And I was like, Oh, God. But you were in New Jersey. Right? Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It was like, everyone's like a maniac. Wait, have
Scott Benner 53:14
you not merged before?
Arden Benner 53:16
No, I have. But every time I emerge, I think, Okay. I saw something online. That was like a lot of people were like, when I'm married. I just close my eyes, which is, you know, probably you probably shouldn't have your license. But I mean, I feel that way. But I don't close my eyes. You said you went to Wild Wings.
Scott Benner 53:31
Yeah, you go to the one out on Route one. Yeah. Oh, that is kind of dangerous.
Arden Benner 53:36
Yeah, yeah. I did that. Yeah. I'm very special driver. You're special driver. Yeah.
Scott Benner 53:43
We should get a sticker that says that. Okay, well, then I'll get bullied at school. That's how you get bullied at school. Everyone.
Unknown Speaker 53:51
tell people you're a special driver. Don't be like, hey, especially if you can't park your car. My God. Imagine that and they'll be all over you. Yeah. All right. Okay, here's another question for me. Yeah, I
Scott Benner 54:02
think we're doing pretty well. Next year. Any questions for me? Nope. So that's what I wanted to tell you. Someone on line said, I'd like to hear art and ask Scott questions. And I said, I don't think Arden thinks about me enough to have a question to ask
Arden Benner 54:19
us. What's for dinner? And I but the answer is I haven't thought about it yet. Or mashed potatoes and chicken. Which I don't want by the way. Yeah, you're not gonna get that.
Scott Benner 54:28
No, you tell people that you had like a weird thing for a while where you couldn't eat meat. That I don't think they care about that. I think people care about that a lot.
Arden Benner 54:35
I made hotdogs yesterday. I was like, Oh, that's horrible. So you're still like sent me to? I couldn't do
Scott Benner 54:41
it. You're still having a weird aversion to some meat. Yeah. We had to get you some low rent Chinese food the other day? Because
Arden Benner 54:47
because it didn't actually tastes like chicken.
Scott Benner 54:53
Like I can eat this chicken because it doesn't taste like chicken. But that just started happening a couple months ago, right?
Arden Benner 54:59
Yeah. Yeah, I've lost like, a couple pounds because of that.
Scott Benner 55:03
You just can't you have no taste for me, right?
Arden Benner 55:05
Yeah, it's horrible. Just taste like disgusting.
Scott Benner 55:08
And at the beginning of this, you weren't hungry at all for a little while.
Arden Benner 55:11
Yeah, right. I'm still really don't get that hungry. You're not getting that hungry. Yeah, like when I went to eat today, I was like, I don't really like if you told me like, you can eat but you don't know. I just probably wouldn't eat. But I mean, probably good. You know?
Scott Benner 55:26
You don't want to starve. Well, some carrots. So there's really a great thing that you wouldn't know, right? If you weren't using if you weren't using an algorithm end or if we didn't really know how to handle insulin. You couldn't go for long stretches of time like that without eating. You would have you have ended up having to eat so there have been times you've gotten up in the morning that I'm not hungry, and you haven't eaten till like two or three in the afternoon. Yeah, intermittent fasting, everyone, it is intermittent fasting. I lose a couple of pounds, but not on purpose. Really? Yeah, no, that's all. But you understand that keeping your blood sugar stable without eating is something that a lot of people aren't able to do. Right. All right. I don't know. I don't think about that. You don't know that? Yeah, no, I know. That's interesting. So you have if you asked me to step back and and see this from a third party perspective,
Arden Benner 56:18
I'm not asking you to do that. But go ahead.
Scott Benner 56:21
wasn't talking about you specifically, it was sort of like the Royal way. Like, let's say now I was moving the conversation. Okay, perceive that. You have to cut me off that if you're
Arden Benner 56:30
cutting you off. I tell conversation works is it? That's what you told me? It is when we had a fight? Yeah. We have to go back and forth. Yeah. Cuz I was like, let me finish my sentence. And he was like, that's not how compensation works. Yeah, you guys should be here. That's fun. She's not always sweet. Oh, I don't think I'm I don't think oh, yeah, but here's a secret. I'm going to give all the secrets out about you. I'm not gonna ask you a question. I'm gonna tell them the truth. After he gets off the phone with all of you and answers us, He's so nice to all you and gives you all the information you need or whatever. I'll ask the same exact question. He's like, Are you serious? You'll know that you do. Pre-Bolus Oh, my God. So.
Scott Benner 57:09
Okay, so I don't talk to you like that. For the last 15 minutes, you've laid out that you don't really know what you're doing anyway.
Arden Benner 57:18
If I know sometimes, Okay, listen, I'm a child, if I forget to Pre-Bolus or let's, let's make it even better. If there's a bag of chips in front of me. I'm gonna eat them. Okay. So don't yell at me.
Do you think you get all that? Yeah, you don't think I'm just like are you get upset when they call you in? Pre-Bolus? Oh my god. I'm like a diabetic. God has never said that. Nor have I ever thought that you should start calling yourself that. I call myself lady Jesus at school.
Scott Benner 57:44
I should start calling myself out because you call yourself lady Jesus. Do Is this catching on lady Jesus? No, no one says we should get that sticker for the car. Lady Jesus. Yeah,
Arden Benner 57:56
if they Oh my god, imagine if they love this color in our parking spots at school. My will just say reserved for lady Jesus.
Scott Benner 58:03
I don't think they're gonna let you do that. I know. But they should. Anyway, that the Pre-Bolus thing is really, really important. Okay, so that's when we talk in future episodes. That's what we're going to talk about. Oh, that seems so boring. I know. But we're going to do
Arden Benner 58:20
I don't know how the talk like you're not gonna. It's gonna be you talking not me.
Scott Benner 58:25
Well, you could just be interactive. That's what I do. Uh huh. Well, you could also I'll think of questions while we're talking and you'll answer them.
Arden Benner 58:35
Why don't you have any questions written down? It seems like you're unprepared. I don't use
Scott Benner 58:39
that's not how I prepare very
Arden Benner 58:41
messy desk. desk. You
Scott Benner 58:42
have my desk is really messy. Yeah. Wow. You want to see some people's questions? What? Some people have questions? Yeah, I don't want to see them. Well, now you're talking. And you're gonna see them?
Arden Benner 58:53
No, I'm okay. We're almost out one hour, I need to seven minutes left everyone.
Scott Benner 59:01
So we're gonna ask, we'll see what people's questions were. And then we will
Arden Benner 59:05
let's go a little bit over one hour and use me to edit some of this out. Okay, I really need this community service. I really want a parking spot. Well, do
Scott Benner 59:12
you think that anything you've done right now will be of service to the community? Now that who needs to know that? So? I don't think that by the way. I think that what you've talked about for the last hour is really interesting. And I think that a lot of parents will find what you said. enlightening.
Arden Benner 59:32
I think the dumbest question you've asked me was what my favorite social media app is. Really? Yeah, that was horrible. That was a horrible question to ask me my favorite color next time.
Unknown Speaker 59:40
With nothing to do with anything that you didn't like? No, I didn't like you also didn't answer it. Why don't have a favorite favorite.
Scott Benner 59:47
What's your favorite TV show right now?
Arden Benner 59:50
You know, I'm watching Teen Wolf at the moment. And let me just it's a horrible show. I've never seen such horrible acting in my life. But Dylan O'Brien is a good looking man. So I'm gonna keep watching it. Um, and but One Tree Hill is a good show my favorite of all time. I could watch any Marvel movie religiously. Like if you guys are, you know on Family Feud and they asked that question or Jeopardy or whatever phone a friend, it's me, it's you. That's the one time you get to request me on Instagram. And then what else do I like? I'm a very dystopian lover. Like the hunger. This is a lot of bloody Dexcom.
Scott Benner 1:00:28
So I'm looking at what's going on here and I'm scrolling through the pictures that are on the Facebook page right now looking for a picture that I attached to her to her thing and there have been a couple of people who put bleeders up on there.
Arden Benner 1:00:39
Some of you need to get some better angles on their pictures.
Unknown Speaker 1:00:42
Yeah. You think you're critiquing people's photography? Yeah, that's horrible. I like babies. Aren't those kids cute? Those that post is the most part of their names. Oh, bad interviewer No, you don't know dad. They even write their twin girls their twin girls, but I
Scott Benner 1:01:09
asked that they name if they named the babies after me. No, there'll be a horrible name. They did not. But the mom the mother. So let me find where I sat it.
Arden Benner 1:01:20
I'll tell you what I think if the names. Oh, okay. I'm just kidding. I won't do that. I'm sure this will go horribly. If I say anything.
Scott Benner 1:01:27
I'm sure they're lovely names. I just don't remember. I'm scrolling. Whether you guys love this post so much. I can't find my Oh, here it is. Hannah and Nicole.
Arden Benner 1:01:43
Wait, no, it's his hand and Nicole is in pink.
Unknown Speaker 1:01:46
Yes. I don't know how to say that other name. Hadassah. Hadassah Grady.
Arden Benner 1:01:50
I like that. I like that one better. Katie. Yeah, I like that better than Hannah. Okay, I mean, no offense to Hannah or anything but like I'm more of a heavy person. I don't think she can take offense. For four minutes hold. Which one do you think it is? I think Hannah is
Scott Benner 1:02:06
well that's interesting. Wait, don't answer I'm gonna guess so one babies and pink one babies and purple. And your Oh wait, actually
Arden Benner 1:02:12
that What? I didn't even look over here. But I did now and now I know who it is. And that's what I was gonna say. Okay, Haiti looks more badass than Hannah. Thanks. So that's my picture.
Scott Benner 1:02:22
She's looking more at the camera has kind of got her hand over her face. Like Yeah, she's shy. Why are you? Yeah, don't please don't? What did their shirts say? worth? were you telling your children what they're worth? No, I don't think that's what it says. worth something worth to. I don't know. I don't know. I know. I'm gonna be honest. You don't need to tell me. I'm gonna move on with my life. Now. You don't want anybody? Okay, can we get back? Let me find the thing. That does not like good food. Something you need to learn how to cook. You're critiquing people's food. Yeah. Is that a selfie you took that's horrible that alright. I was thinking people for something. Where is this picture at? Guys post so much stuff on this board, which is very cool. But I'm having trouble finding what I'm looking for because of that. Reading. who's reading? People read your reading? What are you reading right now for school? Oh, I didn't start any of that. What are you supposed to read for school? I don't know what it's called.
Unknown Speaker 1:03:23
Do you have the book? Yes. You have a book? two books. Your two books? Yeah. ap literature.
Arden Benner 1:03:30
Let's hope that goes well. I took AP Lang I made it. I was also online the whole year. If that means anything,
Scott Benner 1:03:38
tell, listen, while I'm scrolling tell all the parents. If their kids got a good education when they were online, they
Arden Benner 1:03:45
did not. They got really good at cheating. And they're gonna go back to school and take that exam they have to take on the first day of school and an AP class. And they're gonna come home with a zero, and you're just gonna sit down and eat dinner, because everyone else got a 02 except for that one girl who's a kiss ass who didn't cheat the whole year. Like, like no one cheated that year. So you're saying a lot of people were cheating while they were on one. Yeah, everyone was cheating online. Which is very weird because when I'm in school, I do not cheat. I feel very guilty if I do that. Okay, but I had given up I was like, this is a joke, right? I was like, What? Come on? How were the teachers sent me? No, that looked just like me.
Unknown Speaker 1:04:31
Back when I was little. You have a little girl pretending to kiss the fish. Yeah, your child looks like me. Yeah, when you were little How about that? Right? That looks just like me. Thanks. So to let me look and see if we have a name. That does look like me when I was little. She does look a lot like you. Maybe but if that was hard and better,
Scott Benner 1:04:47
that'd be really weird. The other girl the other Arden better. This person didn't put her name up. But her mom's name is Megan. She's my aunt's name. She is your aunt's name.
Arden Benner 1:04:57
Maria connected. I don't know how it's spelled. Yeah, I mean We're not very connected. She does look a lot like me. Yeah. Okay, we have the same head shape. That's actually what stood out to me was her head.
Scott Benner 1:05:08
What shape is your head? I don't know. Whatever that is. You're aware that when you see your head shape on someone else, you know what your head shape? Yeah, but you're not aware she did look like Oh, no. No, no, not here. I'm agreeing with you.
Unknown Speaker 1:05:24
Look at this kid thrown up. Deuces. Yes. Sorry. pyside. Everybody. Is that a gang sign? That's peace. This is can you find this post? I know. I'm gonna have to leave because we're you know, we have a couple seconds left dad.
Scott Benner 1:05:35
Oh, you're staying till we're done. Oh, relax. Hold on.
Arden Benner 1:05:39
Oh my God. He's sitting as water. I'm
Scott Benner 1:05:41
thirsty. Let me do a search for it instead.
Arden Benner 1:05:44
Oh, you could have done that the whole entire time? I
Scott Benner 1:05:46
don't know. I'm not great with the internet.
Oh, it popped right up. That's embarrassing. Okay, guess I could have just done that. Alright, let's see if people had questions. Let me pull up all the comments.
Arden Benner 1:06:02
Let's not answer the bad questions. Okay. Don't say them out loud. Because then they'll know their questions bad.
Scott Benner 1:06:11
They're gonna think we're making hand signals each other right now, which we're not. No, I'll make a hand signal. No, you won't make people think you're speaking behind their back. That's not behind their back. I hope it's her the interviews. You
Arden Benner 1:06:24
know what I said? Heather? No, no, no. That's not gonna happen. Hold on. Oh, pay her. Yeah, I'm not getting any money for this apparently. Because it's community service. I feel like I should get paid under the counter. But whatever. It's under the table and whatever. I don't work with drugs. So I don't know
Scott Benner 1:06:47
you. But when you have a job and you're not paying taxes called under the table, not under the counter,
Arden Benner 1:06:52
whatever. Alright, anyways, Aaron, no money.
Scott Benner 1:06:55
This person wondered. Had you ever been on? Okay, this person asked. Do you know that you're practically a celebrity? Me? Yeah.
Arden Benner 1:07:03
I'm not a celebrity until I'm on the red carpet with Anne Hathaway. I'm not a celebrity.
Scott Benner 1:07:07
Why Anne Hathaway because she's in the best movie ever. Devil Wears Prada ever worse problem. Such a good movie? Yeah, great movie.
Arden Benner 1:07:15
I just feel like Anne Hathaway is like, you've made it if you're on the red carpet with her
Scott Benner 1:07:20
with her. Yeah, but but this person's point is that to the people listening to this, you that that that you may be not a celebrity? I don't think that I'm not saying you are Yeah,
Arden Benner 1:07:32
most people don't know my name in this town. So trust me, I'm not a celebrity.
Scott Benner 1:07:38
Okay, now, here's a super serious question. Do you realize the impact that you've had on the diabetes community in general and people's health?
Arden Benner 1:07:46
I don't think I've done anything. I think this is all you.
Scott Benner 1:07:49
But do you see that? His point? Is that is that without you? I don't have to figure out diabetes
Arden Benner 1:07:56
to her. Now let's have him. I'm trying to read the national woman with a middle name of Seth. Why are you assuming? I mean, there's a man and a woman in the picture. So wait, let me see what the job is. I can figure it out by that.
Unknown Speaker 1:08:12
They don't give women good jobs. They don't give women good jobs. Not in this generation.
Scott Benner 1:08:17
Manager part. Manager, this is a man. Okay, but be so wait a second, like, let's stop on this one for a second and be super serious. If? Who cares? What if you were the reason that I don't know, I made a widget. Right? We have a little, a little device that helps people something. So let's say you were born. And you had, let's make something up specific. Let's say you were born, and you had really fat fingers. So you couldn't pick your nose. And I may, what the hell and I made a little thing for you to pick your nose with. And then it turned out there were a lot of people with fat fingers that couldn't pick their nose. And we started selling them and help everybody get the boogers out of their nose. Would you be able to see that because of you? These people didn't have boogers in their nose anymore. I don't think that would be because of me. They do.
Unknown Speaker 1:09:14
Okay, well, then we have different views and they're grateful for it. Okay, yeah. All right.
Scott Benner 1:09:19
I think they're also grateful that you don't limit me from talking about you.
Arden Benner 1:09:26
I'm not his mom, I can't do anything about that. So you
Scott Benner 1:09:29
could you could say Please don't say my period. But it ends up being really important. You're
Arden Benner 1:09:34
too late, because he's already said and I didn't know so.
Scott Benner 1:09:38
But you've never come to me and said Please don't say that.
Arden Benner 1:09:41
Yeah, I don't really whatever is happening here. It's just not my world. So whatever. Right?
Scott Benner 1:09:45
I've tried to make that clear to people, but I think some people don't understand. Okay. All right. Let's scroll.
Arden Benner 1:09:55
I can tell who's older based on the words they use.
Scott Benner 1:09:58
Really? Yeah, give me Don't say me. His name give me a word that tells me somebody older.
Arden Benner 1:10:03
Well, no, I can see that. They're gonna know it's them.
Scott Benner 1:10:06
everyone listening Well, no, only the person that did okay, whoa, Ray. Ray. Yeah. Ray says you older or younger than 35? Older. Okay. Do you see any young words?
Arden Benner 1:10:19
I'm not a very fast reader. So hold on. Um, no, not yet.
Scott Benner 1:10:25
Can you verify that you are not sitting in the new chair?
Arden Benner 1:10:30
Yeah, I was I tried to sit in that he told me don't move it. So. Yeah, no, trust me. I'm not sending it.
Scott Benner 1:10:39
See, this person is interested in your perspective, which you've been very free with it. I think that's excellent. All right. Okay.
Arden Benner 1:10:48
He's not famous continue.
Scott Benner 1:10:52
Okay, so I'm not famous, and I agree with you.
Arden Benner 1:10:54
What is he thinks he's so cool, because he showed up on that one app when you look up his name. Oh, what was that? I don't know what it's called. It was like it was like a morphing app. Yeah,
Scott Benner 1:11:03
yeah. Oh, like there who? No kidding. There was an app where you could pull up famous people more for your face with them. Yeah. And I was on there as famous person. Yeah, that was stupid. Yeah. But it was also kind of scary. That my face was there. Yeah. I thought so. It took me by surprise.
Arden Benner 1:11:21
Yeah, I should be there. Apparently. I'm the good one here. I should be getting the money. Actually, technically, I do get the money. A lot of clothes.
Scott Benner 1:11:30
Yeah, we you guys support the sponsors? You are you're definitely paying for artists clothing. Yeah, for sure. So but take her question. How did you convince me? No, wait, but take this question. Okay, but take the word famous out of it.
Unknown Speaker 1:11:42
Does it have a dad everyone loves? Well, everyone doesn't love me. But how does? She just said that what she said but my new school and pass it? I can't read it feel uncomfortable?
Arden Benner 1:11:52
uncomfortable? What do you 12? Let me read it. I don't know how to answer this question. Like,
Scott Benner 1:11:59
it doesn't feel different to you that I don't really care if other people like you or not. Okay. Yeah. What's a good answer? Okay, here's Next, I think which so you would say for clarity, you've never walked around and thought, it's cool. My dad has a podcast that people
Arden Benner 1:12:12
know. I actually think it's kind of embarrassing to say it. Okay. Yeah. I don't tell people that you have a podcast if people ask what my parents job is. I tell people that mom works for a company. You don't mention me. Uh, you know, everyone kind of knows you have a podcast, right? Okay. So it doesn't come it doesn't like no one ever, you know, ask that question either.
Scott Benner 1:12:37
Okay, I'm reading sorry. Some I have to be honest, some of you the way you're right. I don't understand what you're talking about. This woman's gonna let her daughter listen. Do you think that's a mistake? What do you think that her daughter will turn to her and be like, I don't know what that glucagon is called either.
Arden Benner 1:12:56
I don't know what her daughter you're asking me questions I clearly cannot answer. You're interesting. You're from
Scott Benner 1:13:00
you're definitely from a generation that will not generalize about some things.
Arden Benner 1:13:04
I don't believe I connected my generation whatsoever. What
Scott Benner 1:13:08
generation do you connect to? Oh,
Arden Benner 1:13:09
I don't know. But not this one. Because I hate every child in this not your children. But everyone I know at my school I'm not fond of what is that?
Scott Benner 1:13:19
What bothers you about the in
Arden Benner 1:13:21
they just they worried about the dumbest things. Okay. Like, apparently, let's I'll put this out there. Apparently, no one else thought it was funny to make your Instagram account named Ashton Kutcher. Like, cooter Come on. Ashton Kutcher, Ashton Kutcher. That's hilarious, right? I have like five people save. It's funny. And everyone else was like, that's so weird. I was like, you have no personality. But then it changed back because I was like, oh, colleges, look at your social media. And I don't want to be Ashton Kutcher. So
Scott Benner 1:13:53
So in general, you're not happy that people didn't understand the actual Ashton Kutcher. Yeah,
Arden Benner 1:13:57
no one appreciated my periods.
Scott Benner 1:14:00
Well, last night, we're not going to tell people but I made a joke last night in front of your friends that only you got. And none of them. Yeah, they didn't get it. Right. This is sweet. This person says that.
Arden Benner 1:14:11
I read that one already. I'm a faster reader, apparently, because you're taking forever. I
Scott Benner 1:14:15
had read it before as well. I'm bringing it back up now. So we can speak about that.
Arden Benner 1:14:18
She calls those crazy. Yeah, do what? Matt is correct, Matt. Matt is correct. I don't think you're crazy. I just think that it's crazy that you're listening to this.
Scott Benner 1:14:28
You so you've so far as we scrolled through. Agreed mostly with Matt. Yes. That's very interesting. That's from Australia. He's got a wave.
Arden Benner 1:14:39
That's my dream accent. Okay. Yeah. You know how everyone asked if you could change one thing about your body? What would it be? Mine was not anything physical. Like, I want a different accent. I do not like, you know, being American.
Scott Benner 1:14:54
Here. Well, my point wasn't about the accent. It was that Matt's got a different sensibility about them. There's an Australian sensibility, more Matter of fact, like you, so maybe you're more Australian than you think.
Arden Benner 1:15:06
Oh, are you saying that maybe Chris Hemsworth would like me?
Scott Benner 1:15:10
Yes. Maybe Chris Hemsworth will like, Okay. All right, people looking forward to Okay, here you go. How How accurate is this one? That's a lot of reading. I imagine her to be very chill and laid back. Or you chill
Arden Benner 1:15:24
my hands. I don't know how to answer questions about myself. It's interesting, isn't it? Um, I heard it.
reading, reading, relaxing the diabetes and Scott keeps an exterior cool. Oh, he does not keep his cool. Basal. Yeah, that's, that's gonna be our next episode. Basically makes it look easy. ninja skills. Yeah, I believe I'm a ninja. You believe you're a ninja. Basically, I imagined her as a pretty cool girl. I'm with Jessica.
Unknown Speaker 1:15:52
Yeah. You believe in Jessica. Yeah. All right. I think she's younger. You think Kate is younger? Because of how she wrote?
Scott Benner 1:16:01
Oh, my God. Yeah. I don't think she's young. I think she's younger. It's interesting. Kate is the person who put your name in general hospital. Oh, really? Yeah.
Arden Benner 1:16:14
Maybe she's just like in the writing? No.
Scott Benner 1:16:17
Do you want to thank her? No. Okay. Next, okay. What about Tommy's idea? This might be really interesting. Would you answer questions
Arden Benner 1:16:35
from children? I don't think I could put up with children. No, I don't that's I've actually been told that the one job I should not have is a teacher or a nurse.
Scott Benner 1:16:45
We wouldn't bring the children on the panel. Oh, wait, what? Yeah, they would just write their questions.
Arden Benner 1:16:50
Oh, yeah. I can't just i, this can't be a live talk with children. Like, I'll be like, Listen, shut up.
Scott Benner 1:16:57
No, but if so if their kids send questions in would you answer them? But would you answer them? Like if they said, Hey,
Arden Benner 1:17:04
I don't think kids would understand what I'm saying. like little children. Wait, how old? Are we talking? I don't know. Because anyone like under the age of 12. I don't think their brains developed yet. Like where it needs to be to understand what I'm saying. So even 13 year olds, they still have braces. So I don't think do you
Scott Benner 1:17:20
think some people are going to be disappointed after hearing your talk?
Arden Benner 1:17:24
A lot of people were disappointed after they hear me talk about the rest of that even says she's using abbreviations.
Scott Benner 1:17:31
Alright, this person is just very excited. Okay, and says, Do you think she asked me if I think you're gonna roll your eyes at me while we're doing it. You didn't roll your eyes at me?
Arden Benner 1:17:39
Oh, my eyes on people. Yeah, I just tell them they're being stupid. Okay. All right. Well, I feel that these people have me all wrong. Well,
Scott Benner 1:17:50
no, yeah, they you're, you're a one dimensional person to them. Oh, no, that means that's not what I'm talking about. What do you mean? How do you not know what that means? You You love One Tree Hill. I bet you they say that all the time in that show. What do you want to tell people that you went to a One Tree Hill convention?
Arden Benner 1:18:06
We went to two of them. Thank you very much. Um, the first time I didn't get to meet Sophia Bush, because the tickets were sold out. But I met James Lafferty, James Lafferty, if your wife is listening to this because I speak Let's all talk about this for a second. Go ahead. James Lafferty decided to marry a diabetic. I'm a diabetic. So if he was looking for a diabetic why not make
Unknown Speaker 1:18:30
literally one more year till everything's legal? Oh, my God. He could have waited. Well, you didn't put it in your Instagram bio. So how would he know?
Arden Benner 1:18:36
You know, Chad Michael Murray did like my photo though. He did. Yeah. And I don't you know, I don't think he's like the famous enough type to have someone else run it for him. So I think he liked the photo. Cool. What's his wife's name? I don't like a row. I don't really know. It's I don't think she's American. I think she has some foreign name. You don't know her name? No, she's not she I know. She's type one. No, it's no, it's not Tom Michael Murray's wife. It's James Lafferty, his wife. Oh, James Lafferty. His
Scott Benner 1:19:05
wife has type she's more famous than john Michael Murray. His wife. What's What's her name?
Arden Benner 1:19:09
I don't know. Look up James. I pretty much have James Lafferty fiance they just got engaged. I know everything. Oh, speaking of Wait, we should all we should all start a club. That now I'm in with you guys if we start a club, too. Oh, yeah, that's her. Alexandra Park. could have been me anyways. If we all started club to get me on the one she held podcast with Bethany joy Lenz, Halliburton and Sophia Bush, then I'm in that you could that I'll do for no community surf service hours.
Scott Benner 1:19:43
Would you really be able to dig in and talk about that show? Oh, I know everything about that show. That's probably not good. What what? What's your second favorite show? I don't know.
Arden Benner 1:19:54
I'm a Gossip Girl fan. I like you. I can't wait for the season three to come out of you. That's something you probably should let your children watch. Okay? Yeah, I started watching that on a road trip in the car, and I realized that I probably shouldn't watch that in the car with you guys. But I didn't anyways, um what else do I like? Well, what
Scott Benner 1:20:13
shows have you turned me on to?
Arden Benner 1:20:15
New Girl? That's a good show. I'm if you don't like New Girl, I believe you don't have a sense of humor. Anybody on here who decides new girls not a good show? Stop listening. You don't deserve to listen.
Scott Benner 1:20:27
First of all, you can still listen to No, I don't think you can. But tell them what we do to mom. I don't understand what do we we have tried twice for
Arden Benner 1:20:39
three times three times. I've started out show over three times for her.
Scott Benner 1:20:43
And it's hilarious. And she never laughs Yeah. Mommy likes TV shows with like the word Chicago in it.
Arden Benner 1:20:52
Even the episode if anyone knows what I'm talking about the episode when Jess Nick and the like janitor or whatever. In the apartment, like he tries to have a threesome with them. You probably can't put this up now. I can. Okay, when that happens. It is hilarious. And they start playing that song from Matilda. She did not even crack a smile. I was like what
Unknown Speaker 1:21:14
my mom says humorous, weird. And just starts playing the drums in the air. Yeah.
Arden Benner 1:21:18
Oh my god. Come on. Yeah, anyways, that's they're, they're engaged.
Scott Benner 1:21:22
I see that. Alright, so Alexandra Park has type one diabetes. Yeah, she can come on the show. She wants to.
Arden Benner 1:21:28
I don't think she she made a book about that song. She's got she's got money.
Scott Benner 1:21:32
Let me ask the question. If that girl came on this podcast, would you co host that episode with me?
Unknown Speaker 1:21:37
No, I wouldn't do that. And you can tell her I like her husband a lot. And that actually, no, don't don't make it creepy. We want to get lunch with them or something. We don't we don't want to make it creepy. Yeah. Okay. Let's just hope she doesn't listen to this. He looks a lot older than you. Yeah, he is. He's almost 40. Now he's in his 30s. He's 35. It says, Yeah,
Unknown Speaker 1:21:58
I can tell. You can tell. Yeah, he's he's in his 30s. All right. Well,
Scott Benner 1:22:02
maybe this will get back to him. That'd be crazy, wouldn't it? Yeah. Okay, wait, here's something interesting. I think New Girl is terrific. You introduced it to me during COVID. Yeah. When we were just like, literally trapped in our house. Yeah, it's amazing. I'm getting hot again. But you don't like to have last? Oh,
Arden Benner 1:22:21
no, I mostly because I think soccer is the worst sport to exist. And I just I can't anything that involves soccer. needs to be shut off.
Scott Benner 1:22:29
Yeah, you know,
Arden Benner 1:22:30
I cannot do soccer. If your kid play soccer, like good for them. I don't know if I can be friends with them.
Scott Benner 1:22:37
What about what about when I introduced you to pulp fiction? You didn't like that?
Arden Benner 1:22:41
No, I didn't like that. I think all those movies like Pulp Fiction Kill Bill. Wait, is that is it Kill Bill? Is what it is with the with that girl? Yeah. Okay, all of those movies. Everyone's like, Oh, it's a cinematic masterpiece. It's so slow. Which like I can appreciate to an extent. But like, you got to like, Come on. Let's go. There's too much dialogue. There's no there's like not enough dialogue or something. There's like too much nothing happening.
Scott Benner 1:23:07
So blackwidow way better than Pulp Fiction.
Arden Benner 1:23:12
Yeah, I also very big black widow fan. I really liked the movie. I would not put that top five though. top
Scott Benner 1:23:19
five in your in your mind Marvel category or even your Marvel category? Yeah, what are your top five Marvel? Oh,
Arden Benner 1:23:24
wait, we can't do this right now. This will take me a while. Why? Cuz? I don't know. I think this is so hard. I'm a very big fan of the first Avengers movie. Okay, Thor Ragnarok. Winter Soldier. endgame. I'm actually a lot of people like Infinity War better than endgame but I'm more of an endgame person. Okay, um, I really like Iron Man. Three. I think that's the best one. If you disagree. I don't know. But I think we should make it clear that Captain America is the worst of the six Avengers. You really don't like Captain him. I don't dislike him. But he's so cheesy.
Scott Benner 1:24:01
Right? And you didn't like Black Panther? Very much. No. Oh,
Unknown Speaker 1:24:04
I feel like I'm gonna get a lot. No, I don't think you would. You didn't like a lot of people. for that. I don't know why we're not liking Black Panther. Yeah, I mean, you don't hate it. No, I
Arden Benner 1:24:12
don't hate it. But I think it's overhyped for sure.
Scott Benner 1:24:14
What about the TV shows? Have they been good? so far?
Arden Benner 1:24:17
I I liked one division a lot. Loki like slowed down at some point. And they made it like too much. Like, like topless or something. I don't know. The Winter Soldier Falcon. I was really lost and what the villain was like, Yeah, what was that? Like? Like? Was she like Irish? I don't know. What was one girl with a curly hair the curly hair the like the red hair and freckles? Yeah, I don't. I don't understand what like where she come from.
Scott Benner 1:24:47
I don't know. So so far. I agree. wandavision was pretty good. This is the best one. Yeah, Falcon and Winter Soldier. That's my least favorite. I wasn't sure what was happening and Loki
Arden Benner 1:24:56
got started good and then got worse. But I think Because it's supposed to be longer the season supposed to be longer in the middle kind of slow down I think it was gonna pick back up there was a scene towards the end of the last time we should become like a you know those like nerds who do this for fun we could do this. Oh my god yeah,
Scott Benner 1:25:12
we already have microphones so at the end of Loki this isn't even diabetic related everything your diabetes, okay, whatever at the end of Loki there was a scene before they went into the house where they were outside of the whatever. I don't want to give it away for people. You know what I mean, though? Yeah,
Arden Benner 1:25:29
I don't know what they're doing. Like that guy has so many powers and they're doing nothing with him.
Scott Benner 1:25:33
I kept thinking, did they mean to edit some of this out and they forgot. Like, why is this taking so long? Yeah, it was not. It was a I didn't like it.
Arden Benner 1:25:41
I actually can't wait for Hawkeye. If you dislike Hawkeye. You just don't understand. Watch Voltron again. He was great. Yeah, yeah, he's legit. Yeah, he's got a nice bond with a black widow. Yeah, exactly. And if you Okay, this is this is this is where I stand. blackwidow is my favorite avenger of all time. But she still should have died. I think we should all he had a family. And yeah, I know she had she was family with the Avengers. And she had her bow. She didn't have a kid. So you know, she can go she's my favorite. And she can still jump off that cliff.
Scott Benner 1:26:14
Okay. You know, she's suing Disney. Yeah, I heard about that. She should. They're doing that thing where they're, they're giving
Arden Benner 1:26:21
five G's on her side. He's helping her.
Scott Benner 1:26:23
Yeah, they gave him contracts where they get pieces of the box office, and then they're releasing the show the movie online where there's no box office, so they don't get paid for that part. Yeah, yeah, they're stealing from them. I think
Arden Benner 1:26:35
that's her last movie just over the money.
Scott Benner 1:26:37
Yeah. Plus, she made that guy with a big head. Yeah. So she's gonna need money to buy hats. Yeah.
Arden Benner 1:26:41
Well, it's all just hope and pray they get divorced. And she ends up with Chris Evans. Why? Because they're meant to be hurt or something.
Scott Benner 1:26:49
You think Chris Evans and Scarlett Scarlett Johansson should be together?
Arden Benner 1:26:53
Yeah, that's something definitely went on when they were younger. You think so? Yeah.
Scott Benner 1:26:59
Interesting. You liked him in knives out? Right?
Arden Benner 1:27:02
Yeah. I think he's a good actor. I just his character. Like, I want to punch him across the face.
Scott Benner 1:27:08
You don't like Captain America is too earnest for you? Yeah. Okay.
Arden Benner 1:27:14
All right. That's actually I had to take a quiz at school. That was like your, they give you like, 30 I don't be called like 30. Less the word 30. Like, I don't know, just like things about you. They put them in order. My last one was spirituality. But my second last one was kindness.
Scott Benner 1:27:32
Kindness fell pretty far. With
Arden Benner 1:27:34
my first one. It was like I had like sarcasm like humor. bravery. I'm like, something like, I don't know, like trust, like all that was at the top. Also at the bottom was, um, was like, work like teamwork.
Scott Benner 1:27:51
So, we're gonna wrap this up. Okay. Okay. Let me ask you a question. How much of what you said today was sarcastic. I don't I'm not trying to be sarcastic. No, I don't think you're trying to do anything. I think you're being yourself.
Arden Benner 1:28:04
Yeah. So I don't know. I, I guess 100 not 100 an hour and 22 minutes of it.
Scott Benner 1:28:12
Think you think you're generally sarcastic?
Arden Benner 1:28:14
Yeah, I'm not a very. I'm a serious person. But like, emotions are my thing. I think you should deal with that. And I'll deal with mine. Okay. Yeah. Like if you're crying, it's not on my shoulder.
Scott Benner 1:28:28
That's a T shirt. If you're crying. It's not on my shoulder. Should copyright that. That's a great idea.
Arden Benner 1:28:33
Yeah, like if my friends are upset. I'm not the person to go to if someone is upset. Don't text me
Unknown Speaker 1:28:39
know. You get very like analytical about it. Yeah, just like suck it up.
Scott Benner 1:28:44
You're like this happened. And then she did this. And then that happened. that's reasonable that she's upset now. Let's get past it.
Arden Benner 1:28:49
Yeah, exactly. That's how everyone should think you
Scott Benner 1:28:51
think everyone should think like you? Yeah. Again, what your insulin pumps called?
Arden Benner 1:28:56
It doesn't it doesn't matter. You see what I mean? Doesn't matter.
Scott Benner 1:28:59
My phone will not stop beeping. Oh my god. It's the dentist office that wants to know how close hygiene experience was today. to the dentist all lievable
Arden Benner 1:29:10
close tiptoeing outside the door right now is he or him?
Scott Benner 1:29:13
You can hear him outside? Yeah. Alright, so we're gonna get back together and do this again. Oh, great. Okay, um, but we're going to talk specifically about using your insulin. Understanding the Dexcom understanding the GMO understanding the Omni pod, understanding your meter understanding all of it. Okay? Because Listen to me. Don't get distracted. Now. You're doing great. I got distracted. All right. I'm like a squirrel. I'm good. What we're gonna do is we're gonna have these talks, they might not be this long. Okay, like, we might break them up into little sections. And we're going to talk about each thing individually. And I'm going to do my best to tell you everything that I think you need to know. If you were going to just leave right now and take care of yourself. Okay,
Arden Benner 1:29:58
I could leave right now. Until care of myself.
Scott Benner 1:30:00
Do you think your agency would be in the mid fives? Whatever. Do you understand why that's important?
Arden Benner 1:30:10
Yeah, no, I yeah, that's important. Sorry. I was not thinking I was reading this. Okay. I we really need to get her on the show reading about James Lafferty. So yeah, so I just get this off the screen so you don't get confused by it. That is not a real sight that they have. They're not famous enough to be on tmz.com I, you know, don't get them on this because they're gonna hear how poorly and talking and they're not gonna like me, or they're really great people and they're gonna be like, you know what? She's right. I'm Agila celebrity. It's fun. Whatever.
Scott Benner 1:30:39
I had five minutes of fame. They're still you're like some of your favorite celebrities, though. I don't know who that woman is. Oh, you don't know who is? She's in a show. Alexandra Park. Yeah, she's in the Royals. Do whatever that is. I think that's FX. Is that even famous? That's what I'm saying. I might be more famous than her. Oh.
Arden Benner 1:31:05
Oh, she gets one of these on the side. You're not more famous.
Scott Benner 1:31:07
She's from Australia. Oh my god. Your net. See? She got it. She got him with the accent. I told you. You blew it. I told you guys all you had to do. She's been in one TV show and what appears to be a very bad shark movie. If I'm guessing 12 feet deep. What is 12 feet deep about?
Arden Benner 1:31:29
I'm guessing a shark debt. Oh, she's also in his new show.
Scott Benner 1:31:33
What's his new show?
Arden Benner 1:31:34
He made a show with another guy from One Tree Hill called everyone is doing great on Hulu. Everyone's just doing great. I think I heard a good wait. Click on it. Let's see if that's a lie.
Scott Benner 1:31:42
I believe you mean, I heard it did well,
Arden Benner 1:31:44
whatever. They don't teach me anything. Um I pray to God that the guidance counselor's don't have to listen to this. Can you
Scott Benner 1:31:53
imagine that? Like we are not giving her? We're not giving her community service for telling us that the kids at school are? What did you say earlier? Oh, that's a drag. All right. Anyway.
Arden Benner 1:32:09
You should also get Harper from Wizards of Waverly Place. She's also a diabetic.
Scott Benner 1:32:14
Yeah. What's her name?
Arden Benner 1:32:16
I'm sure a lot of these celebrities are going to be diabetic in like three years.
Scott Benner 1:32:19
I think people are just getting more diabetes. Because this is type one. Yeah, I know. But she's type one. Isn't she Alexandra? Yeah,
Arden Benner 1:32:26
she she just got she pulled out a book about it. She put out sugar. I think that's it sugar high sugar high.
Unknown Speaker 1:32:33
Have any of you read it The Unexpected Journey
Unknown Speaker 1:32:35
of an inexperienced type one does he get her on experience her? Let me see something. Check into this book for a second. Where's Amazon when you need it? burp. burp into the thing? I didn't I turned. Hey,
Scott Benner 1:32:56
she just put this book out. Yeah. Get her on. Maybe I could.
Arden Benner 1:33:02
I think I could totally do it. I can get them on
Scott Benner 1:33:05
the queue here. Come on.
Arden Benner 1:33:06
Now. That was a total lie. But I could try.
Scott Benner 1:33:10
We're gonna hit her up on Instagram.
Arden Benner 1:33:11
I feel like you could use the whole thing. Like we gave you all that money for a photo op. Just be on the podcast?
Scott Benner 1:33:17
Because you paid to take a picture with her boyfriend who's gonna be your husband?
Arden Benner 1:33:20
Yeah, exactly. Alright, so it seems pretty okay to me. Okay. Though. A lot of money for that photo up.
Scott Benner 1:33:28
The show is pretty popular in Australia. Maybe she knows that. It really is. What show my Oh, this is not a show. I guess it is no, that's not what makes this different than anything else.
Arden Benner 1:33:41
Like everything. We're doing this in a room that's painted a horrible color.
Unknown Speaker 1:33:46
On who picked it? It's mom, it's the spare bedroom color. Yeah, mom's really not good at this stuff. A color picking? Yeah.
Scott Benner 1:33:53
Okay, so. All right. I really do want to stop. I want you to tell me. No, yeah, you're gonna tell me something. Okay. So look at me in the face.
Unknown Speaker 1:34:03
Stop looking at that. I can't look at you in the face real quick. Otherwise,
Scott Benner 1:34:05
I'm gonna look at the painting. Okay, look at the painting and listen to me. Okay. What do you think the most important part of managing insulin is? Be serious. Like,
Arden Benner 1:34:18
if you're asking me questions I genuinely don't have an answer to
Scott Benner 1:34:21
okay then why do you think you'd be okay taking care of yourself? Because it's not that big of a deal. What if you eat french fries? What happens if you eat french fries?
Unknown Speaker 1:34:31
I do myself. But then what happens later? You must actually close your loop. close the loop. you close the loop. You're near your phone. Now you're closer to it. I
Scott Benner 1:34:43
can't bend right now. You're gonna make me get the phone.
Unknown Speaker 1:34:45
Yeah, don't get the phone now. You're gonna come off poorly. If you don't get the phone. Now you get the phone. Get the phone. Come on. Your Pants will match your shirt. You get the phone. My pants don't match my shirt. Yeah,
Scott Benner 1:34:55
I'm being punished
Arden Benner 1:34:56
collar crime. Get the phone. A white collar crime. That sounds horrible.
Unknown Speaker 1:35:00
No it doesn't. Yeah does sounds like a crime if I put on there colors that don't go together here they don't hurt while you were in your Outer Banks pants.
Scott Benner 1:35:12
So if I have shorts on that look like they're for the beach. They're my Outer Banks pants.
Arden Benner 1:35:18
Yeah, that's the only beach. I remember going to when I was little. You don't remember
Scott Benner 1:35:22
St. JOHN. Yeah, that's completely different. That's like an island. Oh, islands. Just the giant beach you know?
Arden Benner 1:35:28
Yeah, but it's different. The Outer Banks is not like St. JOHN. No, it's not. Yeah. That's what I did. I not what,
Scott Benner 1:35:36
but they're still both beaches. They are Okay, so what do you think the most important thing is, buddy? You're sweaty? Yeah. Probably shouldn't say that microphone. I don't really edit this. Anyone have a good deodorant brand? He needed new deodorant? Yeah, here's doesn't work.
Arden Benner 1:35:52
No, not for like natural, like smelling purposes, but like sweating purposes,
Scott Benner 1:35:57
you need an antiperspirant? Yeah. Maybe people will send in suggestions. Now, don't do that. I'm not gonna read them. Okay, so when we talk, coming up in these other these other episodes, here's what I feel like we're gonna talk about, you're ready. We're going to talk about your Basal, and how to get it right and how to change it if you need to. We're gonna talk about Pre-Bolus in your meals. We're going to talk about how different foods need different amounts of insulin. We're going to talk about how to handle fat and protein when it makes your blood sugar go up later. Okay, and we're going to talk about other things like how you can help yourself if you're in a real bad situation, I'm not gonna be in a bad situation, just in case you are, it would be nice to know how to handle it. Right?
Unknown Speaker 1:36:45
I can handle it. Well, but if you passed out right now, so you're an ICU.
Scott Benner 1:36:50
So your blood say your blood sugar is so safe. You're asking
Arden Benner 1:36:52
me question, if I pass out, I can't help myself. So it's over.
Scott Benner 1:36:56
What if you knew it was going up? What if you could look at your CGM and say to yourself, my blood sugar's falling? I can't stop it. I could do something. Now to stop myself from passing I'll drink a juice or something. Right? What if that doesn't work? So you have no context for that? Because it just doesn't happen to you. Yeah. Do you know why it doesn't happen to you? Because I have a diabetic guard next to me. No, that's not why. It's because your basil is really well set. You do a really consistently decent job of Pre-Bolus and your meals.
Arden Benner 1:37:28
I don't think we can do another one of these. I can't listen to that for another house.
Scott Benner 1:37:31
Your settings are right. And that's the stuff we're going to go through next. Okay, are you excited talking to the microphone? No, I'm not excited at all. Actually, that part you're not gonna like, Alright, but we're gonna do it anyway. Yeah. I really want to thank you for doing this with me today. Would you like to say goodbye to everybody? I would
Arden Benner 1:37:47
just like to say Haiti grows up to be like, more badass than Hannah. I called it. I believe it's Hattie. No, I think it's Haiti.
Scott Benner 1:37:54
Do you think they're calling their kid to Haiti? Yeah, I believe it's Hattie. I think it's Haiti. Why would you think it's Haiti? Ha TT right. Wasn't it is DD it was DD. Yeah, that sounds more like happy. No, it's a Haiti to me. Haiti is H a TI. It sounds like Haiti. To me. Haiti is a country you know that right? Yeah, I'm aware. Okay. Hold on. Let's see. So, I can't believe this is what we got on this is what we're talking about. Hannah Nicole. We're not arguing about how that's pronounced. Yeah, I know how it's pronounced. Hadassah grace. Is it Hadassah? Yeah, but it's Hattie. Why would someone called her kid Haiti?
Unknown Speaker 1:38:37
I think it's a cool name. Hate IE. Haiti. Yeah, that's a cool name. Well, that's not what they're calling the kid. And you should try it. You want them to change the baby's name? No, I don't like change. They just try it out. for like a week. Yeah. She's she responds to it. So I'm gonna tell you I think it's happy.
Arden Benner 1:38:54
I don't know. We're gonna have to ask Chelsea. Is that her name? Her name is Chelsea. Chelsea. Sounds like a character's name.
Scott Benner 1:39:01
I don't know that. She wants her last name. Oh. Yeah, see? All right. Well, I'll cut I bet it's fine. That's you're putting it online? That's a private Facebook group. Only the people who are members in there.
Arden Benner 1:39:16
Oh, well, then why don't they just join? Like I'm getting you more people. Now if you join you can see children.
Scott Benner 1:39:23
You get to see the babies. Yeah, it is a really good fit and we can all fight if it's Haiti or whatever. How it's clearly not Haiti. It should be heavy. I think they should try it. But you see now that it's not. I don't know. I'm still against it. What do you think we should call this episode? Hey, be rowdy. No, hey, it's gonna be called conversation with art and part one. Oh, no, that's boring. Don't do that. What should we call it? Call it a? I don't know. It's think. Do you believe that people have gotten to know you're doing this? A little bit better?
Arden Benner 1:39:59
No. I Think people who don't understand my sense of humor. Think of more real brat right now.
Scott Benner 1:40:03
You think they think you're a brat? Yeah. Yeah, I would think I would tell you that. I think you
Arden Benner 1:40:10
a lot of people think that I treat you poorly, like my parents poorly. Oh, I
Scott Benner 1:40:15
don't feel like that. Yeah.
Arden Benner 1:40:16
I don't know. Being White is completely different. That's what I've learned being white. Yeah. Because none of my friends all my friends are like foreign of some sort. Okay, and their houses are so much different.
Scott Benner 1:40:27
Okay, hold on a second. Let's go through this one at a time. So you know, you have a lot of Indian friends. Yeah. kylian. They all treat their parents differently. Oh, yeah. Yeah, they're much more like Reverend of them. Yeah. Especially Filipino. Right. Which, I don't know, which one of your friends would be would dare to be harsh against their parents? Don't you don't say their name. I know who say their background. Is that Italian? Okay. That's the that's the besides you.
Arden Benner 1:40:59
So when you she's also the closest to like, She's like, closest to like, I don't know, like, I like more Americanized.
Scott Benner 1:41:07
But then people from other countries who are more recent immigrants know, like,
Arden Benner 1:41:13
what I'm saying is I have friends, I will openly curse and come home and say what I think I do not hold back what I believe like, I will tell you what I think. And I've had friends who were like, Oh, I can never say that to my parents.
Scott Benner 1:41:27
But do you think that has anything to do with our background? And not being white? Yeah, yeah. 110%. You think of that? Yeah. It's not that mom and I are just open minded. We let you say what you want. No, wait. You can move your chair. You sticking to things? Yeah, I have a skirt on and I'm sticking. Alright. Wait, I need it. I have shorts on. I mean, it's okay. Okay, get back on the mic. So you don't think it's because mom and I like consciously raise you to say what you think
Arden Benner 1:41:55
that's part of it? Yeah. We actually actually talked about this last night with Liv and Tom. What did you guys thought about cursing? We're talking about cursing. We're saying how, like, when we were younger, like a lot of like houses would like to be like, oh, there's a baby in the house like don't curse. And I was like it was minimum really do that. Like we grew up like cursing. It's just part of life. Just do it. And then we're just talking about it. Yeah,
Scott Benner 1:42:17
yeah. So I don't so I think you want to hear something? I think seriously, I think you should be allowed to speak the way you want to speak, I think you should be able to say what you want to say. I think there have been times in your life where your opinion is not fully formed. But it doesn't mean that it's not your opinion at that moment. It is difficult as a parent sometimes to be have something thrown in your face. It's hard when you're wrong. And you say something, but I still let you have your opinion. And it's often your right or wrong. Often you're right about it. And it's difficult for me because I'm faced with the idea that I was wrong. And I think some parents don't want to hear that they're wrong. So that's where the you can't say, yeah,
Arden Benner 1:42:58
a lot of you are wrong. Well, I'm wrong a lot, right. Unless your kids just, you know, really wrong, you know, all the time unless they're going down a bad path. Yeah, you're probably right.
Scott Benner 1:43:12
So you think in general, like day to day stuff. That doesn't involve you becoming a meth dealer. Parents are not understanding what's happening with kids here. Oh, I don't know. You will not generalize. No, you're funny. Don't care won't generalize. But you do generalize. You're like I'm not generalizing about people. But white people are definitely like that. Yeah, for sure. And,
Unknown Speaker 1:43:34
like, well, I'm white, so I can definitely say that. You can say that. Well, I okay. I'm not stopping you from saying,
Arden Benner 1:43:39
let's be honest here. The worst, like group of people is white boys. Not white men, but white boys.
Scott Benner 1:43:47
Those are the worst group of people.
Arden Benner 1:43:48
They're like the most like, Oh my god, just like if you punch them in the face once I think they'd be okay. I think they just need a slap in the head.
Scott Benner 1:43:55
Do you think white boys need to be slapped in the head? Why is that? You're from a very diverse place. Like we live in a fairly diverse place.
Arden Benner 1:44:04
Yeah, a lot of white boys who live here look like they have rocks in their head. Like I think if you just slap them across the face once they might be okay,
Scott Benner 1:44:12
maybe just make the rocks into a brain. Yeah. Okay. You think that has something to do with their background? Yeah. Why would that be?
Arden Benner 1:44:21
I don't know. Maybe they just have more stupid look on their face like I don't know. Maybe they're more unattractive? Who knows Dad?
Scott Benner 1:44:28
Do you think that other backgrounds have it more together? Yeah, really? Yeah. Okay, because they maybe it's because their parents then let them curse and say what they thought. I mean, maybe you know what? I don't know. I know. You don't know. I don't know how you start talking about this. Oh, no. Do I actually we were talking about we're talking about a happy Yeah. Wait, how did we get here? I don't know someone comment down below. I'm just kidding. This isn't YouTube. Is it? Yes, it's not YouTube. Okay, that's interesting. So when should we get back together and record the other stuff? When would be good for you keeping anytime before September 2. So we're gonna need to get on the calendar and do this a bunch of times. Yeah. All right. Well, why don't we say goodbye to everybody and then we'll pick some other days. Wait, I can't do it on his birthday. You can't do it. Take that out of here. You can't say Paul's name a friend.
Arden Benner 1:45:26
But we take that out. That was a that was a joke too. So take that out. Okay, please.
Scott Benner 1:45:33
Alright, so we'll um, we'll pick um,
Arden Benner 1:45:36
I definitely can't do it when cause an eye appointment.
Scott Benner 1:45:39
God will stop very busy that day. We could do tomorrow. We get it tomorrow is not that that's his birthday. But we could do tomorrow and Sunday and then we and that we could do tomorrow and Sunday and then maybe finish up next weekend and we'd be done. just burped I did off to edit that out. Yeah. Disgusting. What do you think? We're gonna do it like that? We'll do a little more tomorrow a little more Sunday. I don't think I can do this again. Tomorrow. You can speaking for today. We're not gonna talk nearly as long.
Unknown Speaker 1:46:08
Oh, yeah. what's what's the weather like tomorrow? I think it's supposed to be on TV. Tomorrow, okay, well, I am going out tomorrow with mom. Okay, well, we only need an hour
Arden Benner 1:46:18
Yeah. If any of you know how to so I will pay you to do my portfolio what you
Scott Benner 1:46:24
that you want to cheat to get into college? No,
Arden Benner 1:46:26
I'm not cheating. Again. The colleges need little help. little push.
Scott Benner 1:46:29
So tell what's finished with that. That what do you want to do in college? Oh. What are you interested in?
Arden Benner 1:46:39
I don't need them to know my whole life story. Okay, that's okay. Can you hear me? Yeah. Okay. All right. This is where it gets personal. Yeah, you guys can hear all about my bloody hoo ha. But not what you're generally interested in. Yeah. I don't want you guys know anything else about my life.
Scott Benner 1:46:56
Alright, well, that will stop it right here. Thank you for doing this.
A huge thank you to Omni pod. Get a free 30 day trial on the pod dash today at on the pod comm forward slash juice box. And don't forget that there's no need to wait for the next big thing to come. Because the Omni pod promise tells you that you can upgrade to Omni pods latest technologies for no additional cost as soon as they're available to you and covered by your insurance terms and conditions apply on the pod.com forward slash juice box and get yourself a Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor right now. Right now. dexcom.com forward slash juice box links the shownotes links at Juicebox Podcast comm I have a couple more things to say before this is over.
I just want to say here at the end in case 20 years from now an adult Arden comes back and listen to that art and I love doing this with you. I think you're terrific. I love you. Hope you guys come back and listen to me in art and talk some more about management stuff. We're gonna do our best on a father daughter level. I don't imagine it's going to go incredibly well. But I'll get to tell what we need from her. And we'll get to hear her responses about what she understands what she thinks she can put into practice. And maybe we'll have to make some plans for how to get to where we need to be before she takes off for college. One way or the other. It should at least be funny. So they'll always be that
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#516 How We Eat: Intermittent Fasting
Author and podcaster Gin Stephens explains Intermittent Fasting.
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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 to Episode 516 of the Juicebox Podcast.
On this episode of the podcast I'm joined by fellow podcaster and author Gin Stephens. Jen is the host of intermittent fasting stories, and the intermittent fasting podcast. She's also the author of a number of intermittent fasting books. her newest one clean ish, eat mostly clean, live mainly clean and unlock your body's natural ability to self clean comes out in January of 2022. I've been looking for someone to come on for quite some time to explain intermittent fasting to me, Jen does not have type one or type two diabetes. But she is a person who is very well versed in talking about it. And I've had some interesting run ins with the fasting idea, and I wanted to understand more about it. Maybe this will help you with your life with type one. Or maybe you're the parent of a child with type one who's looking for a new way to eat one way or the other. This is the next in my series of how we episodes. While you're listening, please remember 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 health care plan or becoming bold with insulin. It is incredibly difficult to compile the data needed to help people living with Type One Diabetes. That's why the T one D exchange has asked me to ask you to consider joining the T one D exchange. All you have to do is answer a simple survey that only lasts it's a number of minutes. If it took you more than 10 minutes, I'd be surprised it took me like seven when I filled it out. You need to be a US resident who has type one, or a US resident who is the caregiver or person with type one. That's all you need to be. And you go to P one d exchange.org. Ford slash juice box. When you get there, everything is 100% HIPAA compliant. It is completely completely completely anonymous. And the questions aren't that difficult. They're not deep probing personal questions. They're kind of simple overview questions. But when they get answers from enough people, that data becomes important for people with type one. I'm going to tell you a little more about it later. But please consider going to T one d exchange.org. forward slash juice box. You'll be helping people living with type one diabetes, and you'll be supporting the podcast. I'll tell you more about it later. For now, I'd like you to meet Jim.
Gin Stephens 2:50
Well, hi, I'm so glad to be here. My name is Gin Stephens and I was an elementary teacher for 28 years. So I retired from that. Just before I retired, I wrote a little book called delayed on deny about living an intermittent fasting lifestyle and ran some Facebook groups and it turned into a full time career. So I love teaching and now just manage intermittent fasting support groups, and wrote another book that came out in June of 2020 called Bad speech repeat, which was a New York Times bestseller. So I am loving my intermittent fasting lifestyle and have maintained an over right right around 80 pounds loss since I first lost the weight in 2014 to 2015. So intermittent fasting has turned into my lifestyle and my career. And I just love it. Wow,
Scott Benner 3:44
I have to say I've been looking for someone to talk about this specific subject for a while. And it took me a lot of picking around because you'll reach out to people who were like I do intermittent fasting and I have this or that you think okay, well, they must be used to talking about it. And then you reach out to them like nah, I'd rather not like cheese, how can this be your thing and you don't want to talk about it. But I am so happy to have found you. What's the name of your podcast?
Gin Stephens 4:08
Well, I actually have three podcasts. Okay, the podcast are now you're gonna think I'm crazy. Well, that's a lot of podcasts. Right?
Scott Benner 4:15
You know what, then let's go backwards first, for a second. We'll get to the internet people a listener, like right away, this guy's gonna start talking is that asking about intermittent fasting? But so I want to understand first, you're a teacher. Right? And are you a teacher who's looking to change their lifestyle and finds this thing and then opens up the support group?
Gin Stephens 4:37
Yep, that's exactly what happened. I was even like many of your listeners, I'm sure. I was a chronic dilator I mean, I started dieting in high school before I even needed the diet, right? Because my mother was a dance teacher. And so I was always obsessed with issues counting calories like out in my 11th grade year. This was back in gosh 1984 85 This is how long ago it was I took a computer programming class with words learning basic, that was the name of the programming language. And I programmed a calorie counter program. So I've always had my head and diets. But over the years, you know, as I went to college graduated from college, my weight continued to yo yo, up and down, you know, the yo yos got higher, you know, would go up more than I would go down more. And so it started to look like a big roller coaster over time. And eventually, in 2014, I found myself at 210 pounds, which was officially obese. You know, I had a doctorate and gifted and talented education, and you have a master's degree in natural sciences. And I thought, you know, I'm smart, Why can I not figure out really how to lose the weight and keep it off? And so I just always was in search of that. Thank goodness, intermittent fasting has been the answer, because I have maintained in my goal range since 2015. Even as I've gone through menopause, I'm now on the other side of that, and still maintaining, but you know, it's what I was looking for all those years. And I just didn't know it. Okay,
Scott Benner 6:02
so I have I'm just for context, how tall are you? I'm five, five. Okay, and now you weigh more like 130 ish.
Gin Stephens 6:12
Yeah, right around there. I haven't weighed myself in years, because I just go by the fit of my clothes now. Right? So you must be close to fit.
Scott Benner 6:21
Is that? Is that a freeing idea to not step on a scale?
Gin Stephens 6:24
Yes, it really, really is. Like, in context, I'm coming from the beach. I'm at the beach right now. And I've been here for two weeks, I'm going home tomorrow. And you know, I know my weight would be up. If I were weighing the scale, just because I've eaten differently. You know, it's been a week, your family, I ate out a lot. And so you know what it got to me. But all this lifetime of dieting, you know, I would get on the scale and see that the number was up intellectually, I know, well, it's because they ate differently. I didn't gain, you know, fat, all this fat over the course of two weeks at the beach. And it goes down over the next few days. But then you start having those diety thoughts, like, Oh, I better go on a diet. And what I learned with intermittent fasting is it all takes care of itself, you know, you live the lifestyle. It just all works out, like I said, so I've been maintaining my weight since 2015. You know, if my honest GPS get a little tight, then I just realized that our time to maybe tighten up those eating windows a little bit, and it all works out? Well, it's so much more freeing, and I lose that diet thought that I was so trapped in before,
Scott Benner 7:25
how much of being a teacher helps you organize a support group
Gin Stephens 7:30
100%, I'm gonna tell you the very best preparation for working with a large group of adults, as well as being an elementary school teacher, because you learn classroom management and how to deal with, with people, you know, little people are, you know, grow up to be big people, and they have the same personalities. And so, you know, my skills is managing groups of people really has helped me with running the Facebook groups. I've since left Facebook, I'm no longer there. But which is a whole different story. But it really is very helpful. And also, I realized, being an elementary teacher, it helps me write books. You know, people are like, Wow, you've written this in a way that I really understand it. And one of my friends said, Gosh, I think all books should be written by teachers. And I think, yeah, that's what we're trying to do. We're trying to deliver content to people in a way that makes sense. That's my whole background, you
Scott Benner 8:26
and I talk in pictures. And I think that's why this podcast is positive for people. Because I'm explaining how to how I use insulin for my daughter and a number of other things. And what I hear back more often from people than not is that I really understand it when you explain it. It's very easy to grasp. It's not very technical. It's in my head. Yeah, it's just your boy.
Gin Stephens 8:50
Yeah, I was had an endocrinologist. I mean, think about this. I'm an elementary teacher, I had an endocrinologist, email me and say, Wow, your explanation of I don't I don't even know what probably I was talking about insulin and the type two diabetes and fasting this of course, very different from type one diabetes, as you know, but he said, it really helped me understand in a way I'd never understood it before. I'm like, well, that's just wacky.
Scott Benner 9:16
Yeah, I just had an endo. I just recorded with an endo last week who came on to tell me that the podcast changed how they talk to their patients. Wow, is very cool. But it's it just goes to show that some people are good at delivering a message and some people aren't. And I suspected maybe the teaching part helped you? Yeah, I'm just gonna stay here for one more second before we get to the fasting thing. You said you're not on Facebook anymore. Did you create your own group off online somewhere else? It's not through Facebook.
Gin Stephens 9:42
You know, I did. I did. And it's it's small. I had gotten up to almost 500,000 group members across my combined Facebook groups. But you know, Facebook started making a lot of mistakes with their artificial intelligence. In fact, just this morning, and I haven't been on Facebook since March, I left March 29 is the day I walked away. You know, recording this, gosh, three months later, almost Well, almost to the day. But just today when I left one of my Facebook groups still active, but run by moderators, but I haven't been there just today I got a deem by Facebook me. Obviously, it's something I posted months and months ago. But they said that I posted something that went against cybersecurity. I mean, I have not been posting on Facebook, like I said, since March, that's been over three months. And today, and because I'm the quote, admin of the group that goes against group studying against the group, if we get too many of those, they shut down the group, right. And, you know, we're intermittent fasting support group. And so my fear was, in the fall, they started cracking down on health groups. And, you know, we all know, you know, the spread of quote, misinformation is something they're trying to go against, but they were shutting down, like essential oil groups and things like that, like a friend of mine had a cooking group, and it got shut down overnight while she was asleep. And she didn't know why. And she was also, you know, off of Facebook, like she had her account had been deactivated. And then her group of 10,000 had been shut down. So I started thinking, you know, I did all of my work on Facebook, and with one click, they could shut me down,
Scott Benner 11:17
right? From an algorithm.
Gin Stephens 11:19
Yeah, yeah, based on I mean, I don't what did I do months ago, or even I may put it in a post I made years ago, I,
Scott Benner 11:26
someone in my group was once reported for bullying by the algorithm. And I looked, and they were just sarcastically saying something to someone that everyone involved in the conversation completely understood.
Gin Stephens 11:36
Oh, we got a Dang. And on the group, I'm one of the moderators, and it counts more when it's a moderator and admin, that's what gets your group shut down. But one of the moderators got a ding for saying, it was it was called bullying. And she had said this to a group member, she's like, well, don't worry, once you're fat adapted, fasting gets much easier. Okay, well, the AI saw your fat that's in contact, your fat adapted? Yeah, I mean, that's a perfectly good contact. And then she appealed it, and she got like a Facebook Jail for like a week. And it counted against the group. Because she was a moderator. And we're like, wait a minute, this is crazy. So I, you know, I started feeling the threat of I could really lose everything I've built, you know, you don't have email addresses of the group numbers. So I walked away, and it feels great
Scott Benner 12:25
for you. That's excellent. So and I agree, I that my Facebook page, I mean, I don't have 500,000. But there's 13,000 people in there, I only started at maybe a year and a half ago, and much more niche group of people, obviously. But, uh, I have that thought sometimes like, what if I like, what if this just gets taken from me by an algorithm? Or by something like that it's helping all these people? How do I find them to say, I don't even know what to do. So maybe I'll have to, in the back of my mind, start figuring out what you learned. So people can have a safer place. But nevertheless, I asked you on the show, because I am probably I am not a good eater in general, meaning that if it's green, or natural, or in any way reasonably good for you, I probably never had it before or eating it under protest that when I was 12. And I, my body retains water, like I'm in the seventh month of a pregnancy. So if I, if I eat too much of anything, I can wake up in the morning, four pounds heavier. It's absolutely right. It's It's crazy. So I'm always and forever and the people know listening, I'm always in forever just like messing with one thing or another, but I never do anything specifically. And then one day I run into intermittent fasting. And I have not kept up with it for I guess reasons that have nothing to do with how well it worked. But I went to a schedule of like eating from, I guess 11 to seven maybe 11am to 7pm. And I started with like a I don't I think I might have started with like a 36 hour water fast. And I went right into intermittent and then I must have lost 15 pounds in like a week. Wow. waterway 100%. And but as I was going and then I kept moving. I started testing the theory, I started acting like a like a scientist, I was like, I'm gonna eat everything in between this gap of time. And it was stuff that I don't even normally eat stuff that I would not consider Good for you. And I couldn't gain weight. Right? And so I don't understand that. And then here's the other side of it. My daughter's had type one diabetes, and she's two she's 17. Now this podcast reaches a lot of people who use insulin and have type one and type two diabetes. When my daughter wakes up in the morning, and overnight her blood sugars are absolutely fantastic because there's no fast acting insulin in her and there's no food, that kind of stuff. And it hit me one day. Arden fasts my daughter Just not on the schedule you would think of she basically goes to bed at 10pm and doesn't really wake up and start eating till nine or 10am. She's basically a 1212 eater, right. And her blood sugars are super stable in that time and no lows, like just very stable. So I'm looking for somebody to really explain the nuts and bolts of intermittent fasting, how it works. And I think you might be the person so whatever it is, you tell people about it, I'd love it if you could tell my listeners now.
Gin Stephens 15:30
Well, you know, you've seen it in action and your daughter her blood sugar is very stable because she's not taking in any any fuel wants to sleeping. And our bodies just running right along. You know, our bodies can can be fueled by what we're taking in. you're consuming or our bodies can be fueled from within, right. So within, like, let's say your fasting, there are two places your body can get your fuel one would be glycogen stores. I mean, how basic Do I need to get into this?
Scott Benner 16:05
Like in your liver, your liver, your liver holds glycogen
Gin Stephens 16:08
up? Yeah, your liver, your liver holds glycogen, your muscles hold glycogen, right? So you know, if nothing's coming in, that's the first place your body's going to turn. And it's gonna you know, it days since to save the glycogen in your muscles for for activity, but it'll it'll dip into that liver glycogen. And it's still nothing is coming in. Oh, and by the way, that's why you may see during a fad that you may see blood sugar go up. And you might think, well, how is this possible, I haven't eaten anything was my blood sugar up? Well, that's because your liver is releasing the glycogen. And it's going in your bloodstream. So you have to be aware of that your blood sugar can go up while you're fasting because the it's coming from within your body. So once your liver gets depleted of glycogen, to a certain degree, your body's like, Alright, dude, we got to do something else, we got to get some more fuel. And that's when it starts tapping into your fat stores for fuel for fuel. Sorry, you drink some coffee, I'm drinking my black coffee right now. So you start tapping in your fat stores for fuel and your body really has a lot of fat stores on board. And it can keep you going for a long time. And it can also make ketones out of your fat stores that fuels your brain very well. This is not the same as you know, diabetic ketoacidosis, obviously, which is something you'll have to watch out for. But you you feel great. So your brain has a steady source of fuel from the the ketones that are being produced. And you know, a lot of people think that you only make ketones if you're on the keto diet, and that's not true. Fasting is very ketogenic. And so, you know, I carbs my eating window every day. But during the fast, I find myself, you know, dipping into ketosis, you know, as I get into the later part of the fast, you know, before my eating window opens. So I have great mental clarity, and great sustained energy during the day, you know, for whatever I need. So I really think our bodies are meant to be metabolically flexible like this, if you think about the standard way that we've been really told to eat for the past few decades, you know, breakfast is, quote, the most important meal of the day, and you need to eat to boost your metabolism. And all these things, we've been told that people are eating like six times a day snacks in between, we're constantly putting sources of energy into our body. And so we never have to tap into our stored fat for fuel.
Scott Benner 18:33
Right, you're just always staying on, you're always keeping the gas tank full. So you don't know
Gin Stephens 18:37
exactly, we're always in the Fed state. And so we never, we never have a chance to even you know, to dip into our fat stores. Really, and you know, we're meant to be metabolically flexible, which means we're able to, you know, change our fuel source as needed, once your body adjusts to intermittent fasting courses doesn't happen on day one. But once you adjust, your body can just do what it needs to do and you don't feel terrible.
Scott Benner 19:03
You feel great in the fasted state, your body just makes that shift naturally like it's supposed to do. It's funny, as I was doing it, it occurred to me, I've been talking about this a lot lately that because of the internet, you have to name things because if they don't have a name, you can't look for it. Right? But if if you would have eaten like this 30 years ago, what somebody would have said, like, how do you eat, you would have said, Oh, I skipped breakfast and I don't eat when the sun goes down. That might be all you'd say. Yeah, you know, and that really is what you're doing right? And you're creating this, this thing that you're describing this time where your body can kind of just say, Alright, now I'm going to work on your fat. I'm going to take the storage and then at some point, I guess you get the storage depleted down where physically you appear more of the way you're hoping to. And then you eat during the eating schedule, which puts it back in and then you stop eating during the fasting schedule and then your body He pulls it back out again. And then you're in this kind of nice back and forth
Gin Stephens 20:03
all this. Absolutely, that's what happens. And another name for intermittent fasting, that's a little more sciency time restricted eating, you know that that sounds a little bit better to some people, you know, oh, I follow time restricted eating, which means you just eat within the window of time. And you know, the cats out of the bag, a lot of people are like, I'm not gonna call intermittent fasting, you can call it whatever you want that I mean, it is called fasting, you know, in the general landscape, but time restricted eating just maybe sounds a little better to some people. But even though it's the same thing,
Scott Benner 20:32
and I gotta tell you, I don't care what it sounds like, I there's, there's a whole series inside of the podcast mind called how we eat and somebody with Type One Diabetes comes on, and talks about their eating style, so that people can see that people eat in all different ways. My theory, my theory being everyone with type ones using insulin, they just need to understand how to use it for their style. And so I just couldn't find a type one who intermittent fast. And it seemed more technical than just explaining how they did it. So that's why I asked you to come on. And I presume
Gin Stephens 21:05
Have you ever read the book mastering diabetes? Have you seen that one?
Scott Benner 21:08
I don't read as a general rule, because I'm a boy. No, because I'm very busy. And I and I have seen people on the Facebook page talk about that. But to the extent that I understand what it is, I think it's they eat like a lot of fruit and vegetables and the
Gin Stephens 21:24
type one that that that's what's what's why I brought it up their type one. And they are I don't know if they're completely vegan, but they're very plant based, low fat plant based. But they talk about, you know, why that works so well, in for type one, and also, but the intermittent fasting, so they do intermittent fasting and like that plant base,
Scott Benner 21:44
my my thought around eating is that it's sort of like my thought around everything, but you can't, there might be a perfect solution. But I don't think you can make everybody do it. So I prefer to just say, look, here are all the options. Maybe one of these fits you.
Gin Stephens 22:01
Well, we're all different when it comes to what foods work for our bodies. And science is actually telling us this more and more. You know, the whole field of personalized nutrition is popping up. They're doing a lot of really interesting research on it. A lot of it comes from our gut microbiome. And like we've found, you know, I get like, let's just say glycaemic index, you know, we've all heard of the glycemic index and glycemic response, probably your audience more than most. But it blew my mind when I realized when I finally understood that we all have individual glycaemic responses, like the way I respond to a potato might be different from the way you respond to a potato. And, you know, it, there's not a universal glycaemic response to any food.
Scott Benner 22:41
Yeah. You know, if I, if I completely cut sugar out of my life, my gi system doesn't work as well. Really, I don't need a ton of it, but I need a little bit of sugar and then the entire process start to finish goes better. That was a really I
Gin Stephens 22:58
need to eat starchy, starchy carbs, I feel better when I eat starchy carbs, you know, I tried to do keto, back in the day before intermittent fasting the whole summer of 2014. I was like, I'm gonna lose weight with keto because then I'll never have to quote diet again. I'm just gonna eat this. I'm just forever by lose any weight. And I felt awful. And I never felt satisfied. I never felt full even though I was eating so much fat, so much food. And then that was when I said, Forget it. I'm just gonna do intermittent fasting. And I'd heard about it, I knew about it. I dabbled in it, but I couldn't make it stick as a lifestyle. Then finally, in 2014, when I switched from keto to intermittent fasting, I reintroduced carbs. And I finally started losing weight. And I felt so much better. And I'm like, Hmm, I really do need to eat carbs. And you know, when I try to try to avoid them, I do not feel satisfied. So I believe that we're really are all different. goes back to what lives in your gut microbiome.
Scott Benner 23:56
Well, let me ask you this when you're not eating when you're in the fasting part of the intermittent fasting, so the intermittent is I'm intermittently eating and the fast thing is, I'm also intermittently fasting when I'm in the fasting part. What if forget, type ones for a second? Okay, type twos and people who don't have diabetes is is fasting lessening your need for insulin?
Gin Stephens 24:20
Well, it would Yes, because you're our bodies know people whose bodies produce insulin are in our bodies when we release the insulin in response to food in our blood sugar going up and so with those of us who have have a working pancreas, insulin is coming out. Like if I were to drink a diet soda right now, for example, my brain says Oh, we got something sweet coming in. That means sugar because our brains don't understand Oh no, this is made in the lab. This is artificially sweet because all throughout history, everything that came in that tasted sweet was fruit or honey or sugar or you know it was going to give us a blood sugar was going to go up. Doesn't happen with with the diet sodas. So our bodies release insulin in response with this valic phase insulin response. And so high levels of insulin are actually anti lipolytic, which means keep us from tapping into store fat. So, like if I just drink diet soda all day long and had no food coming in, I would not be tapping into my fat stores very well, because my insulin would stay up even though my foods coming in because I'm sending that food signal. You know, we don't want to send food signals to our body when we're not really eating.
Scott Benner 25:42
Interesting. Okay,
Gin Stephens 25:43
it is very interesting. I learned all of this from reading Dr. Jason funks. work. I didn't understand that before. You know, we all have been taught that oven has zero calories. It's diet, it's good for you. And when I read the obesity code, I was like, Oh, no wonder we all have all these problems. Yeah, type two diabetes is really a disease that starts with too much insulin. You were were insulin resistant, it follows you know, a pattern of insulin resistance. Insulin is too high, our body becomes more resistant. It all just breaks down over time. And leading to insulin dependent type two diabetics, you know, my dad is in that situation. But I actually read a great article. I think it was written by a nurse practitioner, I can't remember but it was when I was researching for fasciae strappy that talked about hyperinsulinemia and our fasting insulin levels. And again, this is not going to be the same thing for someone with Type One Diabetes, but for someone on the way to type two diabetes. And basically she said we're testing the wrong thing. You know, we track your a one C, and blood sugars, but really, fasted insulin starts to go up even before your a one c starts to go up. So that would be the thing to actually track your tracking unit. She said the wrong thing. If everyone knows what their fasted insulin is doing, you could actually take care of that and maybe prevent your one C from from going up prevent the the progression to type two diabetes, my mom and I'm not a doctor. So yeah, listen,
Scott Benner 27:17
people listening to this know this. They're not getting medical advice here from me. Yeah, bad for me. Yeah, don't worry. There's a big disclaimer at the beginning. So you just didn't hear it. I so my mom is 78 years old, and I'm adopted. So she's not biologically my mom. But she started about a year ago, seeing her a one seat rise, and her father had type two diabetes. And I said to her, like, we're in the middle of a pandemic. And I'm like, Mom, listen, here's what I want you to do. was like, I put her on an intermittent schedule, and a lower carb than she does maybe not more than maybe 30 carbs a day. And her a once he came. I mean, she's 78 and she wasn't being active and ra once he dropped down like a point, awesome.
Gin Stephens 28:01
Intermittent fasting does that. Also, you know, you got to make sure that during the fast you're not doing anything that would make your body think foods coming in so you avoid anything with any kind of sweetener. No matter what they tell you. They're like, Oh, no glycemic response. Well, not right now. Avoid any kind of sweetener or food flavor. Don't put lemon in your water. Don't put cucumber in your water, avoid, you know, fruity herbal teas like Apple Cinnamon delight, that kind of thing. You don't want your body to think foods coming in.
Scott Benner 28:29
Can we talk about this on another episode where a CD who's on named Jenny said that when a person who doesn't have diabetes, smells food, or even believes they're about to eat that their insulin starts to work? Yeah, to help keep your blood sugar levels true.
Gin Stephens 28:46
Yeah, it's true. It's your body sensing these food cues. And that cephalic phase insulin response, you know, your body's like, Alright, food is coming in. So you know, we don't want to worry about things we can't control. Like if you're walking through the mall and you smell Cinnabon, you don't need to freak out but
Scott Benner 29:04
I just pictured someone throwing themselves off the second floor into the planter,
Gin Stephens 29:09
where the clothes pan on their nose. You don't need to do all that right? Just you know, don't put anything in you can control what you're drinking, you can control that very easily.
Scott Benner 29:17
Yeah. So if I'm intermittent fasting, I don't even want to have tea before my my eating time starts
Gin Stephens 29:25
you can have you can have black tea, plain tea, green tea, anything that's made of actual tea,
Scott Benner 29:30
that I put sugar into it or something like that. Boom, I'm done. Yeah,
Gin Stephens 29:34
I don't want to add anything to it. So a bitter flavor profile like it's found in black coffee because I'm drinking my black coffee right now. I had to learn to love it because I used to be a heavy stevia user I would put vanilla cream stevia and cinnamon in my coffee and it was a delicious treat. My brain thought it was a delicious treat to but switching to black coffees made all the difference because the bitter flavor profile is not associated with, you know, calories are coming in. So your brain does not see that as a food cue.
Scott Benner 30:04
Does, can the schedule move about? Like, can I, I can do 10 to six one day or noon to eight, like if I'm gonna go out to dinner later like it does that work?
Gin Stephens 30:13
Absolutely. And, you know, you can, you're talking about an eight hour eating window and an eight hour eating window is a great schedule for someone who is not trying to lose weight. Someone who just wants my husband, for example, he never needed to lose weight. He's a PhD organic chemist, and he does a loose 16 eight, he eats lunch, he eats dinner, that's it. And on the weekends, sometimes you might shift a little earlier and have like a really like a brunch kind of lunch, if it's gonna be doing a lot of yard work or something. And it's flexible for him. Now, if you're a woman like me, or if you're trying to lose weight, you may need a shorter eating window, you know, five hour eating window was my weight loss sweet spot. And waiting till later in the day to open my eating window worked better for me, but it's really your your study of one, you've got to figure out what feels like a lifestyle to you. Because intermittent fasting is not something that you want to start and stop, start and stop. You know, your metabolic flexibility can be affected. If you go long stretches without doing any intermittent fasting, you'll have to go through the adjustment period again. And that's the hardest part. So you want to you want to find a lifestyle that is the right amount of fasting for what feels good to you, and allows you to meet whatever the goals are the path,
Scott Benner 31:31
that adjustment period. I am obviously it's probably different for other people, but is there an average on how many weeks until you're not you don't feel hungry, and it feels normal to you.
Gin Stephens 31:41
It really does vary from person to person. So if anyone is starting intermittent fasting, I would encourage them to read or Scott, listen to my book fast, please repeat. It's on Audible. And I actually read it to you, I have something in there called the 28 day Fast Start, and that is your adjustment period. And so that's kind of an average. Now, if you're, you know, pretty metabolically healthy, you might adjust more quickly. Or if you've dabbled in intermittent fasting before, if you're eating, you know, a low carb diet that would also help your body probably make the transition more quickly. versus if you're someone who has been battling your weight for a long time you know, your type two diabetic, you've been obese for a while, it might take your body a couple of months, and maybe 28 days is not going to be enough, you may need to tweak what you're eating as well. Over time, it's really going to be different for everybody, you need to ease in as much as you need to. But understand the goal, you know, you fast clean, which you avoiding any of those food cues, you stick to plain water, no flavors added. You can have sparkling water as long as it's unflavored black coffee, plain tea, stick to the clean fast. And then even your eating window, close reading window, do it again tomorrow. And you just really learn to listen to your body. If you ever feel shaky or nauseous during the during the adjustment period, or really anytime that that may be a sign that your blood sugar is too low now that your audience would be testing their blood sugar so they would know you know in that case, go ahead and eat Don't be a hero. Don't push them through something that your body's telling you eat and you eat.
Scott Benner 33:20
I also have a fairly big caregiver audience too. So a lot of people who don't have type one that you know our parents and you know, might need the information as well like this. This is a an interesting episode for me kind of crosses a lot of different different audience members that I don't normally do. What what are their you said the fast clean What about when you're eating?
Gin Stephens 33:50
When you're eating you know, you eat what what you how you want to eat. You know, as I already said, there's no one way of eating that works for everyone. You know, they're there for I'll use two books for example. One is mastering diabetes that I already mentioned, written by two guys are type one they eat. Like I said, it might even be vegan like that vegan, and that's what they recommend. Well, then on the on the flip side, we've got the diabetes code written by Dr. Jason Fung and he represents our he recommends that you use a high fat low carb approach. And both approaches they're like 180 from each other, but they're working for different people. But what both have in common is the fasting. You know, so that's that's a commonality between both books. You have intermittent fasting in there. And then during the eating window, you find a way that works well for you. I mean, I eat all the foods. I'm also metabolically healthy, I don't have diabetes, and I never was diagnosed with pre diabetes or anything. Although I was probably on my way at 210 pounds. I had a lot of abdominal fat. And you know, that's a big sign of metabolic syndrome. So I'm pretty sure I wasn't you know, especially Looking at my dad, I was on that path. But you know, I eat all the foods. I feel better when I eat real foods and avoid ultra processed foods, although I still eat ultra processed foods every day. Like I love crackers and chips. I just do fit them in around my whole foods instead of making them the centerpiece.
Scott Benner 35:18
Yeah, so you're not having a bag of chips? Oh, gosh, no. So what if I'm gonna go down the other side of the spectrum for a second? What if you're a person is like, I can eat on a schedule, but I'm not going to eat well? Will there be any benefit for them? If they're, like, literally at McDonald's during their eating window?
Gin Stephens 35:37
Well, you know, yes, I like to say the magic happens during the clean fast, although what you eat is important. You're gonna be, you're gonna be better, you know, we need to nourish our bodies, because that's really what makes them work well, but they did a study with rats, I believe. And so I'm just talking about at the top of my head here. I don't have the details in front of me, but they fed different groups of rats different ways. And they also did intermittent fasting with the rats and the ones who continue to eat. I think they called it the cafeteria diet. It was, you know, ultra processed foods. Those rats had health benefits from the fasting even though they they ate the junky food.
Scott Benner 36:18
I made it I go, you stumbled and you use two different colloquialisms and you blinded them. You started I said, I'm talking out of my head, which I believe is I'm talking out of my ass and talking off the top of my head put the
Gin Stephens 36:29
guy did. I'm also in the south. And we don't say we don't say bad word. I know. Of course, we're trying to women not to do that. Also, I taught school for 28 years so often and changing what I'm saying.
Scott Benner 36:44
I like I said, we don't say that you just don't say that more people can hear you.
Gin Stephens 36:47
Well, we say around our trusted people. And really, things have changed over time to almost 52. So it's hard to unlearn those habits. And again, you have to be super careful in a classroom full of kids.
Scott Benner 36:57
It was delightful. When I heard the two colloquialisms get blended together and you rolled right through it. I was like, that's so interesting. Am I not asking you anything? I should be asking you because I really don't know enough about this?
Gin Stephens 37:09
Well, you know, the one thing I guess you might want to ask is, is it different? Or I'm just gonna tell you, I'm gonna just answer it, you know, the different for you, whether you're type one or type two? And the answer is yes, obviously, you know, you're going to if you're type one, you're going to really need to possibly work with your endocrinologist. Hopefully, your endocrinologist is is knowledgeable about intermittent fasting more and more of them are. But you may need a different plan than someone who's type two, of course,
Scott Benner 37:40
right? Well, I just going off of that and telling you something you might never need to know, but might find interesting. So my daughter uses less Basal insulin overnight than she does during the day. Right? And so I'm imagining that if people want to try this with type one, they're gonna run into a similar situation, but it might not be as Stark and helpful as they think. Because there's still other things at play that when you have the pancreas where any
Gin Stephens 38:10
factors? Yeah, I mean, right. And be aware that your blood sugar might go up, you know, like after the workout, for example, if you're fasting, and you work out, you might see your blood sugar pop up, because your muscles are dumping that glycogen, you know, and so you still have to be on top of that, even though no food has come in, you do have to keep your eye on it.
Scott Benner 38:34
I just recorded a variable Episode The other day that may or may not be up by the time this goes up that discusses the difference for type ones between anaerobic exercise and aerobic exercise and what happens to your blood sugar in both situations. And when you tax your muscles lift heavy weights, you are most definitely going to see a blood sugar rise afterwards. Yeah, right. I'm even talking about growth hormone for kids. Hormones from you know, menstrual cycles. Like all this stuff is not going to be completely squelched by as far as I can tell through my daughter through a fasting schedule. But what I can tell you is that, that during my daughter's eating schedule, she eats about like every other 17 year old kid on the planet. Yeah, some days it's a salad and she looks like a dainty lady and Downton Abbey. And other days. She's like, I need nachos and cheese. And I was like, Okay, and then you end up at some like fast food place and she's dipping nachos into a giant vat of what I don't even know what it is. They say it's case. Oh, but I mean, come on. What does that even mean? But, but so she eats sort of, you know, off and on like that, but her weight is very stable. That's good. Yeah. And a lot of times her age as she gets older. No, no, I know. But but but I'm just saying that. I also know children her age that don't eat on a fasting schedule and mix stuff like that in and they don't have the amount of success. She also exercises and You know, you know she, I don't want to paint her as a babysitter. She's a, I would call her an American eater, right. But if there's a more healthy side to that she's, she's off to that side a little bit. That's gonna show snack on carrots.
Gin Stephens 40:15
Right? Oh, that's good. Yeah, getting getting in the vegetables. That's important. You know, I, I was raised, you know, during the time when we just thought if you just took a vitamin, it'd be fine. You know, who needs to eat vegetables, take your vitamins. And so I've had to learn a lot about food. I have a new book coming out, called clean ish. It's coming out on January of 2020. It's available for pre order now. But it really you know, it's I was doing research for that book. It really helped me see, oh, gosh, we need more than just that vitamin pill. You know, we need to nourish our bodies with the, you know, fruits and vegetables. And so I'm making even more of an effort than I was before I eat the rainbow. Not the Skittles, but a real rainbow Rainbow.
Scott Benner 41:02
Well, I tell people all the time that you know, you can, you can figure out how to use insulin for almost anything. But just because you know how to Bolus for Fruity Pebbles doesn't mean you should have them every day. Right? You know, right. And that eating less processed food. Also, I bring it up here a lot, Jen, I cut out oils. And it made a big difference in my life.
Gin Stephens 41:25
Oh, yeah. Those inflammatory oils? Really. I mean, I have a co host on the intermittent fasting podcast. And she's been talking about those for a long time. And I was like, Yeah, yeah, blah, blah, blah. I don't want to hear about that. But when I started really digging into the science, she was right that 70 of those seed oils that are the modern oils are just not good for us. So I picked the olive oil at home. You know, an avocado oil is also a better choice.
Scott Benner 41:55
All I have is I only use cold pressed, not processed olive oil. That's the only thing it's in the house with the exception if I want to be honest for a second, there is a small can of canola oil, which is not I found not good. But I needed to pop popcorn. And other than that it has no use in our life. I can't drink. Yeah. So and popcorn is a thing around here. So and I make it like it's 1948 in a pot with a lid, you know? Yeah, and put real butter on it. Oh, you're gonna have popcorn? I don't understand going halfway.
Gin Stephens 42:30
No butter and salt. That's delicious. But But yeah, ultra processed foods are a problem. You know, I really think if we could, if we could do cheap things for the world, everyone stopped eating ultra processed foods. And when we stopped drinking all these garbage beverages, which really actually, point one would take care of because, you know, you go to the beverage aisle of any grocery store mega Mart, Costco anywhere, be that right? There is so many of our health problems, everything. We've got artificial flavors, sweeteners. It's just It's terrible. But if we all just started eating real food,
Scott Benner 43:05
I think the health of the world would just be changed, just boom like that. So the people who listened to the show mostly probably know that a number of weeks ago, I had to go, you'll probably enjoy this as a person as a podcast. My son had to go from the east coast to the west coast. And he had to stay there for five weeks to work out. He's training for a baseball thing. And the first week he was going to be there. We didn't have lodging for him. And I was going to be with him the first week and we just couldn't set up lodging. And a listener of the show put us up in their house for a week. Which I know even probably sounds crazy to you. But I had
Gin Stephens 43:45
no it does not sound crazy to me because I've had events with my community we've on cruises, and so Yeah, no kidding. It's free. Free COVID
Scott Benner 43:54
so the reason I'm telling you this is because my son and I lived with this, this beautiful family for a week. But they don't drink anything but water. Yeah, and by the time we were there five or six days, I started looking in the mirror and thinking like I'm losing weight. Yeah, but they eat more than I do. And so I was eating on their schedule not like times a day but like they have big they have a big meal every night for dinner like kind of thing like their nights I don't eat very much and things like that. And I was like losing weight really quickly. Right so I got home and I said to my wife I was like can we make one small change? There's always Snapple in the house diet snap, I was like, Can we stop buying that? Oh,
Gin Stephens 44:35
yeah, that's that. Yep. I would absolutely not drink that. Just drink water. Really? I really think if every person whether you're fasting or not only drank plain water with no flavors added black coffee, plain tea, don't add anything to it. I think the health of the world would just blossom he amazing. Yeah.
Scott Benner 44:53
Well, so then I got a little I got a little sneaky. And I was like well let me like try to make this a little better for the people in the house and I brought in like a bubbly water, but it has a flavor in it. Yeah. And I'm not losing weight the way I did when I was at those people's houses,
Gin Stephens 45:06
I promise you stick to the stick to the unflavored. The plain like I have, you know, the lucky boy in the blue can. That's unflavored. Okay, I'll drink that. I also like sanpellegrino mineral water in a flavor added. You know, I like the bubbles. How about that?
Scott Benner 45:22
I just all occurred to me as you were talking, honestly, over the last 15 minutes. I was like, Oh, I cut out the Snapple. Yeah, didn't replace it with just pure water. How about that? Yeah.
Gin Stephens 45:32
And even you know, forget about what I talked about before with the Alec pays insulin response, you know, then the diet sweetener, or the artificial sweeteners affect our gut microbiome in a negative way. We're learning more about that. And so much of our health stems from the gut, you know, even like what your glycaemic responses, it's related to what lives in your gut. So, you know, we want to encourage a healthy population in our gut and they thrive on the real foods, and the ultra processed foods cultivate an entirely different gut microbiome, that it's going to lead you towards, you know, unhealthy outcomes. Will you see that over and over and over? Every study confirms that there's never been a study that shows that ultra processed foods lead to better health outcome. Over time, two things
Scott Benner 46:21
come to mind at once. I had a really beautiful doctor on and she talked about just thyroid stuff, because right, autoimmune things kind of travel in packs. So if you have type one, you might have a thyroid, you might have celiac, like there's other things that would pop up and they'd at least be in the family. So I add them into the show. And she was talking about gut health. And she's like, it's one of those things we can't really quantify yet the way we want to. But there's something there. And it's really important.
Gin Stephens 46:51
It really is. I'm following a researcher. His name is Dr. Tim Spector. He's out of UK, the UK and he is doing a lot of work with personalized nutrition right now. And you know, he's studied identical twins and a lot of genetic research, but he's really focused on the gut now. And it's just astonishing how important it is.
Scott Benner 47:11
Well, I don't know how much this connects. But I told you, I stopped I took all the other oils out of my life, which means now I won't eat something that's deep fried, you know, you know, that kind of stuff. But we ended up in a, you know, one of our like, kind of local bar restaurants recently. And I just stayed away from things that were fried. But then someone didn't finish their chicken wings. And I had a couple of them. And I recognize that I'm sorry if this is too much information for people, but I recognized after I ate them, I am now on a countdown to need to be near a bathroom. Because my stomach is not accustomed to the oil anymore.
Gin Stephens 47:50
That's true. I went You know, you're at the beach with my family. We went to my dad really wanted to go to a seafood buffet. And I was like, Okay, well fine. Keep the dad happy. And so we had the whole family and we went and you know everything there was fraud, pretty much and the crab legs dipping them in that fake butter. It was you know, not the kind of food I would normally eat. But you're right. The next day I was in the bathroom more than normal. Yeah, it was that food and then I was so puffy, I felt inflamed. But you know, I'm, as I talked about in my new book title, clean ish, I'm clean ish. I'm not, you know, obsessive, like gonna sit there with my family and refuse to eat because this is not what I normally eat. Or, you know, go munching just, you know, Iceberg lettuce off the salad bar. I was like, Okay, this is not what I do normally, but I'm going to, I'm going to eat this food and it'll be okay.
Scott Benner 48:39
I'm learning a lot from you. Because you and I are really similar except I didn't stick to the intermittent fasting. I I'm, I'm ish around it like I'm not your intermittent fasting ish. I'm not Yeah, I'm not eating after dark kind of things. But I am eating earlier in the day than I should be. But I was gonna say about the ish part this weekend coming up, July 4, right. And we're getting together at my mother in law's house for the first time in a long time. And I said, Well, I'm gonna bring a pizza oven. I'll make pizzas but I'm gonna make the dough from hand like like actually from scratch. I'll use double zero, like finely milled flour, which believe it or not, impacts me differently than buying like flowers that are milled the American way. I do believe that. Yeah. super interesting. And so when you come down to it with this one that being is the flour the dough is going to be nothing more than flour, salt, Eastern water, and then I will spend a little extra money to put a higher quality cheese on it. Right and and you know, a couple of toppings they'll be like mushrooms they have some might be a little sausage for somebody that's really going to be it and my body will process that pizza. No problem.
Gin Stephens 49:47
Absolutely. You're so right that I actually know my own wheat into flour on occasion and, and bake from Super scratch and it's just such a different experience that really makes a huge difference. You know when people are like a pizza is so bad for you? Well, not not if you're making it like this, right? I mean, if I ordered like a Pizza Hut pizza with Lord knows what they even put on that right? I
Scott Benner 50:10
know exactly what I'm thinking like I thinking of that pizza right now building it in my head. And I know every base ingredient that's in there and I mean down to the fact that it's only that thing that's in there, there's nothing right involved in it. And it's easier on my system.
Gin Stephens 50:25
100% it really is astonishing. So, you know, that's the thing you can eat all the foods you love. I mean, I eat potatoes all the time. But you know, when I when I make them at home, I'll cut a potato up, toss it in olive oil, throw it in the oven, roast it, and it's like Kevin frost, but you know, roasted in my oven. Yeah. And I don't feel bad. However, the first night I was at the beach when I drove here. I went over to the little beach bar because I always like to go there one time and I had a burger and fries and I felt like garbage. Yeah, there's got to be my stomach. Like why did I need these fries with me? My stomach hurt? Why did I do it?
Scott Benner 51:01
Jim, do you? Do you ever talk about that on the on your show? Do you ever think about it your personal life? Like I know everything you've said today makes 100% sense to me. I've seen it happen in my own life. Why will later today I walk past the candy dish and put a gumdrop in my mouth? Like Why? What happened to me when I was little Jen?
Gin Stephens 51:22
Because we're humans, and you know, we, we were not living the life of perfection, right? It's not easy to do that. And it doesn't feel good. And but you do start like I've gotten better at the, you know, thinking about how will I feel later if I have that? Do I really want to go through that like like I've gone through recently, and we're going through menopause. alcohol affects me more dramatically now than it used to. So you're used to every night at the beach? Definitely, I would have at least a couple glasses of wine. But I don't sleep as well when I drink alcohol. So now I'm like you're at the beach not drinking anything. Yeah. Because I want to feel I want to sleep well. And I want to wake up and feel refreshed. So you know, we just start to prioritize wanting to feel good. I feel
Scott Benner 52:06
like I'm gonna mature right when I die. And then it's gonna be late. Like, you know, like, what my wife said the other day, like, they were out shopping my wife and my daughter, and they found this little restaurant and they were like, come over. So I came, and I'm eating and I'm all the entire time eating all I can think is this isn't gonna work out. I then I couldn't sleep that night. Yeah, I was up at like four in the morning awake. And like, I still felt like I was processing my dinner that I had nine hours before that. And it just was I all I could think when I was laying there is like, you're pretty bright guy. Like, when are you going to like, stop?
Gin Stephens 52:40
Well, yeah, we can be slow learners, because, you know, food is a sensory experience. And there's so much more to it than just what you're putting in your mouth. If you're there with your family, and you have these feelings associated with it. And, you know, like, like me and that beach bar, you know, I come to the beach, the first thing I do is head over to the beach bar and have a burger. My wife will say, you know, if I didn't have the fries, I would have felt Okay, I just know that. Yeah, in the next time,
Scott Benner 53:06
I won't order the fries. So it really is about some like real like memories that just the food like relates to an obviously foods relatable to memories. It's when it's when it happens too frequently, that it ends up being unhealthy for you like my wife, say, if I'm at a movie, and there's not popcorn, I might as well not be at the movie. And I don't understand that. But obviously there's a way she grew up that that just that makes a movie for her. Yeah, again. Oh, yeah. That's interesting. It really is. I really I genuinely appreciate you doing this. But I don't want to miss anything. And like I said, I feel like a bit of a neophyte here. But do you think we covered? Did you if if somebody listened back to this? Will they understand intermittent fasting enough to understand if they wanted to know more about it?
Gin Stephens 53:50
I think so you really It's not scary. It just sounds scary. And there's there's a saying I didn't make it up. I don't even know where it originated. But your diets are easy and contemplation and hard and execution. We all know that from diets we tried before. Well, intermittent fasting is the exact opposite. It's hard and contemplation, but easy and execution. You know, you're it sounds like it's going to be so hard and you're going to you know, be starving and hangry. But once your body adjusts, it is so much easier than trying to diet all the time or eat frequent small meals. It frees up your mind to do other things. You have great sustained energy. And you're like, you know, why have I not always eaten this way? In fact, one of the things I hear from people all the time, is that, you know, this is how I used to eat when I was a teenager or when I went to college, but then everybody said you got to eat breakfast. It's the most important meal of the day. So I forced myself to eat it. So I would be quite healthy. And that's when my problems all started that a lot of people really look back to that and they're like or you know, I had a grandma and she just would sit for coffee all morning and then She had a tiny little lunch and a dinner with Grandpa and she was healthy until she died at age 95. And so, you know, everybody's got, you know, stories like that.
Scott Benner 55:09
You make me think that of something I said to my wife was like, we were healthier when we had less money. And I, yeah, and the money is about being able to afford food and end up in this context and being able to have something around always that you mean to have, like having options in your refrigerator.
Gin Stephens 55:28
Well, yeah. And we've also had been trained to fear hunger, like, you better have a snack in your purse in case you're like out shopping and you need to eat something real quick.
Scott Benner 55:36
I have to agree with what you just said before. And I'll tell you, I'm motivated to do this and stick to it better because I, after a couple of days, had to almost remind myself to start eating at noon. Right. And, and I did feel terrific. I will be honest, my back.
Gin Stephens 55:53
Start eating at noon. You know, are Would you like to lose a few pounds or you feel like you're exactly where you'd like today?
Scott Benner 55:58
Oh, you're delightful. No, I should lose a few pounds.
Gin Stephens 56:05
If you would like to lose a few pounds, and maybe you don't open your window till three. You know you have a little snack and then later a great dinner.
Scott Benner 56:14
Okay, listen, I'm up for doing something. I'm 50 gin in a couple of weeks. And I do have that underlying fear that I'm going to tip over some edge that I can't crawl back over again. Well, when is your birthday? July 12. Damn July 23. Happy birthday. My daughter's the 22nd. Okay, yeah. Awesome. Almost birthday twin. Yeah, we're so close. Close enough. Well, I let me first say I really appreciate this. And I will absolutely put links to your books in the show notes. And and when I do an intro, I'll I'll I'll do a nice, awesome buttoning
Gin Stephens 56:50
here. And I think you'll you'll enjoy clean ish. I know that you said you don't read but listen to I'll be recording the audio eventually. It'll be out at the same time. It'll be out in January as well. I just haven't recorded it yet. But you listen to parts of fast paced repeat on audio. And when clean ish comes out. It really I learned so many things. You I thought I knew a lot. But as I was researching, I learned so much more. And it really just inspired me the subtitle is eat mostly clean, live mainly clean, and unlock your body's natural ability to self clean, and you know, talk all about our toxic load and even the things we're putting on our bodies and how that affects us. We're just in a different kind of world now than you know, 100 200 years ago.
Scott Benner 57:33
Now I agree. You just said I'm gonna let you go about put on your body's meaning of like hand creams and stuff like oh, yeah, effect. Yeah.
Gin Stephens 57:39
Yeah, it all you know, goes through the skin, we know that it does, you know, because everybody's seen someone use a therapeutic patch for something or other. It's a great medication delivery system. So if if medications can be delivered through patches than what you put on your skin is delivered in the exact same way. So you know, our toxic loads are just crazy these days, and babies are born with toxins in their cord blood. Then we go down this rabbit hole forever. But it really what I learned was shocking to me, even though I thought I knew a lot. And it really inspired me to make a difference with you know, like I said, I'm clean ish, but I make changes where it wherever I can. So I can still live a life where if I want to go to the beach bar and have fries I can and still be healthy. The fasting helps with that with the clean and self cleaning that happens during the fasted state. But there's other things but fruits and vegetables help our bodies self clean to Well,
Scott Benner 58:37
I've really enjoyed this.
First, let me thank Jen for coming on the show and sharing all of her knowledge about intermittent fasting. For anyone who cares on the day this episode comes out and I don't know what the date is, you're gonna have to look at the calendar. Actually, that won't help you because if you look at it the day after it comes out. Anyway, I think it's about like the end of July 2021. I'm going to start an intermittent fasting lifestyle. I'm going to start it back up again. And I'm going to stick with it for at least 30 days. So if you're on the private Facebook group, I'll be reporting there about it. So I'm using this to hold myself accountable. The first 30 days goes well, I'll extend it
Oh, you might not know where the private Facebook group is. It's called Juicebox Podcast type one diabetes. I think there's a link in the show notes if there's not definitely you can get to it through Juicebox Podcast comm or just searching Juicebox Podcast Type One Diabetes on Facebook. Don't forget to check Jen out. She's got like she said three podcasts I said to at the beginning but I think it's three. She's got a ton of great books. They're all available on I'm on what they call the amazon.com. You can head over there and just type in her name Jin Stevens it's with a Ph. I could do it with you real quick. You people are so needy Hold on a second. I know no one asked ci g i n s t e p h e n s and then when you hit enter, it's all your keyboard. pops right up all of her books, fast feast repeat. She wasn't wrong. It's the best seller and others don't delay living in intermittent fasting lifestyle clean ish. Wow. She's prolific this Jen Stevens. Now if you go to Juicebox Podcast calm and do a little scrolling down. You'll see all of the how we eat series right there. Vegan carnivore plant based gluten free. Low Carb Bernstein fodmap keto flexitarian. Today, intermittent fasting, and there are more coming. People have all different kinds of ways they eat. And I find each and every one of them interesting. Thank you so much for listening to this episode of the Juicebox Podcast. Thank you for sharing the show with friends, doctors, thank you for sharing it with your patients patients. Thank you for sharing it with your doctors. You guys are terrific. I couldn't do this without you. All the great ratings and reviews and emails and messages. They mean the world to me. I'll be back very soon with another episode of the Juicebox Podcast.
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#515 Chris Dudley
In 1987, Chris joined the Cleveland Cavaliers and became the first person to play in the NBA with Type 1 Diabetes.
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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, welcome to Episode 515 of the Juicebox Podcast.
In the 1987 NBA Draft, the Cleveland Cavaliers chose Chris Dudley. He went on to play 16 seasons for a handful of teams and even made it to the NBA Finals once. He also has type one diabetes, and he runs a camp for kids with type one, called the Chris Dudley foundation. You can learn more about it at Chris dudley.org. Today, Chris and I are going to talk about a ton of stuff playing in the NBA being diagnosed with type one playing in the NBA with type one, what it was like to face Michael Jordan, his camp, and all the other stuff that popped into my head while we were chatting. While you're listening to the show today, I'd love it if you could remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan. We're becoming bold with this.
This show is sponsored today by the glucagon that my daughter carries g vo hypo Penn. Find out more at G Vogue glucagon.com forward slash Juicebox Podcast is also sponsored by the Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor, I want you to go to dexcom.com Ford slash juice box right now where you can learn more about the Dexcom g six and even get started. It'll be the best decision that you've ever made.
Chris Dudley 2:06
My name is Chris Dudley, from diabetes perspective. I got diabetes in 1981 when I was 16 years old, playing the NBA for 16 years and we started the foundation in the Christopher Reeve Foundation for kids with diabetes in 1994, about 25 years of basketball camp for kids with Type One Diabetes. I kid kids from all over the country all over the world really with that kids from globally. And he just 10 through 16 boys and girls and and we've also done a lot of other outreach for for diabetes as well.
Scott Benner 2:50
Can you think back to when you develop the basketball camp originally? What made you do it?
Chris Dudley 2:57
Yeah, you know, so I so backing up so 1981 and really dating myself here, but it's alright. You know, obviously diabetes was in different different spot. It was who's tough. And when you got diagnosed with diabetes, it it was a you know, I tell story that the first thing I asked the doctor is am I gonna live. And by that I didn't mean next week or whatever. But how long? What does this mean? Because at that time, it meant a shortened lifespan. So it was, you know, it just rocked my world. And then it was of course what I still be able to play basketball and got the affirmative on both which which wasn't always the case back then. Sometimes they discouraged athletics activity because of the risk of of getting low blood sugars. And so fortunately, that was changing. That's when studies were coming out and saying activity was good for your overall health, your blood control. seems obvious now but at the time, it was a it was a concern. And so So anyway, fast forward and go through high school, go through college make it into the league, I was the first and only player to play at that time in the NBA with Type One Diabetes. And it was I was almost you almost didn't want to let anybody know I did. But yeah, I really wanted to establish myself as an NBA player and have diabetes kind of be an afterthought versus should we sign this guy because we don't know we can make it right. Once I prove that and and more people became aware that I had in the diet in the diabetes community that I had diabetes, I get a lot of letters from kids or parents. How do you do it? How do you What's your game day route? What do you what do you eat? What kind of insulin? How do you how do you play an activity with with having with while having diabetes. And so I'd always been asked about doing it. Most pro players are about doing a basketball camp get involved with camp. And so my wife, my wife, and I came up with the idea with squids combiner and which have a have a camp for, for for kids with diabetes. And so the long winded answer is that it was really the Genesis was really the outreach from kids and parents asking, you know, and just realizing what a need there was for
Scott Benner 5:40
right. Wait at that time. So, so you're diagnosed in high school? Imagine you're playing in high school, you go to college and play. Is it? Are you just like using regular mph? Did you just kind of shooting insulin in the morning and an evening and kind of eating on a schedule?
Chris Dudley 5:55
Yeah, I'm trying to remember. I think I started off doing that. And then at some point, pretty soon after I went to the mall, I shot a day. Okay, are you taking a shot before? Before every meal?
Scott Benner 6:14
They call it fruit? Now you're getting basil once on a meal mealtime ends? Yes. Did you test very frequently.
Chris Dudley 6:19
I did. You know sometimes better than sometimes more than others. But with with playing with playing sports, you really felt like I had to write. And you know, on game days,
Scott Benner 6:33
I would test as many as 16 times on game day just to really have it dialed in. Right. And so did you. Looking back? I'm assuming now you manage differently. You have a pumper. You still MDI?
Chris Dudley 6:46
I do net. So now I have the Omni pod. So I have the pump. And then I have Dexcom Dexcom. So
Scott Benner 6:55
So now you have a real vision into what's happening. Like looking back. Were you playing at an elevated blood sugar? Or do you not even know? Yes, yeah.
Chris Dudley 7:02
Yes. I think it definitely was. Because, you know, if you're playing, you know, practice is one thing but a games another. If you're playing in front of 20,000 people, you're more worried about going Whoa, going on? Yeah. So So yeah, I definitely do and I would. Looking back, I would have loved to have had a Dexcom or something. I mean, I'd love pump too. But just to know what my blood sugar was doing? Would have been in nano kidding.
Scott Benner 7:33
So I, I asked my son, I was like, what should I ask Chris? When I talked to him? And he was just like, well, you have to ask him what it's like to play against Michael Jordan at some point. And I was like, Okay, I'll see if I'll see if he wants to talk about that. But yes, happy to. Yeah, no kidding. But But staying into the diabetes for a second longer. If you're elevated, like, do you think you were at a deficit? Yes, no kidding. I
Chris Dudley 7:59
do. I think, you know, I took a lot of pride in I never wanted to miss game because the diabetes, I really never wanted diabetes to be an issue. And I felt like, you know, right or wrong, I felt like an almost an obligation for those in the community to show you know, diabetes isn't going to prevent me from from playing and show that you can play in the NBA and, and I felt like I established that early in my career where a couple years where I think I played all 82 games, or if I missed a game. I never missed a game because diabetes. But in doing so. I also know that there was times that I was either worked, you know, borderline wlos. or certainly it may be higher blood sugar. And there were plenty of times you know, I joke around with kids that you know that I never missed a game. But there were plenty of games where I had I was running up and down the court having drank three cans of apple juice or something to get my blood sugar up, right. So it wasn't wasn't always easy. And I think it would have been a lot easier or better today to kind of be a little bit tighter control right? With all the technology and not to mention the speed of insulin increased in in the 90s right it keeps it keeps improving but there was a rapid when we went from Oh, wait from that regular human log or whatever it really Yeah, it really helped.
Scott Benner 9:41
Did the coaches and players know I mean, and by No, I mean, what did you play with some people who flat out didn't know you had diabetes? And did you play with people who knew but didn't pay any attention to it?
Chris Dudley 9:53
Um, well, everybody would have known I think, but there might have been some Who just didn't pay attention?
Scott Benner 10:05
Right? Well wouldn't even understand I would imagine to.
Chris Dudley 10:07
Yeah, I mean, you know, I'm testing my blood sugar in the locker room before we're going out. And so I mean, it wasn't like, so they would know that the person who had to really know and be dialed in was the train trainer, of course. And with coaches, they knew, but I really didn't want them to have to think about it. Think about it. Yeah, that wasn't there. That was on me and the trainer to do that to be ready, when when your number's called. And
Scott Benner 10:35
the fear there is that if they feel like there's a weakness, then there's a reason to put somebody else out there instead of you. Whether it's diabetes or anything. Right, right. Yeah. Okay. Wow. That's a lot of pressure. How did you do that for 16 years?
Chris Dudley 10:49
Well, yeah, you just get in a routine. I mean, it just becomes your Yeah, you're kind of your way of life. Yeah. Yeah. And I think with the coaches, and let me differentiate. In case we have any younger listeners or players is that a number one in the NBA, you have a full training staff. And so having that relationship with the trainer takes that pressure off if you're in high school, or, or younger, or club basketball, or whatever the coach has to know. And be very, very aware of it, right? Because there is no trainer. There's no intermediary.
Scott Benner 11:28
Yeah, so it's you and your parents. Exactly. There still is that pressure, my daughter's going to be 17 this summer, but when she was younger, she played softball, like fairly competitively, meaning that they were like a winner. So away from going to the Little League World Series when she was 12. And she only had one bad low while she was playing. And it was enough, she was at third base. And the inning ended and she gestured to me came through the dugout and said something's wrong. Like that's all she said. And she had a low that was in the 30s and 40s, it took a while to come back up again. But when her bat rolled around, even it like back then 10 1112 years old, I think she felt pressured to go hit because she did not want anybody to think that this was gonna stop her from doing that. And I don't, I'll never get into her head as to why. But I watched her go hit with a blood sugar that was maybe only 70 and had just started coming up and she fought through it, but you could tell something was wrong with her. I wish she was a little older when that happened. So I could talk to her about it. But
Chris Dudley 12:32
and you know, the thing that and that's great point in that. What's tough, too is is you know, with with diabetes is you get that well and yes, you can recover in your blood sugar's back up to 70 and going higher and getting to get to 100. But you still don't feel right, right, you know that the low blood sugar can throw off it, I've found that even exercise now that you know, a kind of a giveaway for me that my blood sugar is going down? Or is my balance is off. I just don't have the same. I can just feel it physically. So it's to your earlier question. Yes, you can you can make it you can play and but but there are, it does affect you. I don't
Scott Benner 13:14
know if you'll want to answer this. But is there ever a time where you're running down the court thinking I shouldn't be out here?
Chris Dudley 13:20
Ah, there was times where I was like, I need a timeout.
Scott Benner 13:27
Somebody foul somebody, I just want to know that you found somebody one time to get a break. That's
Chris Dudley 13:33
well, you know that well. And the thing is, and again, everybody as diabetes knows this is what's so hard about it with playing is or can be difficult is that you're by you still have everything else that everybody else is going through, right. I mean, either we play 82 games, there's times where you have a cold or you don't feel great or you can get a good night's sleep, and it's hard sometimes to differentiate, I feel off is my blood sugar. So when I say I want to timeout it's not always that someone was saying I need to test to make sure because I was I didn't have that confidence that that I was not that I was maybe going in sometimes he tests me like, no, you're fine. It just you just don't feel good. Because people who don't have type one when they feel off their next thought is and I wonder if I have too much insulin I'm about to pass out in front of 35,000 people exactly.
Scott Benner 14:27
Yeah, that's that's a it's a good point. And now would you mind if you know what were your Awan sees when you were playing? Do you have any idea?
Chris Dudley 14:38
They weren't they were two sevens. I tried to get below seven but you know and the ANC is is great in a lot of ways. But the and now we're talking about time and range i think is is more important because with the agency. I would have good agency sometimes but I might have been you know What 50 plus 180? is when you know, I mean, you can,
Scott Benner 15:05
yeah, you can fool the test by having a lot of lows and a lot of highs and seeing it bounce out. I just know that that was the only way that they paid attention to it back then your, your point is 100%, right time and range, less variability. That really is a great measure of health. I was just wondering, I mean, but sevens were, that was probably better than what the ADA was asking for at that point.
Chris Dudley 15:27
Yeah, no, I think so. You know, I, you know, I've worked, I worked hard at it, to try to keep it you know, to stay in range. So,
Scott Benner 15:36
when you're a professional athlete, it just, there's an inference that your body is just that it operates differently than some people's. So do you have to back then were you eating? Like, they like the guys now? Like, the guys now look like superheroes? You know what I mean? Like, you look like a tall man who was athletic when you played like, the guys now look like they could grab you and throw you if they wanted to? Did you eat more specifically? Or was it more like? I don't know, it wasn't like cheeseburgers and basketball, like, what was the vibe? Ah,
Chris Dudley 16:09
it's good. Quiet, you know, that was always a struggle with the, with the trainers and trying to get, they kind of had to balance that out where they would try to get good, it was kind of funny, they would try to get healthy food on the when the planes when you're, when you're traveling or the team meals, and then they found if it was too healthy, kind of like with our kids. It's too healthy. Nobody's going to eat it. And kind of defeats the purpose. So I was, you know, I was aware, but I don't think there was the emphasis that there is today on on what you're eating by
Scott Benner 16:47
on a fine tuning of
Chris Dudley 16:49
what do you know, it's kind of fun. I mean, I played with some guys who did literally like could eat a hamburger before the game and go out and just kill it and you know, kind of laugh about country strong and just right. I mean, what guys are just tremendous athletes. It catches up with the waiter, but they were I couldn't do what they did. But but just I think that's where diabetes, actually is that there are some blessings on diabetes are some advantages and one is you do get to know your body better. And I did go through the process of Alright, what what is my body work better? What type of food is work better with? Yeah,
Scott Benner 17:26
it just occurred to me that over the last couple of decades, as we understand nutrition better, that it doesn't just happen overnight that there is a transition of talking generations into believing differently. And I watched my son's 21 now he plays college baseball, and right up until about a year and a half ago he had that like just here I'll take a handful of this and that and you know you're running out on the field with a doughnut in your mouth almost you know in between games and now as he's getting into 21 years old, he's like, I don't think I should be eating this and I was like yeah, I don't think so either and he doesn't have type one my daughter does but it's just very interesting to see that happen in my mind like you know you always your your head goes to ideas of you know, old baseball players playing you know, with hangovers and stuff like that and and being the best. Alright, so I just have to ask you,
Unknown Speaker 18:21
Jordan,
Scott Benner 18:23
just the so much better at the time than everyone else, or it still stacks up today.
Chris Dudley 18:30
It still stacks up today he to me he's the best player ever.
Scott Benner 18:42
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My daughter turned 17 years old yesterday. She got her driver's license, gave her a cupcake and we went out to dinner. When she woke up this morning. She went to the beach with her brother and some friends. Just like most 17 year olds, she slept in a little bit in the morning and got up but not quite enough time to eat before she went to the beach. She got a car. They drove to the shore. They spent a few hours on the beach and they came home the entire time. I could see Arden's blood sugar on my phone. Why is that? Well, it's because Arden's wearing the Dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor my wife and I could both see Arden's blood sugar on our iPhones. And if we had Android phones, we could see it there as well. Arden can share her numbers with up to 10 followers. And so can you dexcom.com forward slash juice box. One point I sent Arden a text that said just this was that food. And what I was talking about was that I saw her blood sugar kind of go from 191 30. And she said, No. And I said hydrate and Bolus. And she did. And that was that dexcom.com forward slash juice box, the speed and direction of the blood sugar are available at your fingertips on your iPhone, your Android, or you can use the Dexcom receiver. So if you're the person with type one, and you don't want to look at it on your phone, you could use the receiver or you can use your cell phone, the apps are terrific. And sharing with other people is amazing. Seeing your blood sugar, and the speed it's moving in. That's life changing. Please take a second, Get started today. With the Dexcom you will not be sorry. If you're using insulin, seeing your blood sugar in real time is about the best thing that could happen. It allows you to make these great decisions with insulin and with food. And you get to see if things are going right or wrong. So next time, you can say to yourself, Oh, you know what did a unit for that went up to 140 and kind of sat there corrected later with a unit. Maybe next time I'll use two units for that. I don't know something like that. These are made up numbers. But you get what I'm saying right? You see what happens cause and effect, and you get to make better decisions next time. The links in the show notes of your podcast buyer will take you there. The links at Juicebox Podcast comm will take you there but you can always just type it in dexcom.com forward slash juicebox g vo glucagon comm forward slash juicebox. And don't forget he's not a sponsor. But he's doing such a great job on the show today, Chris dudley.org All right. Let's get back to Chris and the story about Michael Jordan. Just like how I let him answer the question I'm do a cliffhanger on you. Bet you weren't expecting that.
Chris Dudley 22:39
I was fortunate I got when I was in college, I went down to work jobs at the basketball camps down at UNC where Jordan went and he would play during summer so I got to play with him during the summer. And then obviously my he's a couple years older than I am but I was played mostly during his time and had a lot of when I was a kid when we played the ball a couple times early in the playoffs. And what Jordan Jordan to me was, you know wasn't is the best player to play again.
Scott Benner 23:16
Yeah, I saw my my son tries to make the point that even the fifth guy on a bad team is incredibly athletic now, and I try to read like I try to retell the best I can I always go to the one story where I tell him. I was watching the game one day and and Michael Jordan turned his ankle completely over, like his foot went underneath of his leg and it was bent sideways and you thought for sure he'd never walk again. And he stood up and hobbled, hobbled, hobbled, hobbled and then ran. And I was like, I don't understand. You know, you ever see Reggie White's knee hyperextend. And then he leaves. It's an amazing video, his knee goes backwards. The way it's supposed to go forwards he leaves the field. If you're a Philadelphia fan, you think I'm never gonna see Reggie white again. And two plays later. He's back out there playing. And I'm just like, I don't understand how that happens. Like now some people just get amazing gifts, you know, physical gifts like that. So you bring him back right now. 25 years old, drop him in the league. He's the best player in the league squared. Really? No kidding. So how do you keep up with that? When you're like when you're everyone else? What's the plan?
Chris Dudley 24:26
It's hard enough. And I think the game has changed, but it was a different. I mean, there's some things that are better today. Probably they're they're definitely the skill level has gone up as far as the outside. There's such a premium on outside shooting. That has definitely changed but the game then was so much more physical. So the counter argument to is could some of the guys today be as successful. Back then, back then, if they're getting ready every time they go. They're laying there. Someone's punching him in the ribs. said they're getting in touch. So, you know, that's so funny you said it's just a different deal. And I do think the one and we've we've kind of touched on it. One huge advantage you have today that would have played out for guys back then is, is the nutrition, the strength, medical, they don't play the same. They take off back to backs they rest more they it's just a it was more of a grind even more of a grind back. Especially in especially when it first came in the week than it than it is today. It's it's a little bit and part of it is the dollars that have gone. Gone into it that are in the league. I think there was a an article about LeBron, and that he spends, I don't know, was close to a million dollars on someone. Massage and nutritionists and cook and this and that. And for good reason. I mean, he's unbelievable. Yeah, he's a freak of nature. And he takes he, he works at it. And so I think that's changed to an extent. It's helped.
Scott Benner 26:09
I guess it's sort of the way people drive a show car. You only take it out on Sundays when it's sunny driving a little slower. And you you played in a time where they're like, Listen, we're driving you every day until you fall apart. Even someone else will come. But even the length of your career. Was that even uncommon back then?
Chris Dudley 26:29
Yeah, no, it's, well, you know, the average. I mean, some guys do it. But the average in the league is three, three years. So there's a lot of turnover. And if you get past 10 Yeah, it was definitely uncommon. You're, it'll be unseen today, because guys come out earlier. So they start younger. When I when I played, there were some players that came direct or a couple years in, but even Michael Jordan was a junior when he came into the league, a junior in college, right? So they're younger. So it'll be just, it will be interesting to see if they go, they can go as long
Scott Benner 27:12
or not. was their club like did you know Ron Santo and Bobby Clarke? Like, did you have a mean? Like, did you guys know? Yeah, or No, those
Chris Dudley 27:20
were my heroes, but I really didn't know him. Okay. And so I was well, where I grew up in. I lived in Philly till I was 12. And so I was a big fan of the Broad Street Broad Street boys. Philadelphia Flyers went back to back Stanley Cups in the 70s. So I was huge Bobby card pant, before I got diabetes. And so when I found out he had diabetes, that was huge for me, and very
Scott Benner 27:45
inspirational. So I grew up in Bucks County, right outside of the Northeast. And okay, and I have to tell you, when I found out Bobby Clarke had type one diabetes, it was only like 10 years ago. And then you think back to how he played. And I don't even understand, that doesn't even make any sense, you know? But I guess it was a different time. I don't know Sam fold is. He's a GM of the Phillies now. But when he was on the podcast, he just told me when I was playing, if you saw me in the outfield chewing gum, I was lower. I thought I was low. And if I was chewing seeds, I thought I was okay. That was like, the extent of what he would do. You know, it's, it's really fascinating.
Chris Dudley 28:22
Well, I remember when I was a kid here in it, the flyers practice would have they'd always have orange juice and like a chocolate bar over on the bench.
Scott Benner 28:29
And that was forgotten. Yeah, that's crazy. It really is. Okay, so how do people find out about the foundation? And what do you want from them? You want them to learn about it? You want him to donate to it? You want him to come out to a to an event? What is it you're trying to do? And how are you handling this with COVID?
Chris Dudley 28:48
Well, so Chris, God, we got to work. Look up the foundation. And and obviously, we're nonprofit and we always accept donations. Because we're putting on camp every year with this would last year would have been the 25th this would be the 26. Last year we held camp, but it was virtual. So and unfortunately this year, we're back doing the same it's either virtual or we may try to do a couple I may go to different spots and meet with kids a few different places. We're trying we're looking into doing that. But we just couldn't hold camp this year because because the COVID because of the restrictions that are in place now. And it just it really breaks our heart that we can't do it the camps normally indoors or outdoors. Outdoors so it's uh you know, back east and you got the Poconos
Scott Benner 29:56
night. Sure.
Chris Dudley 29:57
So the camps up there. It This is Kind of that kind of setting. Okay, and it's an outdoor with bunkhouses outdoor courts, swimming pool rolling hills and you know volleyball court and so it's great. It's a great outdoor bunkhouse kind of what which kind of envision camp? Right.
Scott Benner 30:17
That's amazing. I have more questions if you have time. Yeah, I do. So do you have any other autoimmune issues? thyroid, celiac.
Chris Dudley 30:28
I've been on a thyroid. I take a thyroid, blanking on the name right now but I took a thyroid pill every morning centroid centroid Thank you. No problem. Yep.
Scott Benner 30:39
How long? When were you diagnosed with that? And is it hashimotos? Or is it hypothyroidism? Do you know is it autoimmune or is that? Not?
Chris Dudley 30:48
I think it's hypo. I don't think I think it's the latter. I think it's a I've been on a you know, probably 15 years. I think maybe more than that. I just know, I've been taking this for forever. And it's been with just taking the one pill every morning. I've been.
Scott Benner 31:06
It's been good. So after you got on playing this happen?
Chris Dudley 31:11
You know, that's quick question. I don't even Yeah, I think it was right after it.
Scott Benner 31:14
Okay, when I say Yeah. And do you remember? Where you lithologic hair falling out? Like, do you remember what led you to it? Or just the blood test caught it?
Chris Dudley 31:23
It was just a blood test. They just said you're a little either a little higher, a little? Well, whatever it was, right? We recommend this bill. No kidding. So that's what I have. Other net? No, we have a number of kids at Camp who have celiac. And yeah, different than we would have some diet, things that we do a camp for kids.
Scott Benner 31:48
Yeah, there's there's definitely an increased occurrence of things like that even low vitamin D seems to be really common with people with type one. It's just it's interesting that I like to ask people how about in your family line? any other type one in your line?
Chris Dudley 32:04
Yeah, my uncle. So my father's brother had diabetes passed away now. But he had diabetes from a young kid on so my father when I had to sit and I had the classic symptoms, you know, being incredibly thirsty and having to go to the bathroom and he caught it earlier than probably normally would have. Because of my uncle. And I went went to the drugstore got the I think it was called test tape back then and
Scott Benner 32:34
peed on it. Right? Yeah. Different world that you got on you that fell on your cell phone? What your blood sugar? I know, it's such a different world. Yeah. And it really is something because you live through and had diabetes through a couple of leaps. You went from one insulin to another kind of insulin, you went from one testing to another time. And now this would you? If they told you that they could implant cells in you that would start making insulin again and give you a medication that would stop your body from killing the cells? You would do it? Or would you not? That's good question. What are the side effects? Yeah, right. Well, that's the obvious first question, but I don't know. I'm just my bigger question is as somebody who's lived for this many decades with type one, are you looking to get rid of it? Or do you not think about it like that anymore?
Chris Dudley 33:29
Um, I'd loved it for there to be a cure. And I have to say I'd love there to be a cure not so much for me, but for the kids and for others, because I've learned to live with it. And so it's But yeah, I mean, when my way is, you know, technology is great when it works right when when you get a bad you're in a meeting and the pumps goes bad are you I don't know if the what device you're on. But if you've gone through the doorway, and you've caught your pod on your you know, whatever, or you're on the plane and all of a sudden it's like bad pie, you know, all that stuff that the the nav, I think the toughest part is just the 24 seven of it that you just don't get a break. So yeah, I'd like to be certainly would want there to be a cure. But but but again, I would rather you know, kind of tell I don't think the kids at my camp, I don't know that they're going to live through their whole life with having diabetes. I think we're getting closer and closer. It's amazing. I
Scott Benner 34:33
had there was a gentleman on a couple months ago and there's this drug that right now when you get diagnosed, if they catch you early enough, they put you on this drug and it can hold off the onset for like years. It's fabulous. You know,
Chris Dudley 34:46
in fact I'm involved with a company here up in Oregon that's working on. We have tests a screen that will show Are you at risk of getting Are you going to get Type One wind. Yeah, if you and and before used to be. And they've been trying to do the screen. And this is a much quicker, easier test and what's now where you got it, you got to do it, send it back to the web and wait a couple weeks or whatever get the results. Before it was in I talked with my wife about this, you didn't necessarily want to give the test to your kids when they were young, because they're going to get, you know, take blood and all that. But because there was nothing you could do about it. Now you can do something about it. So that's very, very exciting that you can
Scott Benner 35:33
Are you talking about trialnet? Yeah, sure. They were on recently to a lot of people were they Yeah,
Chris Dudley 35:39
yeah. So trial net, and knowing it's a much bigger their, their pitch for people to get tested is completely different now than it was even just a couple years ago. Because now you have something that you can actually enter was thoughts that you could do certain things, give a little insulin do certain things to kind of prevent it before. But now we know concretely that you can postpone it, which is, which is awesome news.
Scott Benner 36:06
It's amazing. Technology. It's it's some of this newer stuff is the closest stuff I've seen, that seems like it's you uses science that we understand now. And that it feels like it has like an endpoint. It's not just like, we're gonna try this and see where we get to. It's really cool. And But with that, you know, I
Chris Dudley 36:24
think it's I think we're getting so much closer and closer, closer, but you also don't want to be you still got to deal with the diabetes. And you still you don't want to give newly diagnosed
Scott Benner 36:37
people the feeling that they don't have to take care of themselves, because it's gonna go away. Yeah, I tell my daughter, look, I lived with the hope that somebody will figure this out. But I don't expect it. I guess that's the difference. Like I hope but I don't expect my daughter's a once he's been in the mid fives for seven years. Now. She doesn't have any dietary restrictions. Like we've like this podcast, what we usually talk about is how to use insulin in ways that keep you you know, from spiking and having problems like that blank screen. Yeah, it's very cool. But at the same time, I like knowing that people are out there working on this stuff. It's interesting. No, I
Chris Dudley 37:15
do too. And I just throw that caveat, not not to be negative. But it's I remember parents telling me and this is your 20 years ago, or even when I was hanging on, so it was like, well, there's probably going to be five or 10 years. You know, and that was just that's what they said. Yeah. Yeah. So so it's like, yeah, I think we're getting in worthy. Whether there's going to be the magic pill kind of cure with no side effects. And I don't know if they're, or it's just gonna be the technology just gets better, better better. And we're on the closed loop system, or whatever it
Scott Benner 37:52
might be. It's just getting so much better. My daughter's using an algorithm and I have to tell you that we were really good at it prior and there's things to learn when you're using an algorithm adjustments you have to make but I have not slept so well as as I have since she's been on that it to see the algorithm take away basil to stop like, drifting low blood sugar is amazing. And it just it unless you really mess up overnight. She doesn't get low
Chris Dudley 38:20
overnight. And would you mind me asking what kind of what are you guys using? Yeah, Riley wink or anything like that. So she's,
Scott Benner 38:28
she's looping right now. Yeah, so she loops with an omni pod, a Dexcom. And we actually use the orange link. It's a new link that came out that seems more stable for us. But I'm excited to try on the pot five, because it eliminates the link. And it eliminates the need for me to understand how to build an app and keep it on our phone and things like that. And she's going to be heading off to college soon. So I would like it to be more retail, I guess. And on the orange, how is orange different than the Riley's? Yeah, I don't honestly know. I just bought her Riley link was Boston up because she drops it all the time. And and I went to buy a new one. And I bought the orange one to try it. And I'll just tell you that. I just told somebody this in the podcast the other day, but I am in a two story house. And Arden was in the dining room with my wife at the end of the night. She went upstairs with her phone, but forgot the orange link behind but her bedroom is above the dining room. And we never knew it kept it kept the algorithm running the whole time. So yeah, so it's really cool. I mean, and just it's somebody made that that there's a guy somewhere who's like, I'll do this, you know, it's really fascinating, but I am excited to get the Omnipod five and give it a whirl and see how it goes. But yeah, I think algorithms are the future. And I hope everybody who wants one can get one financial Yes. It's really something. Your kids did you ever test your kids?
Chris Dudley 39:55
Ah, yes. And they've no God. I mean No, no, but no diabetes, obviously, and not at risk. Okay. And I
Scott Benner 40:05
guess my last question for you is, because I'm assuming you've been married for a while. He's your wife at all, you're smiling, like as I happen? Is your wife at all involved in your diabetes? Or would you? And to what level? How does that work for you guys?
Chris Dudley 40:22
Well, early on, I mean, she was awesome. And she really dove into kind of understanding that, and you know what diabetes was, and really helping me with diet and diving into that control and making sure it's now you know, a big deal. Obviously, especially before, we've been able to get kind of a tighter control with all the technology we're talking about, but a big deal and even today is worried about low blood sugars when you're driving or different things and really making sure she always made sure I was prepared really helped me with, with with with my diabetes, and not letting me just not forget about it or ignore it. You know, it's great. Because we all go through that emotional, right, I think we all go through it. I know our campers do, but at times where you just want to like, I just don't want to deal with this. But still, she's been awesome. That's absolutely awesome.
Scott Benner 41:26
You know, it's funny, right? About an hour before you and I did this, my daughter's going to school virtually from our house. And I got a notification. So my, my Dexcom is set at 70 and 120. So I got this notification, she was going over 120, which we don't usually see. And I walked in and I was like, what's going on? She goes, Oh, my pod ran out of insulin, I forgot to tell you. And it was just like, like, like a half an hour ago. So he starts drifting up. And that was the thing you were talking about before. I think like, even when you're good at it, and you've been doing it forever. You almost forget the technology, which is a blessing. But at the same time, you know, you see more newly diagnosed people are like, well, I changed my pump at this time. So that it it's ready to be changed. Like you don't do that after a while, you know? No, so she just shut her camera off and stood up and we swapped her pod real quick. And she sat back down and she was on her way again. But yeah, it's a really different world. I don't think that my daughter will ever appreciate how you grew up with diabetes. I don't think she'll have any preference
Chris Dudley 42:21
for no and I, I think rod sail he taught you about Nimrod, Santos. But it's amazing to me that he played a time before testlets. Yeah, it's like, how did you do that? That's just incredible. And, you know, he, someone I didn't hear him tell, but I've heard the story taught of him going up to bat and having double vision and, you know, tell a story. Of course, he just he had to guess which ball to hit. And he hit the right one, and you know, home run or whatever. But it's just, but the fact that what they dealt with people before, even before for myself is amazing. And what he went through is incredibly difficult. And even Bobby Clarke was much more difficult than what I went through is definitely but it got it's gotten better and better and better and better. It's just easier. Yeah,
Scott Benner 43:13
baseball does fascinate me too, because it is such a schedule. And when it's when they're not playing, they're traveling. And you hear guys, like, you know, I don't know how far my son's ever gonna go. But he's, he knows guys that play. And some of them stopped playing because of just like the mental fatigue of it. Like they just can't keep up in their heads anymore. He had a friend that was in the White Sox organization. And the guy said, first of all, I got there, and we were all like the exact same athlete, he says, which is really a bummer, because you're not better than anybody all of a sudden, you know, and he goes, and then it's just every day and then on a bus. And he's like it was it was just hard to keep up, you know. But then, like you were saying earlier, then put Type One Diabetes on top of that. It says it's a hell of an accomplishment. It really is. You know, especially, you know, I don't imagine that they see you as I mean, I don't know, but do you really get seen as a person? Are you like a thing that the team owns that they want to work? You know what I mean? Like, are you are you a tool? Or are you a person and how much? How much of that is your problem? And how much of it is theirs? Right?
Chris Dudley 44:15
Yeah. Well, it's I do remember once, early in my career, wait for the I was in New Jersey and Bill Fitz, which coach training camp I was, I was struggling with my control. And I mean, there were times in training camp where I would go with two days, you're just going so hard where I almost didn't take into it. And you're just because a hard what your body's going through. Right. And it was a different day. They don't do that the same way anymore. Sure. But it was brutal. But I remember I was kind of maybe had to sit out and was just having a hard time with it. And he just kind of pulled me aside and said hey, we pay you a lot of money your professor and he was great guy and he Right here for me, but he said, You, we, your professional, we pay a lot of money. Get out of control. Yeah, figure it out. And it was it was a little bit of tough love. And it was, I was like, Okay,
Scott Benner 45:13
how old do you think you are then? We said Jersey is probably 25. Yeah. That's amazing. Well, you know, I guess. I mean, honestly, do you grow up? This? It's got nothing to do with diabetes, and you don't have to answer if you don't want to, but you emotionally grow up slower? When this is your life? Like when you're doing something like this, it's on a national stage, you're good at it, you're making money? Is there not the need to be mature? through your 20s?
Chris Dudley 45:45
No, no, I mean, I would say. And that's one of the reasons sometimes guys who asked, they don't ask you guys, you kind of, you know, you find out quickly. It's a it's a, it's a job, it's a profession. I mean, it's great. I mean, writing the wrong playing with the best talent in the world playing on TV. It's, it's, it's, it's incredible. But it's a job and the ones you see. And that's why teams always want they want to have a few veterans around, they want the veterans kind of mentor the guy, because the veterans are the ones. Take it cert, you know, they're the ones putting in the time. The successful the most successful players, it's usually not that hard. Obviously, they're incredibly physically gifted, but they're also the ones who put in incredible amounts of time and really treated as a profession. Right. So the answer question, yeah, there are some that are immature, especially when they first come into weed, and kind of falling, you know, have money in your pocket and the attention and all that, but the ones that last are usually turned into a job. Yeah, yeah.
Scott Benner 46:49
It makes a lot of sense. I treat this podcast like a job. I have to be honest. And if I didn't, I mean, these things would seemingly have nothing to do with each other. But if I didn't treat this, like a job, it wouldn't exist the way it does, it would fall apart. Right? It's just, it's crazy. Is there anything I didn't bring up that you were hoping to talk about?
Chris Dudley 47:10
No, I just think with Well, you know, with our foundation, yeah, maybe what I'd like to touch on with the foundation and and you asked earlier, we'd love for people yet to go on or go on our website at Chris duffy.org. And with the camp, and the thing I found is that that the initial thought behind camp was that kids, it'd be awesome to teach kids how to play basketball I have in type one diabetes, and that that is awesome. And some we do and we we teach them about the diabetes we teach them about it's basketball camp. So it's a it's a two in one. It's a regular basketball camp that's wrapped into with diabetes, but the rip, but some of the real value of camp has been getting to know others who are walking in the same shoes. And just how important that is, when I grew up when I got diagnosed 16 sophomore in high school, I really don't think I knew anybody with diabetes that or I didn't have any friends with diabetes. For years I didn't in high school to college, and it can be kind of lonely. I mean, you have friends, but there's certain things you just can't, it's just not the same. And I think that connection that happens there a camp when other kids now our campers, they stay in touch all year, all year long. And they don't with through social media, whatever. But I think that's invaluable, because so often we have, we have a camp, we have on a Thursday night, we have this thing called pass the ball where someone, you go up front, and you kind of talk about something, you hold the ball and pass the next person that comes up. But some of the stories people tell you that breaks your heart of just how alone they are, how they're ostracized for having diabetes, or whatever, whatever it may be, and kind of a teen years are are tough without diabetes, but they can be very tough with diabetes. And so I think that's something for us all to just kind of keep in mind. And that's why I love that you're doing this this podcast. And I love that you're kind of having that stretching the diabetes community, because it's I love talking about I mean, it's helpful to kind of pick your brain you pick, you know, whatever. I think it's so important. So when I say, look, thank you for what you're doing. And you know, that's what we're doing with our campus. Well,
Scott Benner 49:37
I appreciate that. I appreciate that you're doing it. And I'll tell you that when I started this, I really just thought that I was a person who wrote about diabetes. And people would tell me that when they read the stuff they had, you know, better control for the lack of a better way of saying it real quickly. And when I made the podcast, I thought that's what the podcast was going to be about. I just thought it was gonna be about talking about how to use insulin, how to have better outcomes. But I meet people and interview people who love the show, who who already understand how to manage their insulin, and never needed the show for that they needed it to hear another person with diabetes, tell a story, or to realize that other people like them, which is such a trite thing to say, but it's incredibly true. Like, you need to have a community and if you can't find it in person, finding it, you know, like, this is apparently pretty valuable. And I did not expect that. So yeah, it's very cool to be able to bring people together. And I'll tell you, we do i do topics that I don't think most people talk about, there's a woman on here two weeks ago, who's got bipolar disorder and diabetes. So grow on here trying to shake heroin addiction and type one, like you said, there's other things that go like there's real people life, and then you get diabetes on top of it. So we have people on all the time talking about difficult stuff. And, and it would be your inclination to think well, you know, don't have a girl on who's done heroin, like people won't like that. But that's not the truth. The truth is, is that there's a lot of people live in a lot of lives. And a lot of them have type one diabetes, too. So it's very, like I really, I really appreciate you coming on and, and sharing all this with me and, and I just, I appreciate you taking the time. Thank you. Yeah, no, my pleasure. Absolutely. Thank you. So no, great. Hey, Kelsey, can you jump back on for a second? Hello, Kelsey, I'm still recording because you're a fan of the show. You get to talk for a second so you can hear yourself one day when you're listening to this. Oh, awesome. Thank you. That was pretty much it. Do you have type one as well?
Unknown Speaker 51:36
I do. Yeah, I've had type one since I was seven years old. Right. And you.
Scott Benner 51:41
You work with Chris through the foundation?
Unknown Speaker 51:43
Yes. Yeah. I worked full time for the Chris Dudley foundation and help out with camp every summer and we're looking forward to when we can get back in person.
Chris Dudley 51:52
I just wanted to record. Chelsea's got a great story. So Kelsey was a camper. Kelsey, what age did you come in 10. First 10. So long time lifer camper. And then Kelsey met her husband, who also has type one at camp.
Scott Benner 52:07
Kelsey, you met your husband at Chris's camp?
Unknown Speaker 52:10
I did. Yeah. He came as a basketball coach. And I was working there and we got married last May.
Scott Benner 52:18
Chris did that mean you had to pay for the wedding? I don't understand. I got off because it was a nice wedding. COVID wedding? COVID. Oh, no kidding. Oh, she you just got How old? are you now? Kelsey?
Unknown Speaker 52:33
I am 20. I will be 29. In about a week.
Scott Benner 52:35
Wow. Good for you. Are you thinking of having little children? Yep. Someday? Did you? I'm aligned with what Chris was saying earlier about? Some people don't want to know. And some people want to know, do you think you would test your kids?
Unknown Speaker 52:48
Yeah, for sure. It's definitely something I kind of go back and forth on because like you guys were saying it. You know, nowadays, there's the technology so that if you do know, there's stuff you can do about it. I think when I was younger, and I would hear people talk about it and be like, Well, why would you do that, then they just have to sit there and wait for it to happen. But now there's so much technology that I think it would be interesting to see, especially with both parents having type one. Well, Kelsey,
Scott Benner 53:15
I think you might have heard them already. But the pro tip series might help when you decided to be pregnant one day. And I don't know if you've heard the I had Samantha on. So Chris, I this girl came on with type one who I interviewed her in her first second third trimester. And then I interviewed her postpartum as well. And it just so she could talk about what it was like to be pregnant with type one. And I hear from a lot of women that it's helpful. So I'm not rushing you, Kelsey, but you are 29. So let's get
Unknown Speaker 53:44
no, that's awesome. I have friends as well that I think would really enjoy that.
Scott Benner 53:49
That's really cool. Well, I appreciate you. I know Kelsey reached out and Chris, she found me for you. So I'm really grateful for and I would just want to listen Say hi to her. Alright guys, I hope you guys have a great day. Thank you so much. All right. Thank you.
Well, I'd like to thank Chris from the Chris Dudley foundation. Chris dudley.org. I want to thank Dexcom for sponsoring this episode of the podcast. Also, a huge thank you to one of today's sponsors. g Vogue glucagon, find out more about chivo Kibo pen at G Vogue glucagon.com Ford slash juicebox you spell that GVOKEGL Uc? ag o n.com. forward slash juicebox.
Hey, this is gonna be like months from now. But I also recorded with Kelsey, from the end of the episode, she was really great. I don't know when you're gonna hear that. But I enjoyed talking to her very much, in fact, and I think you'll enjoy hearing from her. Anyway, if you're looking for a great basketball camp, and you're out in the greater Northwest, definitely check out, definitely check out check out there, definitely check out Chris dudley.org to learn more about the Chris Dudley foundation. And I'm leaving all that checkout stuff in there, because I gotta be honest with you. I'm not perfect. Sometimes I get on a roll, and I'm like, Wow, I can't believe I got all that out without messing up. And sometimes I say Checkout, instead of checkout or checkout instead of checkout or whatever. I'm a little tired. It's late at night here. I'll talk to you guys soon. I really appreciate your listening, sharing the show. Last week, the show hit a million downloads just for 2021. So in 2021, we were at a million already. That was crazy. The show in total should hit 4 million any, any time. Now. I don't know if I've got a celebration planned around that or not. I'm not really sure what I could do. But I can tell you this. It's because of you. Thank you for sharing. Thank you for listening. Thank you for telling your doctors, doctors, thank you for telling your patients. I can't thank all of you enough. This show would not grow without the fervent support of the listeners. And I know that I wish I could say thank you 1000 times. I'll talk to you soon.
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