#1473 Canadian Danger Phallus
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Carli, 48, jokes about her husband's “T1D curse” while navigating diabetes, heart dissection, and lymphoma.
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Scott Benner 00:00 Hello friends and welcome back to another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.
Carly 00:14 My name is Carly. I am originally from Canada. I've been in Texas for just over three years and I was diagnosed with type one diabetes at the age of 40, nothing
Scott Benner 00:28 you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan. AG, one is offering my listeners a free $76 gift. When you sign up, you'll get a welcome kit, a bottle of d3, k2, and five free travel packs in your first box. So make sure you check out drink AG, one.com/juice box. To get this offer, don't forget to save 40% off of your entire order at cozy Earth com. All you have to do is use the offer code juice box at checkout. That's Juicebox at checkout to save 40% at cozy earth.com. Are you an adult living with type one or the caregiver of someone who is and a US resident? If you are, I'd love it if you would go to T 1d, exchange.org/juice box and take the survey. When you complete that survey, your answers are used to move type one diabetes research of all kinds, T 1d exchange.org/juice, box. The show you're about to listen to is sponsored by the ever since 365 the ever since 365 has exceptional accuracy over one year, and is the most accurate CGM in the low range that you can get ever since cgm.com/juice. Box. Omnipod five sponsored this episode of The Juicebox Podcast. Learn more and get started today at omnipod.com/juice. Box, links in the show notes links at Juicebox podcast.com.
Carly 02:00 My name is Carly. I am originally from Canada. I've been in Texas for just over three years, and I was diagnosed with type one diabetes at the age of 40. It was a happy 40th birthday present for me, right around your birthday, right like so my birthday is October. The symptoms I was diagnosed in February, but the symptoms definitely started popping up like late November, early, early December. So yeah, and the other story is my husband. He was married before, to a type one diabetic, and he proposed to me on my 40th birthday, and then I got diabetes a month later, so it's basically all his fault.
Scott Benner 02:43 Have we had his penis tested?
Carly 02:48 Is it possible? But he refuses?
Scott Benner 02:51 Oh, no. I think we should do a scraping of skin cells and then send them off. So I don't know the technical dues that's behind how we figure out if his penis is calling seeing type one diabetes in women, but I think it's possible. Yeah, yeah. Would you let him cheat on you to see if the next girl gets type one next girl?
Carly 03:08 He'd actually, yeah, okay, fine, that's an experiment. I'll be
Scott Benner 03:14 Carly. I love you. But if this is what you need,
Carly 03:18 the sacrifices I have to do for my wife.
Scott Benner 03:21 Can I pick the girl? How does this work? Yeah. Okay, so Wow, do you have any other autoimmune in your life, like in your extended family, or you personally,
Carly 03:31 myself, personally? No, I've got a bunch of random, weird health stuff. It's always, um, generally, when I get sick, I get really sick. Tends to be my strategy my mom has, that's the
Scott Benner 03:45 funniest way anyone's ever said it.
Carly 03:49 I had a perfect perforated ulcer when I was 15, shingles in my 30s, dealing with cancer now. So Wait, seriously, heart disease.
Scott Benner 03:58 Wait, hold on, you have heart disease
Carly 04:00 I have, well, it's called an aortic heart dissection. So I've got a weird hair in my in my heart,
Scott Benner 04:07 Harley, we have to figure this out. And what kind of cancer are you okay? I'm
Carly 04:11 okay. I'm going through so it's basically the cancer is like a melanoma. So I did immunotherapy for a year, had a bunch of lymph nodes taken out my armpits, like, year and a half ago, thought that was all done, and then basically, kind of on, like, two weeks after I rang the bell, a new thing popped up, which was linked from the original stuff. And so they actually ended up doing a live herpes virus into the spot to kill it so, and then that was kind of working, and then I was gonna get that cut out. And then within those scans, they found a new they found a new variant. So now I want some chemo drugs that had more surgery. And yeah, that too much. I want
Scott Benner 04:53 to find out how that affects your type one. But not before I say this, how many of these things have happened to you since penis? Boy touched you. Almost all of them,
Carly 05:05 yeah. So yeah, yeah. Like the perfect answer when I was 15. I can't blame him on that. But yeah, everything else, yeah, yeah, we were definitely dating when I got single. Yeah? No, I feel like this is him. Everything else has happened
Scott Benner 05:19 post you're from the, what they call the Great White North. But Is he correct? He is yes, okay, okay, so you guys moved together into the states.
Carly 05:31 Yeah, during COVID, his company shut down, like their Canadian office. So he moved here in 2020 we spent a year apart trying to figure out who's going to quit their job. People felt like there was probably more opportunity for both of us down here. So, yeah, so I followed about a year later, healthiest year
Scott Benner 05:49 of your life. Yeah, no, beyond being serious
Carly 05:54 outside of, like, all the major diseases, like, yeah, generally, like, I'm super active and like, that's basically like, I've never been one that got to sleep lots, and I would sleep in workouts, eat workout, eat some more. Workout, sleep.
Scott Benner 06:09 I just didn't know if it was like a moldy house that you didn't realize had mold in it, like you walked out of it for a year and you're like, hi, everything tastes fresher all of a sudden, and then he came back. You're like, yeah, jeez, all right. Well, listen, let's not make fun of the poor guy. But hey, you two aren't going to make a baby, though, right? No,
Carly 06:26 no, they're both, yeah, we're too old, so
Scott Benner 06:29 sorry, would you if you were younger, it was definitely
Carly 06:34 up for debate, like we I've had, I've also had kind of issues on, on that standpoint. So I always kind of wanted kids when I was younger, and it just kind of wasn't quite in the cards. And, yeah, we have a, we have a great life now, and I'm very, very happy with, kind of, yeah, like with, kind of with our life together, not
Scott Benner 06:54 in the cards. Like, your lady bits don't work, right? Or just like that. You know,
Carly 06:58 yeah, I could get pregnant, but could never hold a pregnancy game. So that was, yeah, sorry. I'm sorry, but it was so Jeezy,
Scott Benner 07:07 took all the fun out of it. Never mind. Okay, I know. I know. Sorry. Hey, everybody just found my line Carly. I was like, they're like, oh, he choked right through cancer, but he got to, he got to miscarriage, and he shut them right down. Yeah. Anyway, that was it. That was it. Now you all know my line. Okay, so what is it? Well, geez. So how many years have you had diabetes for?
Carly 07:29 Not long, so I it will be eight years in February.
Scott Benner 07:33 Oh, you're, you're almost my age, yeah. Oh, okay, yeah. So you've had it for eight years, and in those eight years, you haven't found any other family members with autoimmune stuff or type one my daughter is 20 years old. I can't even believe it. She was diagnosed with type one diabetes when she was two, and she put her first insulin pump on when she was four. That insulin pump was an Omnipod, and it's been an Omnipod every day since then. That's 16 straight years of wearing Omnipod. It's been a friend to us, and I believe it could be a friend to you. Omnipod.com/juicebox, whether you get the Omnipod dash or the automation that's available with the Omnipod five, you are going to enjoy tubeless insulin pumping. You're going to be able to jump into a shower or a pool or a bathtub without taking off your pump. That's right, you will not have to disconnect to bathe with an Omnipod. You also won't have to disconnect to play a sport or to do anything where a regular tube pump has to come off. Arden has been wearing an Omnipod for 16 years. She knows other people that wear different pumps, and she has never once asked the question, should I be trying a different pump? Never once omnipod.com/juicebox, get a pump that you'll be happy with forever. When you think of a CGM and all the good that it brings in your life, is the first thing you think about. I love that I have to change it all the time. I love the warm up period every time I have to change it. I love that when I bump into a door frame, sometimes it gets ripped off. I love that the adhesive kind of gets mushy sometimes when I sweat and falls off. No, these are not the things that you love about a CGM. Today's episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the ever since 365 the only CGM that you only have to put on once a year, and the only CGM that won't give you any of those problems, the ever since 365 is the only one year CGM designed to minimize the vice frustration. It has exceptional accuracy for one year with almost no false alarms from compression lows while you're sleeping, you can manage your diabetes instead of your CGM with the ever since 365 learn more and get started today at Eversense cgm.com/juicebox, one year, one CGM. My mom's got hyper thyroidism,
Carly 09:58 and actually. Something that I never like, I just only recently learned was auto immune. Is, I keep wanting to say eczema, but eczema, my sisters had eczema her entire life, so that would be the only other so
Scott Benner 10:11 thyroid eczema type one, yeah, and then just you randomly getting sick, yeah, yeah. Nobody, anybody else that you're related to just have that, like, what people would call, like, bad health luck. Well, yeah,
Carly 10:24 my dad passed away from ALS about 10 years ago. So no, 15 years ago, so I'm sorry she's very bad health
Scott Benner 10:32 Yeah, that is bad health luck. Yeah, yeah. I think anything that happens that ends up with you dead is definitely bad luck. Oh, well, that sucks. I just feel terrible to me. Oh my gosh. You have brothers and sisters. You do? You have one sister?
Carly 10:44 Thanks, yeah, no, yeah, one sister, yeah. She's 15 months younger. Gotcha,
Scott Benner 10:49 you diagnosed eight years ago. You're in the States. When it happens, you're in Canada. I was in Canada, yeah, how do they start you off your treatments?
Carly 10:57 Yeah, I guess that was kind of one of the things, like just, you know, listening to the differences between the different the different countries. But so I was Alberta. Like, every province has their own health care system, so I'm guessing someone in Ontario is going to have a little bit different experience than someone Alberta. But like, basically, I was wasting away. Like I was about 20 pounds lighter than I should be. I had zero energy. I was trying to get to my family doctor, who was part of a walk in clinic and had an appointment in, like, March and like, that was, you know, three months this, as soon as I could get in to see her, and just kept feeling worse and worse and worse, and kind of went into the walking clinic with where, you know, my doctor was, and the lady who saw me, and I don't blame her, because I think a lot of people come and say, I don't feel well, and it's just like, Yeah, you know, to pick up yourself here, whatever. I'm like, No, but I'm like, I'm super active. I know my body, I'm definitely not doing well, but I kind of go in and she's like, well, you're seeing your doctor in a month. Like, can you wait? I'm like, I don't think I can anymore. And she's like, Well, you didn't just turn 40, like, things slow down. I'm like, well, it's not like it turns 40, and my entire body decided to to shut down. So she sent me spurs, some blood tests, and the next day she calls me and she's like, You need to go to emergency right now. Like, kind of in Canadian numbers, my blood sugar was like, 35 or something like that, which
Scott Benner 12:21 is, I can figure it out for while you're talking good, you talk, I'll figure, yeah, yeah.
Carly 12:25 So, yeah, so. But so she's like, he's going to emergency right now, kind of left the office, went to emerge, spent about six or seven hours in emergency waiting to see someone. So finally they like, yep, you've got diabetes. You've got type two diabetes, just because of my age. Like, you know you're over 40, so it must be type two and like, I'm, like, you can see my veins and all my body.
Scott Benner 12:51 Everything I seem to know about type two diabetes says I shouldn't be, like, wasting away like this, if it's happening. Yeah? Also, three took them three months to see you too. Huh? That's very Canadian, yeah, yeah.
Carly 13:03 Very, very, yeah. So he, like, he sent me away with a prescription for Metformin, and then and a bit the referral to see the endocrinologist. Like, a week, you know. So this was a Friday, so the soon as I could get in was a week later to see an endocrinologist. So he spent that weekend, basically, like, you know, my husband is like, six four and played rugby, so, you know, close to 300 pounds. And we're walking around like, we went saw a few friends that weekend, and he's basically walking in the door going, guess who has type two diabetes? And he was all excited, because it wasn't him and it was me. It's so kind of spent a week on Metformin. Carly,
Scott Benner 13:45 if he ever breaks up with you, be careful if he walks in the room and yells, everybody who's dating me, raise your hand.
Carly 13:53 Exactly. Yes, it's been a week on Metformin like that was kind of all I had. And no equipment, no nothing, kind of, not much guidance beyond that. And so I went and saw, kind of my endocrinologist on Friday, and I walked in and she's like, You are not type two diabetic. She's like, you are type one. We're gonna get you in to see, like the dietitian right now and stuff. So kind of, I saw a dietitian. They showed me how to do insulin shots in the moment, and she said, Come back and see me in a week. And they just put me on long acting for the first week, just to kind of guess, get used to it and see us, started finger pricking and long lasting per week. And then saw her that next week, and she put me on,
Scott Benner 14:31 listen, it wouldn't be hard and fast, I don't think. But if I saw you with a 35 blood sugar, which, by the way, is 630 in over here in America? Yeah, I think I'd have a really difficult time thinking this is just type two diabetes. Also, like, yeah, not that your body weight has you know that people can be thin and have type two diabetes. Like, that's not my point. But like, you gotta think you can start adding the things up, like, the losing weight. Like, did you have other symptoms? Were you going to the bathroom? A lot?
Carly 14:59 Yeah, oh yeah. Like, it was where it first showed up. I grew up competitive swimming, so I always know when I'm getting sick when I'm swimming, like, because I'll feel bad without, like, before I actually feel bad. So it kind of popped up in December where I'm, like, my energy levels were really low and stuff. And didn't really notice the weight loss until kind of maybe a couple weeks before I went in, where I was, like, Oh, wait. Like, I put on a pair of jeans and, like, these are falling off me. Like, like, I would do a bike class, kind of the group on Saturday mornings. And my husband's also a very good cook. Stay can pass at kind of Friday nights. And I would show up on Saturday mornings generally, like, hung over and, like, super dehydrated, and joking with it was always joking with a buddy that my husband was trying to kill me. So I just feel like sweating salt and stuff like that. Carly,
Scott Benner 15:42 you're so Canadian.
Carly 15:47 So like, it was, yeah, like, those lots of thirst, getting up in the middle of night, he definitely infections and stuff like that were popping up and wouldn't go away. And, yeah, so, like, you look back on it, but like it was, like it was the energy level, like, again, it'll do something active, probably two, two times a day. And like, you know, I'd go for coffee in the morning from the office and just to walk a block. Just felt like that was
Scott Benner 16:08 too much. Hey, things degraded the way we would expect. But for some reason, a doctor looks at you and says, You have type two. You see endocrinologist A week later, after a week of metformin, he probably lost more weight, I'm imagining. And, yeah, luckily, you're not dead, but you're in DKA, aren't you? Not? If I was, they didn't tell me. Okay, so the the endo puts you on the long acting for a little while to get used to it, i By the way, why couldn't they should have put you in the hospital, is my point? Yeah, yeah, no, like, I, they sent me home that night, yeah, this will probably be fine. Give yourselves one of these a day while you acclimate to it. And then we'll talk to get, like, acclimate to, oh my god, yep. So you live through that. Obviously, you go back in a week. What happens? So they
Carly 16:54 put me on normal, like, yeah, so kind of fast acting and long lasting. And, you know, I see the dietitian, like, or I get a diabetes nurse that I kind of have to go and see her for, like, once a week for, I think about three weeks to kind of make sure I'm kind of getting the hang of it, yeah, and then I see the Endo, I think about three months later. And then after that, I'm on a one year rotation with the Endo, and that's about it for my for my care.
Scott Benner 17:23 Are you carb counting right away, or are you doing sliding scale? Which province? Oh, excuse me, you're messing
Carly 17:29 they did, yeah, they Yeah, yeah, yeah. They got me on carb counting right away. Well, yeah. So I got one friend that, like, two of his three children had type one diabetes, and I actually, like, I think that first Saturday after I've been diagnosed, I showed up. He was also part of this computing class. Showed up, and I kind of just said, I'm like, I got type I'm like, I've got been diagnosed with diabetes. And dude looked at me and he said, you know, like, well, he's like, there's two things I know about this disease. It's a numbers disease and it's a routine disease. And he's like, if I know two things about you, he's like, You love your routine, and you love numbers. So he's like, you're gonna kick ass at this, and you'll be fine. But he definitely helped me on the gave me a little bit more direction on kind of carb counting, and, you know, how they like,
Scott Benner 18:14 you know, kind of gave you a leg up. Give you a leg up on things, and got you going. I have to tell you, this lag just saved me because you said I have a friend whose kids have diabetes, and my brain wanted to say, Oh, God, your husband wasn't near those kids, was he? And I knew, and I knew how wrong that was, and the lag gave me time to think about it, and so I didn't say it. Now I'm taking credit for not saying it as I've posturally said it anyway, I find that both not funny at all and hilarious, in case you're all looking for an insight into my sense of humor, yep, well, I get it. Yeah, no, I was like, the only thing that stopped me was lag. I don't want to, I don't want to talk over when I say my stupid stuff. Anyway, let's assume those kids were over 18, so that what I just said feels okay. Yeah, they are now. They are now, yep, for sure, or then whatever. Anyway, your husband had nothing to do with that, nothing, nothing, no, not on this one. But, I mean, it is fair to say his ex wife and you both have diabetes. I'm just saying, Oh, my God, he should probably wear a condom constantly. I'm just, I think, so I don't know what he's got down there, but I don't think it's good. So
Carly 19:25 it's dangerous. Whatever it is, it's dangerous.
Scott Benner 19:29 That's right. Oh, there's no way to call this Canadian danger. Penis is there. I don't know what
Carly 19:35 your what your safe cards are allowed. So
Scott Benner 19:37 I think Apple won't let me do that. It's a shame, because, god damn it, that'd be awesome. So okay, so you get a little help from a friend. You get not a lot of, you know, not a lot of direction from healthcare. Does healthcare ever step in for you and become more valuable? Or do you just free wheel it on your own and figure it out?
Carly 19:56 Kind of free wheel it on my own, like people like, I really. Like my endocrinologist, but I think just the system is too, like, it's the way that, like, it is the, definitely the difference. You know, both systems have their issues. But like, the one thing I've really noticed in the States, I'm getting more appreciation, kind of, on the cancer side of things, is like, because it's a business, there's some customer service aspects down here, whereas in Canada, like, it's like, there's not, there's no incentive to go above and beyond, and you're kind of getting paid for, like, who you see and like, anything extra is, but not even that. There's not compensation. But, like, they're overworked, underpaid, and don't have the capacity to do it. But yeah, like, I would see my endo once a year. She's like, you're doing great. Like, my a one, CS at the time was low, sevens, but she was like, it's a little high, but you're super active, so I'm not worried about you. You're, you know, like, your weight, steady, all of that kind of stuff. So here's a prescription for the next year. Off you go, and we'll see you in a we'll see you in a year.
Scott Benner 20:58 Yeah? So it's a shame. You know, it's funny, as I'm sitting here like it's election day in America while you and I are doing this, it just occurred to me, I mean, out of nowhere, almost crazy, that you could listen to this podcast not know me and be like, Scott's got some really weird right wing fringe ideas, like he's always talking about how doctors aren't blah, blah, blah and everything. And I'm like, and I don't really give away my politics on here, or how I lean, really, but I don't feel that way. You know what I mean? Like, I don't have, like, the, like, the whole world's out to get me. This is all a conspiracy. You know, no one's working on a cure because there's more money. I don't really, I don't think like that. And by the way, if you do it's, I don't give a play. It's fine with me. But I find myself talking that way because of all the conversations that people have coming in here. Like, if you go back to the first year of the podcast, all I all you would hear me say is, like, look, I didn't get a lot of direction from my doctors, and I figured this out. And here's what I figured out. And here it is, you can just do whatever you want with it, right? But I don't know how many people have to come on and and say this stuff before you just go, wow. Like it, mean, it doesn't matter. It's ladies in Canada. Like it's, I hear from people in I just interviewed a woman in where, what the hell was she the other day? You don't know, because it was just me and her, but I think about, I think I was interviewing a woman from Bahrain. How does a woman from Bahrain find a podcast made by a guy in New Jersey? Because the people there aren't helping her. And, like, you know what I mean, and and so, and everywhere in between. If I pulled up a map of where this podcast is, like, vigorously listened to, the answer is almost everywhere. Yeah. This is also not to say that some of you don't have, like, awesome doctors who, like, on day one sat down and talked to you like, bang, here it is. Let me lay it out for you. And you just walked out of there with a five, five, a, 1c, because you know what you're doing. That absolutely happens. But clearly, I interview a person at least five days a week, and overwhelmingly, this is how the stories go. And I know people don't come on the internet to tell people how good things go, you know, all the time, but maybe more people should. So if you're listening to this, you're like, hey, you know it's not balanced. Well, then come on and be balanced about it. But all I can tell you is that a lot of people that come on tell me this, like, Hey, Scott, I know who you are, because my doctor did not fundamentally help me. So sucks, is all well, and on the other side, like
Carly 23:24 they're here, like three months, like we've
Scott Benner 23:28 only been 15. Oh, Carly, did you go to the wrong part of the house? Again, I'm with me, but she
Carly 23:33 made me cry.
Scott Benner 23:37 Oh, I can Yes. Now, okay, did you go to the wrong part of the house? What just happened?
Carly 23:40 Maybe. All right, let me Are you moving? No, I was sitting very still,
Scott Benner 23:44 because when I talk on the phone, I wander around my house aimlessly. When I'm on the phone, I like, oh, clean toilets. I put laundry in like, I sweep floors. People like, what are you doing? What? Sometimes I have to say to people I'm on phone calls, hey, in a second you're going to hear me flush the toilet. It's not because I just used it, I promise. It's because I cleaned it while we were talking. Yeah? Try something else. Maybe put your Wi Fi back on. Yeah. Okay. Well,
Carly 24:10 first, let's I've just tried a different room, which is going to be a little bit more. I don't know if that's echoey, but
Scott Benner 24:16 you have a tin foil hat that you can wear that might help. So I made my big pronouncement, and I said, it sucks, really, you started talking. I literally couldn't hear you. I'm sorry.
Carly 24:26 Okay, so, yeah, just on the endocrinologist side. Like it the first one I found here. She was actually quite involved with my diabetes and, like, but I yeah, she basically made me cry everything. Like, I left,
Scott Benner 24:39 oh, the office. But Carly, how does that? How does that happen? What does she say that that makes you upset? Well,
Carly 24:45 so this is so I was before coming down to the States. I was just on MBI, and so saw her for a while, and she's like, You need to get on a pump. You need to get on a pump. I'm like, Hey, fine. Like, I want to so kind of starting out, trying to understand insurance and all that kind of stuff. And, you know, with the insurance that we had was my husband's company at the time, I was just covered for Omnipod and the five was coming out. So I'm like, Well, this is supposed to be the newest technology. Like, why don't I just wait until it's out? Started on the five, and I'm like, maybe two weeks into it. First time I'm ever on a pump, and I walk into the office and he's like, this doesn't make any sense. I don't understand how to read any of this information. This is not helpful. Like, I didn't even know this was out. Like, what's going on? And she's yelling at me.
Scott Benner 25:27 She told you, get on a pump. You got a pump. And she's like, not this pump, you fucking idiot. Anyway, this is how the stories happen. People just keep listening. Go ahead. Yeah,
Carly 25:39 yeah. So that was kind of where I'm like, okay, yeah, I definitely it's time to leave her. So kind of got a new PCP, or found a PCP, and she referred me to a new window. I really quite like her, but again, like, I see her every three, four months, and, you know, we spend 1015, minutes together. But just even the difference, because, like, the Canadian and this could have changed. Like, I apologize to Dexcom, is it has changed. But the Canadian app versus the US app, like the Canadian app, the doctors didn't have the ability to download all your information. Okay? So, like, you'd go get your blood test and they would just see your ANC and like, that was the information they had, and that was that was it where. So even just the fact that, like, when my endo walks in, even if she only spent five minutes looking at my my information, she at least has a sense of what's going on with me. And, you know, and like, there is some kind of service around that level. But, you know, like, on the cancer side too, like, I'm just, I'm blown away at the care that I'm getting. And like, my access to doctors, and just, you know, one of the reasons that I was quite sure, if I was still in Canada, I might not even been diagnosed at all, and definitely would not have a lot of the stuff that has been caught would have gone unnoticed, just because of the way the system is set up there, versus it is here. Like there's something about the customer service, like, where it is a business, that you're trying to bring people back, that my brother in law had some kind of, like, just had some skin cancer stuff, and he went in, they treated it, and they said, like, hopefully we never see you again. And like, there's no preventative care to follow up, or like, anything like that. It's just like, you know, off you go and good luck. Whereas here it's like, you know, I'm still getting, you know, you're getting scans every three months just to make sure nothing new is popping up. And, like, there's a better sense of and with her, it could be just because, you know, kind of conspiracy people well, it's a business. They want to bring you in like they're trying to make money, you know, like, that's, I don't care, because they're, they're trying to take care of me. So do
Scott Benner 27:36 you think that, like, it feels like doctors helping you with cancer are more on the ball, because what they're doing is segmented, already understood, like their steps they're taking. We're going to do this, then we're going to take a scan. If the scan says this, we'll do that. Like it's much more if, then if this, then that, because it's a it's planned out, whereas diabetes probably has a lot of variables that the doctors aren't aware of. Yeah, I
Carly 28:02 hadn't actually, yeah, I hadn't really thought about that. But that does make again, with like, cancer, like, you're kind of supposed to be kind of cured, or whatever, and, like, but it can come back. And so there's whereas with diabetes, I guess, yeah, like, we have it, you have it, and it's not going away. So there's less, less need for follow up, is the right word. But yeah, yeah, yeah. I guess that's, that's a very good point. Yeah. I just
Scott Benner 28:23 wonder if that's the end it feels like it's going well because you're alive, so you're like, well, there was a CGM for your cancer, and you could see it bouncing around or whatever. I wonder if you would be like, well, they're trying their hardest, but it's not going as good as I wanted it. Like, you know what I mean? Like, it's such a I don't know. It's hard thing to quantify. I guess, yeah, maybe, yeah, yeah. I don't know. It's, it's, it sucks. Like, don't get me wrong. Like, in the end, you're asking a human being to, like, go to college, get an undergrad degree, go off to medical school, do the whole thing, absorb as much as they can, probably go into a specialty, learn as much as they can about the specialty, probably while they're learning about the specialty, the stuff they're learning is probably outdated, yeah. And then you come into a room and all the other stuff's going on, the human interaction, stuff, insurance, or time, or whatever, and they've got to look at you, make an assessment, say a thing based out of the knowledge in their head, and it's either right or it's wrong. And you go forward and see if you're lucky enough to, you know, to do it. I think with diabetes, when they tell you the wrong thing, it's so obvious right away, yeah, that you can say, Well, the thing that that person said to me was not helpful. And then they know that's the deal. And so then I think they throw their hands up and they think, oh, they'll figure it out. Yeah, that vibe, I don't know. I mean, I'm sure there's a lot of stories in between, but kind of feels that way to me sometimes, yeah, no, that's, yeah, that's a I like that, yeah, I don't know. It's just, I. Just think it's human. Yeah, I honestly think that if you stop talking about, I don't know, diabetes or cancer or health right now, and just shift it over to anything else and try to have a conversation about it, you'd start having the same exact conversation. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah. So,
Carly 30:19 and it's person to person dependent too, right? Like, it's even kind of, I would think of this kind of, like, work from home stuff that popped up post post COVID. Right now, companies are pulling back on that. And there's, you know, like, there's people that, like, it's work from home, but I'm still working. And then you have people like, Oh, I'm going to take advantage of this system. And, like, you know, it's kind of that some employees are good at it. Some employees aren't. And it's, I would assume, kind of the medical system and the doctors and everyone else out there is the same, like, you know, kind of people's motivations different, or people
Scott Benner 30:49 are a mixed bag, yeah, that's, yeah, right? And they have their barrier. They can find the bad ones, yeah. And they have their variables too, right? There's, like, it's easy to say, like, oh, you know, I don't know David doesn't do good working from home, but you don't know if David's kids are sick, or his wife is yelling at him constantly, or he's yelling at her constantly and she's running around, hiding from like, I don't know, like they might have a lot of family problem, and then he's working from home, and then it's both, David doesn't do a good job from home, or maybe David's At home, you know, with his phone in one hand, watching a YouTube video, and, you know, looking at Twitch with the other hand, and that's why he's not getting anything done. Yeah, you know, you don't know what the reasons are that things happen, but at the same time, there's going to be as many just lazy people as there are people who are just not in a good situation. And you just never know why what's happening is happening. Like, it's easy to think, like, Mo, my doctor is an idiot. He doesn't care. He's not trying to help me. Or maybe that's not the case at all. Like, maybe your doctor's sick, or maybe your doctor's, you know, getting divorced. Or, like, you know, I mean, like, there's a lot of things going on in people's lives. In the end, none of this matters, because this is what ends up happening. Listen, if you really look at diabetes, like over a timeline, go back to 19, you know, 1915 as an example, and you get diabetes and you die eventually, right? They were doing starvation diets to try to keep people alive, like that kind of stuff worked. Sometimes, for some people, insulin comes out. Shoot people with insulin, hey, I'm alive, right? Insulin gets better. I'm sure these people who were saved by insulin in 1928 for example, didn't live till they were 7990 years old, like, Right? But it saved their life in the meantime. Then you know what comes next? Uh, pork, beef, you know, regular mph, like, you start going through that timeline there, and every time I talk to somebody who lived through one of those timelines, it came with its own challenges, and then it gets better every time the insulin gets better, and then it gets better when pumps come out, and then it gets better when testing is better, and it gets better when CGM come out, and it gets better When algorithms come out. But what we're counting on through this whole thing is technology, either biological or mechanical, technology, to make diabetes better. At no point during this process do I hear anybody telling me, Oh, I was diagnosed in 1965 but I'm still alive now. Let me tell you how much better my doctor got during this time, no one ever tells that story. Right in my mind, what we're waiting for is technology to be able to mimic better the ability to take in information, absorb it, consider it, apply it towards everything the world knows about health and type one diabetes, and then regurgitate the correct answer. I think we're waiting for AI. Yeah, yeah. That's where I think a leap in doctoring is going to finally come from, because, not because doctors are bad people, or they're not trying, or they don't take it seriously, or they don't care about me, or there's, you know, insurance, they got everybody in there. It's, it's the limitations of their their little like, noodle, they're thinking thing like, it just, it's not because they're dumb, it's because we're human. Yeah,
Carly 34:07 well, and in the end, we we're human. Like, doctors can only give us so much information, and, yeah, I can have best doctor in the world. It's going to be like, you know, no more than anyone have, like, the best advice that, if I don't take that home and listen like, you know, in the end, it's still like me that has to figure out, like, what my body's doing, and why does it, you know, why it reacts this way when you know I'm doing this? And like, in the end, like we have to take some responsibility ourselves. Like, it sucks that, yeah, you know, you hope that you could be able to kind of go and see a doctor, and they should give you the right guidance. But in the end, it's like, you know, again, we still need to go and figure out what's best for us.
Scott Benner 34:46 And even that perspective is like, we have to go home and do something with it that gives that you understood it. Yeah, it's not just about like the doctor telling you the right thing to do. It's about them telling you that in a way that you can absorb. And now. Like, you're a different person. Some people are visual learners. Some people don't want to read. They want to some people want it told to them, like, how the hell are we supposed to get this straight? Do you know what I mean? But like, yeah. Like, I've already done an episode or two. I'm not saying it's perfect or anything like that, but I've had people come on who have had, like, medical issues that they're like, I don't know what's going on with me. And I was like, why don't we just sit down and keep asking? Ai like, why don't we keep telling the AI about you? And then ask it what might be the problem? And it gives back, like, I don't know if it's right or not, but it gives back reasonable ideas to look into that I don't know that everybody would think to look into. Yeah, I know it's not perfect right now, and I don't know if it'll ever be perfect. I'm not saying it will be or anything like that, but at least it can hear what you said. Remember all the things that you told it. My name is Carly. I'm this tall, I weigh this much. I've got this kind of cancer and that kind of cancer. I've got this kind of this, and I've got that, and I have type one diabetes, and I end it's possible that somebody with a magic wand is trying to kill me.
Carly 35:59 And, you know, because I call it magic, that'll just that goes right to his head,
Scott Benner 36:04 which head? Now, listen, exactly. We'll get the Canadian out of you, yeah, now the AI is, is it's remembered those things that you've told it. Now, here are my symptoms. What do you see here? Like, here's who I am, here's here's my, you know, here's my measurables. Here's what I know is wrong with me. Here's what I'm, you know, experiencing. Lay it out for me here. What do you think could be going on? What could I try, first, to try to impact these things, and then let an intelligence you know that has access to the internet, which should have access to everything that doctors learned, and if it doesn't, someone's going to do it. And you know what I mean? Like, I think doctor, your doctor in a pocket. Listen, I said this to my wife a couple of years ago, and she fought with me a little bit about it, but I said, I think one day doctors will be technicians and not the clinician. I think the AI will be the clinician and the doctor will be the human there to go over everything, to make sure it makes sense. Makes sense. Yeah, I don't think surgery right away, but you know what I mean, although there are, like, there are some robot surgery tools that are awesome, but they're usually very specific to one surgery that they do, yeah, but that, to me, makes the most sense. Like, where's the limitation of doctors? It's their inability to keep all of the necessary information in their head and then compute it and spit out an answer. Well,
Carly 37:29 to your point, earlier, like, you know what they're learning? Like, you know, stuff is changing so much and, like, yeah, so quickly that, like, what they learned even a few years ago might be irrelevant, and they might not know it's, it's relevant, right? Like, it's so or, what about
Scott Benner 37:44 new literature, new new testing, you know, this stuff that comes up constantly. Like, I had a lady reach out to me this morning, and, you know, like, listen, let's be clear. First of all, I'm a podcaster, okay? Like, you know, and she's, you know, she sends to me. She's like, Look, I know you're not a doctor. And know, this isn't medical advice, but my three year old has diabetes, but only has this specific antibody and blah, blah, blah. And you know, like, you know, isn't using much insulin. He's getting stem cell treatments. Like, the family's doing a lot, you know, trying to keep this diabetes at bay. And she says to me, do you think a GLP medication would help him? And I'm like, I'm reading this, and I'm like, and if she's listening, you know, it's cool that you reached out to me and everything, but I'm thinking, like, It's nine o'clock in the morning, lady, and I didn't go to medical school, like, I don't know, but, and my assumption now is that she's been listening to the podcast and heard a couple of people's stories about using glps and their insulin needs going significantly down, but I asked her that, and she hadn't heard those episodes. Oh, now, side note, Carly. That made me sad, because I would like it if you all listen to all the podcasts. But I got past that part pretty quickly, and I sent off an episode, and I said, Hey, listen. Here's an episode with this 15 year old girl who's using a GLP, and she's, like, barely using any insulin. Now, she had type one for like, three years. She's using a ton of insulin. Like, something's working for her. It's not gonna, you know, it's not curing her, obviously. And I'm assuming, at some point in her life, you know, this is gonna, you know, ratchet up. But this has been going on a while now, and everything. So she's like, I'll go listen to that. But Scott, what would you do if it was your kid? And so I'm like, Look, I'm not a listen. Also, I'm not a doctor. I don't give people medical advice. Like, I can't answer this question, but she had a lady here. She's you, she's craftsmen at straws, right? And I don't know if this ends up working for her kid or not, but obviously the lowest dose that's available in a pre mixed in a pre, like, measured pen, I'm assuming, would be insanely too much for a person that size, right? And I don't know the reasons why or why not. You wouldn't give it to a kid. Like, I don't know any of this, right? So I tell her all that. I'm like, I have no idea about any of this. I really don't know, but I. I would wonder too, if I was you, like, is there like, a micro dose of this medication that would help but and then I said to her, the the lamest thing you should ask your doctor. And when I said that, I thought she's gonna go ask a doctor who is gonna just have heard, like the side effects from GLP from two years ago on the internet and go, you can't give that to them. Give them liver disease and shut off their they're gonna, their guts are gonna twist up in a butt. Like, you know, I mean, like, so I ended up saying, why don't you send this episode to the doctor and let them listen to it, see if you can spark their imagination to go ask questions and find out. Because I don't know. Like, would the tiniest little bit of that stuff, like, do something for the kid? Would it hold off their diabetes? Like, would it, like, lessen the impact on, on the on the kids beta cells? Would it stretch things out? I don't know, but you know who definitely is not going to know her doctor, and so she was put in the ironic position of thinking to herself, it's possible a podcaster will have more up to date thoughts on this than my physician will. Now I'm not saying that's a good idea. I'm not saying you should be coming to me before your doctor. I genuinely am not saying that. I want to be very clear, but like it puts her in that position to wonder that, yeah, and if aI had access to everything that was happening in the world, and it could, it could consider those things, you know, like testing and, you know, stories and, you know, anecdotal and and whatnot, it might be able to come back and just say to her, like, hey, You know what? Don't do that, or I wonder what maybe the AI would come back and go, Hey, you do have to wonder what would happen if we just gave the kid, like, the teeniest little bit of this, like, I don't know, like, you know, but that's what I think you're waiting for, is you're waiting for something to aggregate information, be able to hold it, understand who you are, and regurgitate reasonable things to look into, yeah, yeah, no, for sure, yeah, because it ain't gonna happen. It's definitely not gonna happen in Canada. I mean, no, I try not to make a big deal out of it, because I feel like some people are like, Oh, see, he's like, He's agreeing that socialized medicine is a bad thing. But it takes way too long to go to a see a doctor in Canada. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It just like, when I was, yeah,
Carly 42:21 like, when I was in and I remember, like, when I got diagnosed, I'm just talking to a co worker, I was like, Well, yeah, like, I always had a very negative view of the US system. Like, well, you know, you could go bankrupt and, you know, whatever. Like, just, how is this not just part of, like, your everyone should have decent health care, right? And, yeah, I get diagnosed, and I have, you know, access to a nurse, and I immediately get an endocrinologist and stuff. And then I come down here and it's like, oh, like, both systems, again, have their issues, but if you have insurance here, like the level of care you're getting is exponentially better, you know, like, is so like, it's, yeah, like, neither system is perfect, but yeah, the Canadian system, like, having, just having access doesn't necessarily mean you're being taken care of,
Scott Benner 43:09 right? Yeah, right. Access to people three months later, and you know, we're longer I know, listen, I know other Canadians, and they come in with reasonable concerns, but, you know, the doctor's like, well, that's not going to kill you. We'll see in a year. And I'm not making that up. Like, I've had people tell me, I you know, I had low iron. Took them nearly a year to see a doctor, but, and it's low iron that needed, like, intervention, not like a vitamin, yeah? I mean, a year is a long time to live exhausted, yeah, when it's not necessary, because I had that happen to me, and I pressured a doctor, and four days later I had an iron infusion. Guess what? I felt better in two weeks like so somebody else has got to wait 12 months to your point. What exists here that doesn't exist there? It's the carrot at the end of the stick. It's money. So, yeah, you want to get paid. You get my ass in there and you fix my low iron problem. Yeah? You know, yeah, I don't know.
Carly 44:03 Like, I'll use my sister like she so my sister, over her lifetime, she's had, like, it's happened three or four times where she's just stood up and she's just passed out. And the last time it happened, she knocked her head, got a pretty bad concussion. And so they finally ran it, like, we'll run some tests and stuff. And so they're like, Well, we think you have epilepsy. So she goes and does the test. Like, it takes her three or four months to get the test, another three or four months to get the results. And like, it's inconclusive, so we need you to run another test. So it takes another three months, takes another three months to get the results. They're like, just over a year into this, and they're sitting there going, if you have epilepsy, we're gonna have to take you're gonna lose your driver's license, but because we don't know you know off you go do your live your normal life, but it was basically, like, it took them almost two years and maybe four or five appointments in total for her to be diagnosed as like, it's inconclusive. So we're just gonna leave. It. But all of
Scott Benner 45:01 that, anything was yeah, just even wear a helmet. I mean, like, is that? Like, yeah, yeah,
Carly 45:08 exactly. She first told me to epilepsy, looked up for ways to like or things to, you know, things to do, to take care of yourself. And one was like, maybe wear a helmet.
Scott Benner 45:17 Did somebody really say that? Send her a picture of what? Wait You said that you and I
Carly 45:24 would get along. Helmet for Christmas,
Scott Benner 45:26 yeah, you and I would get along. I see this, yeah, to me, though, the horrible part about the story isn't that they couldn't come up with an answer. Like, I accept that they can't always find an answer. It's the amount of time it took them to not come up with an answer. That's the part that kind of pisses me off. Like, how much time has to go by for you to go, oh, sorry. Like, you know how demoralizing that is, yeah, well,
Carly 45:49 just the fear of, you know, she's 45 years old. Like, yeah, when are we gonna be like, I've been driving for almost 30 years. Like, you're gonna take this away from me and like, what are the like, what does that do for my job and my kids and like, yeah, and stuff just overhang, like, hung over her for almost two years, and then to be like, ah, not sure. So we're just gonna leave it
Scott Benner 46:10 anyway. Good luck. Thanks for coming. Yeah, hey, get yourself a Tim bit on the way home. Yeah. God, that's a donut hole, right? Yeah, that's exactly what it is. You call it something fancy, but it's, it's the it's the middle of the track, like you've made something up, you know what? I mean, yeah, yeah. Have you ever tapped the tree and taken syrup right out of it? Yes or No,
Carly 46:34 I did. I was at a water poll tournament nationals in long time ago, and they were in Montreal, and so we went and did, uh, we did do that. So
Scott Benner 46:43 I know any stupid thing I ever say to people they've done so, yeah, I know
Carly 46:49 only once, though, only once. I only
Scott Benner 46:50 do that so that people who think that generalizing is bad go, maybe, maybe it's not like every dumb thing he says to people like, oh, that definitely happens. Go back to the Canadian episode where the girls, she's a can can dancer in the Yukon. It's awesome episode. Oh, and I say something to her about, like, working at the bar that I know people were like, Oh, stop reaching for. She goes, yep. And I'm like, Yeah, I win again. Anyway. What do you have here in your notes about diabetes versus cancer? What do you want to talk about revolving around that was interesting.
Carly 47:22 Papers reached out about that, like, because it was kind of like this. You know, if I could have one over the other, and cancer is looking like it's more chronic and not going away either. But if I can get rid of one, I would get rid of diabetes, because it's still still it's because it's all consuming, right? Like, Cancer sucks and but in the end, if you don't do a good job with either of them, the end result is going to be the same. You have a little bit more control, actually, probably a lot more control, over diabetes. But it's like, it's all consuming, right? Like, no, I probably don't go much more than 10 minutes where I don't, at least I'm like, What's my blood sugar? Like, haven't looked at my blood sugar. What's going on? Like, in every decision you make, right, like, Okay, I'm going to eat, but I'm going for a ride in a couple hours. Like, where it's, like with cancer and it again, like it my thoughts process is changing a little bit on this now that it is a little bit more chronic and not going away. But, you know, like, when I was first just doing, like, head surgery, surgery absolutely sucked. Post surgery sucked even more. But like, then I was just going in for immunotherapy once a month, right? So you kind of go in, you get the treatment, and then you would think about it for another month, right? Like, you kind of go about life a little bit, whereas Carly,
Scott Benner 48:33 I gotta tell you something, it isn't often that I get bummed out by things, but that I'm usually a very positive person. I don't want to bum you as the parent of a child with type one diabetes. She's just embarking on her young life. That really kicked me in the stomach. I have to tell you, thanks, Carly. I'm Yeah, yeah. Just here
Carly 48:53 to bring joy. I appreciate you
Scott Benner 48:56 being honest about it, and it's a very interesting perspective. Now, may I ask you if the cancer was going to take you three months from now, for sure, you'd say I'd rather get rid of the cancer. Yeah, yeah, for sure. Okay. I mean, I just didn't want people who can't hear nuance to yeah, get upset. That's all,
Carly 49:11 yeah, yeah, no, and like, and yeah. Again, it's kind of, you know, the fact that this is not going away as quickly, it becomes a little bit more sure of a bigger deal and a little bit more emotionally time consuming and stuff like that itself. So, you know, that perspective, you know, is, is evolving, yeah, probably say, but yeah, like, it's, they're, they're different mindsets. Have you
Scott Benner 49:33 had a big if I'm not here anymore conversation with your husband? Not really
Carly 49:38 like, I think so. I'm generally, um, relatively positive. I don't do a lot of research, you know, like, kind of, my doctor's like, oh yeah, we'll just have the surgery and you're just gonna do this treatment and whatever. And so I'm just kind of, I've gone about thinking I'm going to be fine, and not done much research. I guess still am reading a book and, like, there was one section on cancer, and I was like, Oh, this isn't doing. Well, for my my emotional health. And I did, um, I shared, like, one paragraph writer to my husband, and the next morning he woke up and he's like, You have to stop reading that book, because he didn't sleep the entire
Scott Benner 50:12 thing. He's like, listen, I read it and it's upsetting. Well, I mean, listen, I think that's like, I again, it's, I can't believe Texas. I mean, come on, you know what? I mean, it's a state. It's big, isn't it huge? It's the biggest city in Texas. I think it's bigger than a lot of countries like you would think, get a nice, rock solid internet connection. But neither here, yeah, I get the idea that the cancers, like do the thing move forward, right? Like we do the thing, we test later, we move forward. It's the only way to live with that. In my like opinion, my mom lived a, you know, a time, but a short time after her cancer was removed, and like she got to ring her bell and like it's gone, and then, you know, a year and a half later she was gone. But in that time, look at me trying to be upbeat about my mom dying. In that time, I did appreciate that we did the thing. The thing is over. We'll set up the next test. Until then, you'll live like it's not going to happen again. There was something good about that. Yeah, yeah. I don't understand how you could live otherwise, to be perfectly honest. No.
Carly 51:15 Well, you can't, like some people do, right? Like, I guess you know you you see it in the in the diabetes community, you see it in cancer community, right? Like, cancer came back and, like, I probably need to talk to someone. So kind of got a therapist, and, you know, first meeting, he type one diabetic and has been type one diabetic for like, 35 years. I'm like, okay, Kim and I, we're, we're each other's people. So kind of got along right from the beginning. But, like, both of us, we kind of talked about that. It's like, how I am not diabetic. I have type one diabetes, right? Like, and so it's kind of across everyone. Like, some people just internalize whatever's happening to them and make it part of their identity. And like, I'm not saying one way is right or wrong, right or wrong at all, but it's, you know, like, it's kind of how you guess, like, that's kind of part of me. And, yeah, like, you know, I guess saying like, diabetes is all consuming, but I still, like, I don't, my lifestyle hasn't changed, you know, like, I didn't, yeah, I haven't stopped drinking. I still eat carbs. Like, you're gonna live the way given that cookie, like, you know, like it's, yeah, like, my life is exactly the same as it was
Scott Benner 52:18 before. And how many visits with a therapist till you ask him if he's had sex with your husband.
Carly 52:26 That's a neckline. I think,
Scott Benner 52:29 listen, I don't think I can tell you any more of my secrets till I double check on this. Yeah. Rugby guy, big dude. You don't know him, do you? He's like the Johnny Appleseed to type one diabetes, your husband. He's gonna find this funny, right? Because he's big. And you, yeah, yeah, you can reach me through an interstate. So I'm not worried.
Carly 52:54 You can see the stuff that he sends me on Instagram, like the reels. He says, I don't want
Scott Benner 52:59 to open my front door. One die. And like, you know, like, this giant man sitting in front of me, I'm gonna go, Oh, you're gonna be Carly's husband. Yes, I'll just tell him that story about the can can dance or loosen him right off. He'll be fine. Yeah, yeah, Carly, is there anything we haven't talked about that you that you want to, that I haven't brought out of the conversation?
Carly 53:19 No, no. I think that's kind of Yeah. That covered it like, yeah, I guess just one kind of like that. Every system is a little different. And it's just, you know, I find kind of, when listening to someone from Canada talking about the system versus the states, that there's always kind of a bit of a, I don't know, cognitive difference. Is that the right term like that, I struggle with. And it's just, yeah, the system just, it's a little different and interesting, you know, managing both,
Scott Benner 53:46 yeah. So if someone comes on and starts saying, like, Oh, I'm in Canada, and everything went great, party used, like, It ain't like that everywhere. Sister, like, that kind of feeling like, just makes you feel like, that wasn't my experience, yeah,
Carly 53:57 yeah. And it just, and I think kind of people like in in Canada, we don't, like, until he was here, I didn't appreciate some of the, you know, the positives of the system down here, and some of the pro like, you know how some of it is a little bit more proactive and preventative versus, you know, yeah, like in Canada, like, unfortunately, like, it's part of the system, but, like, there's not a lot of preventative stuff. It's more like, just, how do we manage what's already happened? Yeah,
Scott Benner 54:22 I think that's pretty much everywhere, though. Like, yeah, if you're lucky enough to be working on preventative care, you're doing it yourself to some degree and or bringing in doctors who you're paying cash to here that are helping you with stuff like that. Like, if, you know, I don't know if they're, yeah, I don't know if most of them are, you know, even allowed to, like, listen to you. If you come in and say, Hey, like to preventative, I need you to help me manage some preventative mate, but that'd be interesting. Why don't you go into a general practitioner and say, I want to, I want to preventatively main, do something here. Can you help me watch the doctor go? Yeah, sure. But we can't bill your insurance. I. You know, so that sucks, really does, by the way, I love Canadian danger penis so much that I'm wondering, can I just, like, make it pee, like, you know, like ampersand, like NIS, or, would that, yeah, be okay, yeah, I don't know such a good title, or, what if? What if I called it Canadian danger and then a different P word, like a more acceptable one. Then the first thing I said when the episode came on was like, Look, guys, this episode is really called Canadian danger penis. But I couldn't put that, yeah, I couldn't put that in the title. I'll probably just reflect
Carly 55:36 that. That'd be another like, of course, in the moment I'm blanking on any other term for the Oh, for the penis, for a penis, but like, Is there, like some other, like Carly, I know, for
Scott Benner 55:47 fun, why don't you name all the words you know for penis right now? Yeah, the guy can bleep him out. What comes to mind? Go ahead. Well,
Carly 55:59 you said, imagine it like magic wand, like the shrimp boat. I'm now, I'm going to, was that Grumpy Old Men? At the end of Grumpy Old Men to be able
Scott Benner 56:08 men. How old were you? What the hell
Carly 56:10 was the same, like John Lennon and Walter les gal and stuff like,
Scott Benner 56:15 you got that. So, right? Walter Matthau, did you say? Is that right? Is that right? Is that the Walter, Matthau and Jack Lemmon, I believe you said John Lennon. Did you say John Lennon?
Carly 56:32 Wrong. One. Wrong.
Scott Benner 56:34 That was awesome. I did some use my Google fingers. Member, phallus. Phallus could work. Canadian danger phallus, oh yeah, that's what we're gonna do. Also, manhood, organ, shaft, tool, genitalia, private part, masculinity, Rod, package, pecker Johnson, Willie and junk. That's what came up for me. All right, that sounds pretty standard, yeah, none of the dirty ones came up.
Carly 56:59 No, no, yeah. But see, there you go,
Scott Benner 57:02 Canadian, let's go phallus, because the P is there, and then, yeah, because in private part would be weird. Yeah, I'll do phallus in the title, and then everybody will come in and I'll let them know I just had to do that for the title. And then we'll move on. Yeah, there we go. I love it. You've brought a lot to this podcast. When I look back over this thing when I'm done, I'm gonna remember this moment. I wonder how long I'll do this for. How long have you been listening?
Carly 57:26 So I started during COVID, like, I was kind of like, I needed to get out of the house, you know, work from home. And so I wasn't big into podcasts at all. I don't listen to podcasts at all at that time, like, oh, maybe this will be a good place to to learn about diabetes. And so it just kind of Googled diabetes podcasts and landed on yours
Scott Benner 57:44 and just started listening and have been stopped. 2019, 2020, 2020, Oh, awesome. Thank you. So I think I can Kelly, summer 20, Summer, summer. 2020. Summer. Okay. I think I could keep this going. I think I could do it another 10 years. Like, for me personally, like, I could, like, once I get into my 60s, like, I'm gonna be like, Listen, I'm just whatever money I've been able to scrape up, I'm, I'm gonna off with it now and be done. But I think I could do this for a decade. I think I could make it interesting for a decade. So that's my goal. Is 10 more years, 20 years total. Like, at the end, at my funeral. What's that well, and then the end, like, where
Carly 58:23 it's, like, it's part of, it's just creating a community, right? And people sharing stories about, you know, their own experiences that we're all experiencing. So it really is,
Scott Benner 58:31 Listen, I'm very proud of the whole thing, like, how I see it helping people every day, and it's a great outlet for my stupidity. So that's awesome. And, you know, like, people come on and tell stories that you just don't hear anymore. Like, listen. I don't know what we talked about today, but at one point you said, I think I'd rather keep cancer than diabetes, and I think that's a thing worth hearing and considering if you're out there listening, you know what I mean? Like, I do agree that you have to live like it's not their diabetes, that you have to minimize it as much as you can, you know, all that stuff, and try not to let it over take your life. But the truth of the matter is, is that, you know, when Carly came on and said, If you could give one of these away, she said, What? She said, You know, so you got to keep that in mind while you're living with it or parenting with it, or whatever. Yeah, all right, well, this was somehow a bummer and fun at the same time. I'm so sad about your just go
Carly 59:25 back. Just go back to the penises. And yeah, we'll make it end on a high note. On a high note,
Scott Benner 59:34 you just broke up. But I was so sure you're gonna say strategic and, oh, you just, you just broke up, Carly, I was so positive you're gonna say on a high note or on a hard note, but I wasn't sure where you were going with that. Is that where you're Oh, you and I would get along really well. You and I would get along very well. Wouldn't we look at us, you'd be like, Oh, he's about to say something stupid. I know. Yeah, I know he's about to say something stupid because I'm already thinking of stupid now. There you are breaking up like it is so infuriating. All right, I don't know what's wrong with Texas, but I hope they fix it. You were just gone. Hello,
Carly 1:00:11 Carly, hello, I'm here. Yeah, breaking up.
Scott Benner 1:00:15 I don't know what's wrong with Texas dog. Houston, we have a problem technology. Am I wrong? Yes, Justin,
Carly 1:00:21 we really do have a problem. Also, I can definitely call you not wrong.
Scott Benner 1:00:27 Carly, I'm gonna let you go so that I don't bang my head on this desk while people are listening. Okay,
Carly 1:00:32 yeah, no, that's great. Hold on one second. I'd
Scott Benner 1:00:42 love I'd like to thank the ever since 365 for sponsoring this episode of The Juicebox Podcast, and remind you that if you want the only sensor that gets inserted once a year and not every 14 days, you want the ever since CGM, ever since cgm.com/juice, box, one year, one CGM, a huge thanks to Omnipod, not just my longest sponsor, but my first one. Omnipod.com/juice box. If you love the podcast and you love two plus insulin pumps, this link is for you. Omnipod.com/juice box. I Juicebox. I can't thank you enough for listening. Please make sure you're subscribed, you're following in your audio app. I'll be back tomorrow with another episode of The Juicebox Podcast. If you or a loved one was just diagnosed with type one diabetes, and you're looking for some fresh perspective. The bowl beginning series from the Juicebox Podcast is a terrific place to start. That series is with myself and Jenny Smith. Jenny is a CD CES, a registered dietitian and a type one for over 35 years, and in the bowl beginning series, Jenny and I are going to answer the questions that most people have after a type one diabetes diagnosis. The series begins at episode 698, in your podcast player. Or you can go to Juicebox podcast.com and click on bold beginnings in the menu. Hey, what's up? Everybody? If you've noticed that the podcast sounds better and you're thinking like, how does that happen? What you're hearing is Rob at wrong way, recording doing his magic to these files. So if you want him to do his magic to you, wrong way. Recording.com, you got a podcast. You want somebody to edit it. You want rob you.
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#1472 Tao of Tom
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Tom, 29 (T1D since age 8), overcame resentment, weight gain, and stigma to take control of his diabetes while working in commercial real estate.
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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
Here we are back together again, friends for another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.
Tom Taylor 0:14
My name is Tom Taylor. I'm 29 years old. I'm from the New York City area. I work in commercial real estate analytics, I was diagnosed as a type one diabetic when I was eight years old in third grade. Please
Scott Benner 0:26
don't forget that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan or becoming bold with insulin. Don't forget to save 40% off of your entire order at cozy earth.com All you have to do is use the offer code Juicebox at checkout. That's Juicebox at checkout to save 40% at cozy earth.com AG, one is offering my listeners a free $76 gift. When you sign up, you'll get a welcome kit, a bottle of d3, k2, and five free travel packs in your first box. So make sure you check out drink, AG, one.com/juice, box to get this offer. Are you an adult living with type one or the caregiver of someone who is, if you are, I'd love it if you would go to T 1d, exchange.org/juice, box and take the survey. When you complete that survey, your answers are used to move type one diabetes research of all kinds, T 1d exchange.org/juice, box. It should not take you more than about 10 minutes. The episode you're about to listen to is sponsored by tandem Moby, the impressively small insulin pump. Tandem mobi features tandems newest algorithm control iq plus technology. It's designed for greater discretion, more freedom and improved time and range. Learn more and get started today at tandem diabetes.com/juice box. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Dexcom g7 the same CGM that my daughter wears. Check it out now at dexcom.com/juicebox,
Tom Taylor 2:07
my name is Tom Thaler. I'm 29 years old. I'm from the New York City area. I work in commercial real estate analytics. I was diagnosed as a type one diabetic when I was eight years old in third grade, and I have had quite a journey managing the disease. I've been relatively independent about it since I was young. I come in contact with a lot of folks who recognize my pump or my CGM in public, even though my my omnipot receiver usually gets mistaken for a second phone. I'm not nearly that cool to need two phones. I think it's very, very interesting community, and I really appreciate the work that you do, Scott and educating people about it.
Scott Benner 2:44
Oh, thank you. Did you see the omnipot app came out yesterday? I
Tom Taylor 2:47
didn't. I've been waiting for that for so long. Oh, I can't wait to get rid of this device. So,
Scott Benner 2:53
yeah, the app came out yesterday. I put a link up, got hit like 1000s of times in the first 24 hours. I was like, Wow, that's amazing. So people
Tom Taylor 2:59
were obviously really excited waiting for it. Well, thank God you're on top of it. Yeah? Al, I mean, in fairness, I get a text from somebody who says, hey, the app just came out, so I'm a little ahead on stuff like that, nevertheless. So you've had diabetes for 21 years. Your Diabetes can vote, drink and all that stuff. That's right, yeah, that's exactly. Has it ever gone to Vegas for the weekend, left you alone? Yeah, yeah. I think it has, I think it's gotten away from me from time to time. And then, you know, it'll, especially when I was younger, you know, I'd come back and, metaphorically speaking, you know, the disease would kind of say, hey, you know, you've been feeling terrible for a few days. This is why you need to get a grip on this. You know, over time, I've definitely found, you know, rhythms and mechanisms to kind of regulate it. And I think that, you know, it's a blessing in disguise, in retrospect. In fact, actually, I wrote my my college essay on type one diabetes and the phenomenon of high blood sugar and just how unfortunate the feeling is, I likened it to, and this is pretty nerdy, so stick with me here for a second. But there's a there's an old epic poem called The rhyme of the Ancient Mariner. You know, this guy kills an albatross and and all of a sudden, the world kind of collapses around him. And he's, he's sailing on the high seas, and the seas kind of turn to molasses. And I, you know, when you when your blood sugar is high, it feels like your blood is molasses, and everything is just kind of, you know, prickly and painful and slow. And so, you know, I think that feeling, which when I was younger, was probably like half of the time I was awake, something like that. What it makes you appreciate just feeling normal and all the little things in life. Gotta accept everyone, but it's definitely a blessing in disguise. In that way, you mentioned that you've been taking care of this since a pretty young age, but it wasn't because you were doing awesome at it. It just wasn't. It was because that was what was needed to be done. Exactly right. Exactly right. You know, it was no one in my family had this disease prior actual that's we found out when I was diagnosed. I have a very large family, and my mother's one of nine, my father's one of six. We've got a lot of very close blood relatives that are all very close. Geographically and as far as spending time with each other, but nobody else got was diagnosed with type one diabetes of the, you know, I can probably count, you know, 60 to 80 close relatives I could probably name for you right now, I was, I was the lucky one, but our great grandmother, on my mother's side was a diabetic and and she apparently had to use one needle that she would boil to sterilize and bore insulin. Insulin from a bore because they didn't have synthesized one readily available in the early part of the 20th century. And so, you know, we kind of figured out what was available as far as equipment and stuff. My parents and I kind of got into a routine when I was young, but I was very much left to monitor my own blood sugar, to set a schedule, to inject myself with the help of school nurses as well. When I was, you know, enough to be in school, basically, I think that the kind of epochs of time for me in managing, you know, type one was when I was younger, in elementary school, and I was diagnosed in third grade. School Nurses were a big part of the regulation, because that was the time I was away from my parents, and I would have to go to the school nurses, as you probably hear all that all the time, and check my blood sugar and take insulin ahead of lunch and whatnot. So they were very integral in establishing some structure there for me and having some accountability, which I think is important for a young kid dealing with the disease. There's a fine line, frankly, between accountability and, you know, oversight kind of taking away that sense of internal accountability for a kid. So I think that, you know, I was very fortunate to have some great school nurses when I was young, that that really made me accountable to managing the disease myself. But also, you know, giving me oversight and checking in to make sure that I had the help I needed to
Scott Benner 6:43
what was the level of expectation 21 years ago? What kind of insulin were you using? What were your outcomes like, and what were your goals? I remember,
Tom Taylor 6:52
you know, being diagnosed. Then it was November, 2003 you know, I kind of had in my head. I think I'm a fairly managerial person, and that I'm always kind of tracking progress in some way, whether it's my health or, you know, my work or whatever else. So I would think about these things in the way, a couple of different gages. I would think about my blood sugar on a day to day basis. I would think about my a 1c in the long term. And then, you know, just kind of how I felt, the expectations were, you know, you're going to have some swings. In retrospect, I kind of wish that the knowledge, I think that is kind of widely disseminated now, about how food affects you and what cycles we have immediately after eating, how much pre bolusing can help. Due to CGM, that wasn't really in my consciousness yet, so it was kind of like, All right, well, you're going to eat, you're going to then take a shot. You're going to feel probably pretty bad for a while, but then it'll come down. And, you know, if you run around a lot and you're active, that'll probably help control it, but you know, just good luck kid, you're gonna, you're gonna have probably feel bad for a lot of the time. But before I was diagnosed, so, you know, who knows exactly how long it was that I was diabetic before, you know, we realized it. And I'm happy to go into the story too, of how I was diagnosed. But I remember, I was in third grade. It was my first year playing tackle football, you know, I would think about the number of bathroom breaks I could take in a day in terms of, like, time outs for, you know, a college basketball game or something. You see the amount of time outs on the screen, on the crayon on the bottom, and they've got, you know, five a half, or whatever it is. I was, you know, left my own devices. I would have gone to the bathroom probably 20 times a 20 times a day, but I tried to limit myself so I wasn't, you know, in and out of class and disrupting everything. And the teachers would get upset with me. And wherever I was, you know, I had to find myself having to go to the bathroom every 1520 minutes. So during football practice, I would urinate on myself at least twice a practice. And there's a tremendous amount of shame, you know, and it was just a very unpleasant and confusing experience, you know, I remember speaking with, you know, my coach about the problem and just having having no answer, being, you know, being eight years old, yeah. But, you know, in retrospect, like everything was better than that, you know, finally getting in some of my system, I kind of just thought about it incrementally. You know, I went from having an A, 1c in the double digits, I remember, you know, at eight, and then by the time I was, you know, probably 10 or 11, I got it down into the, you know, the sevens, and then, you know, eventually that was kind of the plateau, yeah, I think it was probably in the, in the kind of low sevens. And then I went off of the pump for a while, because it would just kept coming out. And I hated tubing. That was very active kid, you know, I'm a golfer as well. And just anytime you have twisting and sweating, the pump is going to come out. So I switched to injections, until the last couple of years, honestly, in my mid 20s, I went back on the pump. And that, combined with the CGM, you know, has me now in the in the fives. Well, you know, I think my last ANC was like 5.3 or 5.4 and I'm, you know, trying to optimize, to hopefully be as close to a non diabetic as possible. I have a clarifying question. Back when you're talking about the football practice, is that prior to your diagnosis or after diagnosis, you were still using the bathroom that frequently
Scott Benner 9:53
you can manage diabetes confidently with the powerfully simple Dexcom g7 Dexcom. Com slash Juicebox. The Dexcom g7 is the CGM that my daughter is wearing. The g7 is a simple CGM system that delivers real time glucose numbers to your smartphone or smart watch. The g7 is made for all types of diabetes, type one and type two, but also people experiencing gestational diabetes, the Dexcom g7 can help you spend more time in range, which is proven to lower a 1c The more time you spend in range, the better and healthier you feel. And with the Dexcom clarity app, you can track your glucose trends. And the app will also provide you with a projected a 1c in as little as two weeks, if you're looking for clarity around your diabetes, you're looking for Dexcom, dexcom.com/juice box. When you use my link, you're supporting the podcast, dexcom.com/juice box. Head over there. Now this episode is sponsored by tandem Diabetes Care, and today I'm going to tell you about tandems, newest pump and algorithm, the tandem Moby system with control iq plus technology features auto Bolus, which can cover missed meal boluses and help prevent hyperglycemia. It has a dedicated sleep activity setting and is controlled from your personal iPhone. Tandem will help you to check your benefits today through my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox this is going to help you to get started with tandem, smallest pump yet that's powered by its best algorithm ever control iq plus technology helps to keep blood sugars in range by predicting glucose levels 30 minutes ahead, and it adjusts insulin accordingly. You can wear the tandem Moby in a number of ways. Wear it on body with a patch like adhesive sleeve that is sold separately. Clip it discreetly to your clothing or slip it into your pocket head. Now to my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox, to check out your benefits and get started today. Definitely prior. Prior, definitely, prior.
Tom Taylor 12:01
Okay, I remember, I was diagnosed November 7, 2003 which was, you know, toward, toward the latter part of the football season. But, you know, I had had most of it already. And I, you know, I go, basically at a doctor's appointment, at a regular checkup with our pediatrician that day, that November they, you know, test my blood sugar. As part of that, it's 350 or so. We go to the hospital, to the hospital, to Greenwich Hospital in Connecticut, and I stay for the weekend, and I remember just the, you know, when I finally got an insulin drip and tremendous relief that I felt. I didn't realize, you know, how what the cause was from my horrible, just kind of state of existence for the prior several months. But yeah, going forward, that was not a problem anymore.
Scott Benner 12:41
Okay, are there autoimmune in your family besides type one? Not that
Tom Taylor 12:45
I'm aware of, no some thyroid stuff, but yeah, nothing, really. This is a kind of a lone wolf,
Scott Benner 12:50
but there is thyroid people have hypothyroidism or Hashimotos, I
Tom Taylor 12:55
believe so. Yeah, and you know, not to pry too much into their lives, but I know that there is definitely, you know, some metabolic dysfunction going on, but, and you know what, I have this suspicion that a lot more people are diabetes than they that are actually diagnosed, but, but, no, I was, I was the lucky one out of, you know, a few dozen family members. Wow.
Scott Benner 13:16
You feel like there are people that have diabetes type one that don't know in your family, or what
Tom Taylor 13:21
do you maybe not in my family specifically, but you know, it's kind of, it's kind of strange how much it's come up that, you know, I'll have a friend say, you know, I've got this crazy brain fog, and you know, I'm just, you know, I'm out of it, and you know, I'm going to the bathroom a lot, and I'm always like, Okay, well, there's, there's a clue we should look into this. And I'm also one. I always keep extra land sets on me or my backup meter, and I'm always testing people's
Scott Benner 13:43
blood sugar Tom's like, I'll get, you know, I was like, we'll figure out what's happening right now, I always offer. I always offer. And when I was, have you ever found one? Have you ever unearthed the diagnosis? Thankfully,
Tom Taylor 13:54
no, I guess, for better or worse, you know, I wouldn't want to, you know, unnecessarily bring anybody into this. But, you know, I just maybe it's my, you know, whatever, just seeking misery loves company. But I do think that at some point I will probably find somebody is just suffering day in, day out, unnecessarily, who could be helped by, you know, just the regular course of of type one treatment, obviously type two is proliferating. You know, as a mild tangent, I do also have this pet cause that I think we should probably come up with a new name for type one diabetes. I know there's juvenile there's, you know, diabetes mellitus, but I just think that there's a lot of association that people have with type one and type two diabetes that is really not, you know, helpful for for the top of public consciousness. And, you know, I don't know if it affects research dollars or anything like that, progress toward a cure, but I think that their disease is enough that separately, that hopefully one day we can call it something different, and it would maybe, maybe lead to a better understanding.
Scott Benner 14:55
I'm always interested, because I find that some people have that feeling, and some people. Don't like. But what do you think the the confusion is because I know nobody understands type one diabetes versus type two diabetes out in the general you know, in the general world, they don't know this diabetes to them. But once you understand what it is like, once you have it type one, you know the difference. And why does it matter to you if other people don't,
Tom Taylor 15:23
you know, I think there's two realms to it. One, you know, having had this since I was a kid, and having it, you know, it's not, I don't think it's a main feature of my identity, but it's definitely part of my identity. There's definitely some judgment and some shame whether not people realize they're doing it. I think a lot of people do these things without intending to, you know, I think so too explicit. But I think that a lot of people here, you know, you say you have diabetes, and they're like, Oh yeah, you've got the fat disease. You know, are you where you're responsible or you don't take care of yourself? And it's like, well, no, I've got the genetic one actually,
Scott Benner 15:52
right? And
Tom Taylor 15:53
so whether that is even true or not, it doesn't matter to you, right? Like, you don't want to be associated. You're looking to have one less thing on your on your head, and if they're looking at you thinking, Oh, you have diabetes. This is a thing you had a choice in, and you did it, and you just, you would just like it if they understood it was a thing that happened to you. Yeah, yeah. And maybe that's, you know, a victim mentality, and I don't know why. Maybe it's not productive. And I've, you know, I've gotten over a lot of the resentment that I had just put this, you know, luck of the draw. Obviously, I couldn't control it. And I guess, you know, part of me, just my, you know, animal brain wants people to know, like, Hey, I, you know, this was just a, an unfortunate draw that I got, and it wasn't my fault. Yeah, I've largely gotten over that. It doesn't really, you know, keep me up at night, but I do think it would be productive, you know, for the discourse, just maybe, maybe, maybe, just for me, but to to have a different kind of label, because I do think that the way that the diseases work to, you know, I explain it very simply. I just say, Look, my auto immune system thought that my pancreas and the islet cells producing insulin were a foreign, you know, invader, and shut it down. And so it's more of an autoimmu disorder than diabetes, which is insulin resistance type two, which is, you know, a function of this kind of that, you know, avalanche effect, snowball rolling downhill of more insulin having less effect, you know, due to numerous causes, but oftentimes due to a level of a, you know, body mass that
Scott Benner 17:17
is so well, first of all, the first part, I completely agree with you, and I understand why you would want in a world where everybody misunderstands why type two diabetes exists almost, you know, like you don't. You just don't want people looking at you and going, like, you did a thing to yourself, like, like, all right, I got enough going on here. I don't need that. I also think it's interesting. There's a study recently, and I did it on one of the I forget it's been in an episode, so I'm going to get some of the numbers wrong. But they did a study with GLP medication and people who were pre diabetic, so people who were all, you know, looked like they were on their way to type two. And they put these people all on a GLP medication. And something crazy, like, in the mid 90% of them are no longer pre diabetic. Wow. My thought is, like, I know some people take in more calories than they need, and I know some people's activity level is lower, but I also think that a lot of it is genetic as well, because we're all basically out here eating the same food. And to say that, like, the impact it had on one person versus the other person, like one person's lucky enough to not have insulin resistance, and the other one does, I don't know that anybody's out there making like there are some people who are eating great I'm not saying that, but I'm saying of all the people that are out there who are just eating everyday foods that are available to them, that they can afford. Some of them get type two diabetes. Some of them don't, yeah, I don't know. Like, we're blaming people now for the food they can afford. Like, the only mean, like, it's, it sucks, right? Because if you go back a number of years, probably before, and I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but probably before, we were using all the processed foods and the chemicals on foods and etc. Like there's just one again. Details are, you know, you can go look them up if you want, but somebody chemically engineered a weed killer so that it wouldn't kill, I think wheat, yeah, yeah, you can basically just drop it all over a field of something that you're growing, and everything dies except the thing you're growing. Because they genetically, I don't know how they obviously, I don't know how they do it, but they make that that that poison so that it won't attack the thing that you mean to be growing. You're still spraying it on the food right before we did that. I mean, I'm assuming, if we go back to before things like that happen, you're going to see much less insulin resistance, type two diabetes, autoimmune issues, you know, inflammation, type stuff. You know, people saying, I can't eat my stomach hurts like that stuff. So, I mean, if this is how the food's made, I wish people could say it looks like we're caught in a thing here. You know what I mean. Like it's, no, I don't think you can blame one person or the other, but you also can't fight that fight as a type one. You're just looking to not have people point fingers at you, whether they're right or wrong about what they're saying. You're looking for them to just leave you the hell alone. It all makes sense to me.
Tom Taylor 20:15
Yeah, make a great point. And you know, I do have a lot of I think we're very aligned on the root causes of a lot of this stuff, you know, as a type one, I think again, one of the blessings is the part of the disease that is most dangerous for me. I can also, you know, have have some degree of control over, right? I can. I can manage my blood sugar. I try to be as efficient with insulin as I can. I try to maintain activity and not, you know, cause a snowball effect of inflammation. You know, I take medications. Originally, I was on humanogue and Lantus, and now I'm on, you know, mostly hemolog, just, you know, with my pump and I can, I can I can, you know, make lifestyle changes. And I'm very fortunate to be able to mostly afford, you know, to do what I want when it comes to food, and eat whole foods and not rely on processed and fast foods. You know, talk about snowball effects and momentum. You're right. I mean the prevalence of processed foods and glyphosate and other other weed killers that are illegal in many other countries. People always talk about going to Europe and you eat pasta for, you know, a week, and you come back having lost weight, and your stomach doesn't hurt, and you feel good. And, you know, who knows if those effects are over blown? I'd love to see like a real study on that. But, I mean, we all know it, right? I mean, the American food system definitely has inputs that are less desirable, whether or not it's specifically the volume of food, which I also do think that just because the food is so calorie dense, but nutrition low and made basically to be addictive in terms of its texture, its color, its crunch, its whatever its flavor, its sugar content, it's high fructose corn syrup. It really does create this compound effect where people, people can only do so much. You know, there there are stronger forces. There are people whose jobs it is to design addictive substances, whether it's slot machines, whether it's Doritos, whether it's social media, and they're really smart and they're really well paid, yeah, they know how to do it, that's for sure. And it creates this, this cycle of inflammation, where the insulin resistance is just inevitable. You know, again, there's no single solution to all this, but my my answer in my life has been, you know, the best I can to try to break those cycles. You know, people have different methods for it. You know, there's the, I forget the name of it right now, but there's an index that basically says, you know, how much food causes you to crave more food? You know, it's carbs and and the simplicity of carbs. And if you eat a very simple carbohydrate, heavy diet with low protein, low fat, you're going to just crave that dopamine hit of more food, and your body is not truly satiated. So I go high protein, high fiber, high healthy fats, low carb. And, you know, my body composition has changed dramatically. You know, I was a relatively chubby kid. When I graduated college in 2017 I was 290 pounds, you know, now I'm down in the low two hundreds just, I think, largely because I reversed the effect the momentum. Well, good for you. You're 290 How tall are you? I was 290 Yeah, I'm, like, between six one and six two. Wow. I was pretty rotund. There's a, you know, I was always a bigger kid. You know, when I was playing football, I had to wear an X on my helmet because I can only play line. Otherwise, I guess would have just fell on, fallen on some smaller kids and broken them. But, you know, I was never small. But then, you know, college, which is difficult to manage for any diabetic, definitely got a little out of control. And you know, I was definitely in a bad cycle of just eating and not exercising. And you know, alcohol doesn't help. And you know, being able to reverse that once I kind of got some resources, you know, once had my first job and could buy the food I wanted and whatever else made a big difference. And it's just amazing how good you can feel every day when you put a lot of effort into deliberately crafting your
Scott Benner 23:50
body. So even though, and you can now afford to do these things, but still, something has to motivate because you also could have afforded to buy a pizza every day. So like, what happened to you? I'm kind of going to your notes here, like you're talking about a journey of struggle, resentment, self pity. Like, why don't you walk me through that, and then let's get to where you where you are now, totally, totally, you
Tom Taylor 24:09
know, I think you're real. This is one of the things I love about your show, is you get to the heart of the matter there. So, yeah, as a kid, I definitely felt sorry for myself that I had this, you know, disease. I had this befall me. Why me? Why me? But it could have happened to anybody. And then that just kind of, I think I got better at it, but I never quite fixed the underlying issue. I went to a college where there were a lot of folks who had just a lot more resources than me. And so, you know, I'm thinking here, why have I gotten such a bad, bad break? And then you fall into a hole, and you and you say, Well, you know, if I wasn't given what other folks were given, as far as health, as far as you know, financial resources, as far as you know, guidance, what's the point I'm never going to win? And I think that that was a very destructive cycle for me. It really led to me not doing. Anything that I could have done in retrospect to make a little bit of a difference. And so it comes to a point where I am, you know, 22 years old. I'm sitting in my parents house because I had, you know, graduated college without a job. And, you know, I'm not a very efficient person, really, in any way. And I remember sitting in a room in my parents house without a job and just having a moment, and I don't know what it was, you know, I'm not well attributed to any specific phenomenon, but I kind of said, All right, what are we going to do here? Here's the path that you're on, doesn't it doesn't seem like fun. So are we just going to kind of roll over? Are we going to become, you know, just somebody who gets by? I think I'm I think I'm better than that, and then that that I think I'm better than that moment, I think is what was the spark, and it's not better than anybody else. I'm better than what I currently am. Yeah,
Speaker 1 25:47
also, you weren't. It's so interesting. You weren't. It's not like you were starting in some horrible hole. You weren't as advantaged as some of the people you went to college with. I hear that. Listen, my son told me once, when he went to college, he was, I am the poorest person here. And so I think I understand what you're saying, right? But at the same time, if you look at the country as a whole, I'm not asking you exactly where you fall, but like you weren't poor, am I? I grew up. I had food to eat. I had a home. I was blessed my you know, I had two parents in my house. I and then so that, that spark of, you know, I'm better than this is why? Why? Because I have been given opportunities. And, you know, there are billions of people on this earth who would kill for the life that I have. So you know what? Let's stop feeling sorry for ourselves. And you know what I just said, let's give it a shot. Yeah, let's give it a shot. Let's let's give a shot trying to not be at war with the world and not feeling sorry for myself. Let's try to reverse it. And it's not as if everything changed that day but that minute, sure that spark, you know, became flame. And maybe that's not the perfect metaphor, because I guess it would be something like a forest fire, but, you know, I turned it around and I said, Hey, look, I'm gonna try to make incremental progress here. I'm gonna keep working at getting a job. I'm gonna keep working at I'm gonna start working on my my health, my physique. And, you know, I found a friend of a friend who was a nutritionist and a personal trainer who was willing to, for, you know, a friends and family rate help me out with a nutrition plan and a workout plan or starting slow. It was probably the fall of 2017 after I had graduated college, and it took me three or four months, but I, you know, I lost 80 pounds. I worked out, really, for the first time in my life. And other than playing sports as a kid, right? I learned about food. I learned about, you know, what makes my body feel good, what makes it doesn't what makes it not feel good, and then, and all that momentum just kind of built on itself. And I really do think that the way you and I'm not treading new ground here, this is, you know, millions of people have made, have made statements publicly, but, but but I just, you know, you have to, you have to really believe it yourself. And then, you know, the whole the diabetes thing really fits into it, because it's like diabetes is a momentum disease, type one especially, and if you do the little things right consistently, you're going to be fine. You're going to feel better, build and compound. I understand what you're saying is that you're not, you're not saying anything magical the world's never heard before, but in your life, it was the first time you thought about it. Pretty much it is new information. You know what I mean, like, because you I mean, I don't care what people can have their own opinions, obviously, but I look at other people and I think that we're born and, you know, we say, Oh, here's our kids, like, we'll give them all the advantages that we can possibly go forward to give them, and, you know, the sky's the limit. And then you tell the kid the sky is the limit. The kid thinks the sky is the limit everything, like, nothing's gonna hold me back. And then when real life gets to you, you know, like, when someone beats you out for a spot on a on a baseball team when you're eight, or when you, you know, graduate with a degree, and you're like, No one's hiring me like, what's happening? Like, you know, all of those things, they're speed bumps, right? And, like you said, you keep going and you keep going, and you get past them eventually. But the knowledge that that's possible, I don't know that we talk about that, right? Because everything sort of just happens for you as you're growing up, like your parents pull you along from thing to thing, and bail you out along the way, and then all of a sudden, you know, this diabetes is on me. I've, I've gained weight at school, I'm not getting a job, and it feels like it's sink or swim, like, like, right? Like I gotta, I gotta do something here. But some people don't feel that way.
Tom Taylor 29:18
Like, no, totally. And I think you're right, and I think that knowledge is was probably underlying that, that spark, right, you know, I probably, you know, ingested a lot of this, you know, motivational talk or examples in my head, and just, you know, whatever it added up to, it eventually bubbled at the surface. And, you know, look, I, I love my parents very much. They had their own struggles in life. And we were actually on Medicaid for a large portion of my kind of teenage years, you know, so getting insulin was always tough sometimes. And, you know, navigating the health insurance process kind of radicalized me on that. But coming to this personal philosophy, this kind of like outlook on life, where I wake up every day and I say, You know what, certain things. Things are going to impede you. It's truly the biggest thing that makes a difference in getting over those things and building momentum forward is just that first moment, that first moment when you get bad news, or whether you know something doesn't go your way. And you know the first pin is like, you know that anxious, angry, negative feeling, if you can kind of accept that for what it is, process it, digest it, not hate it, because it's never going to go away, but just digest it and then step over it. Yeah, and you can actually do something, and then also appreciate other people. I think everyone has a cross to bear. Like I said, I, you know, I've, I've dealt with with my own struggles, and, you know, being on, you know, public assistance for health insurance made me appreciate like, you know, look, I respect people who can't do it, who have, you know, don't have help. Aren't there yet, but I'm not there yet. And I think it's just to think of life as a continuum, and you're never done, you're never tapped out, and you shouldn't be, and diabetes is just one realm for that. If you're a 1c is bad right now, and you just feel bad and you don't see a way out, like, just accept that, process it and then start over.
Scott Benner 31:09
I do think that everyone is at some point gonna think, Why me? Like, I have to, I'll be honest that maybe six days ago, for the very first time, probably since she was a little kid, like Arden and I were talking about, like, personal, like, you know, stuff about her, and she got upset, and she's like, I don't understand why this is happening to me. And she's talking about a number of different things, but I think diabetes was mixed into it. How come? You know, the things that are trying to feel like they're trying to stop me, like, I don't see them happening to other people all the time. And I just told her, I said, I think everybody generally gets something, some people get more, and some people get less. And it's pretty random. I just shared with her. I was like, Look, I for me. I just get up every day and I start over again. Like, you know, whatever happened the day before we took care of the things we couldn't take care of we couldn't, you know, and the things we could we did. And then you keep moving, you know, if you think backwards to something that was really horrible in your life a decade ago, that thing probably doesn't exist anymore. And so the thing that's happening today won't exist at some point either. And Scott, yeah, that's just how it occurs to me. Is that? Like, I mean, people say it by saying, like, keep moving. You know that that kind of thing. But in my mind, stuff's not, not important. Like, you know, you need to be kind to people, you need to make some money. You got to pay for your things. Like, all the things that have to happen have to happen. But if they don't like, you're still going to keep living. And then it's up to you to decide how that the life as it's reflected back to you, like, how you accept it, feel it and and treat it like, you know what I mean? Like, yeah, I don't want to say you can be happy anywhere, because I'm sure there are places I couldn't be happy. But you know, you could try to until you can move forward.
Tom Taylor 33:04
Well, it's a couple of things that I'll build on that, because I think you make fantastic points, you know, there's a lot of, you know, you can borrow from different philosophies, right? But a lot of the philosophies I buy into, most are kind of talk about thinking of life as, as something that's, that's motion, that's, that's movement. It's not. There's never a perfect moment, right? There's never a snapshot in time where everything is going to be perfect and everything's going to be good, and you're going to have this shining, perfect feeling, you know, and no anxieties and no sadness and no loss. It's motion. Life is constantly progressing forward. So let's think of it that way, and let's think about progress. And let's be gracious. Let's have gratitude for the get the things that are good and realize that everything that is good came because somebody got up, put their pants on, that's what I'd love to say, and went to work, yeah. And the buildings you live in, the art you watch and the music you listen to, is because somebody thought, and they were probably told at some point, like, you know, that's dumb, or they had self doubt, but they did it anyway. And one thing I also think about in terms of time and that kind of motion thing is, you know, somebody once, I was at a wedding a couple years ago, and somebody told me, like, Oh, I just, you know, I wish I lived in the 19 and the year 1900 you know, I just think all this natural stuff would be so much better than what we have right now. And I said, Look, if I was born in 1900 I wouldn't have lived past age eight, yeah, and I was eight years old when I was diagnosed with diabetes before 1920 when, you know, the some unbelievable doctors in Toronto synthesized insulin, you know, kids just fell into comas and then they didn't wake up. Yeah. And so I was born in 1995 I for whatever reason, I was fortunate enough to be born then, and I have insulin, and I can live a life that prior to then, I would not have been able to for all of the, you know, million plus years of human evolution. Let's build on that. Just take that, that gratitude, and, you know, think like, All right, well, if I was born at a different time, whatever you weren't, I don't understand
Scott Benner 34:55
that. People don't understand that today is the best time, and they'll. Yes, in the history of the world, to be alive, and the only thing that's going to beat that is tomorrow, smallpox, tuberculosis, malaria, typhoid, diphtheria, syphilis, pneumonia, cholera, the plague, leprosy, 1900 that all just kills you, probably, childhood mortality, yeah, I mean, and we don't have to, you know, everything isn't rosy and gold. There's still work to do, but there's, you know, we get to do that work, and that's great, and all of this is because people worked. It didn't just happen. Not that attitude is, is big. I wonder, sometimes I am not clear on purpose about like, how, like, where I fall politically, because I don't think it has anything to do with this podcast, but I think I speak in a way where I believe liberals hear me and think I'm liberal, and conservatives hear me and think I'm conservative, but I just take that as doing what you just said, which is kind of just taking good ideas from where they are, things that make common sense to me. I think
Tom Taylor 35:54
that's very advanced. I mean, it's not these sort of tribal as to say, you know, my team, my team, and I'm always right about this. You're just trying to find, I'm just trying
Scott Benner 36:02
to get trying to get through this thing, yeah? Like, I'm trying to get through this whole thing, like, and in the moment, what makes sense is, what
Tom Taylor 36:07
makes sense in order to run a government, you do have to, you know, eventually form coalitions and stuff. But when it comes to just people talking about stuff, yeah, we I just, I don't get how people can side with the camp and say, you know, look, I'm on this team. You know, you're wrong, because you're on the other team.
Scott Benner 36:24
I believe what I said earlier about type two diabetes. I think that if it progressed the way it has over the decades, it's clearly outside influences that are impacting people. And yes, people could continue to make better decisions. But that's not always as simple as it sounds. So I think a liberal person would hear me and go, My God, Scott is he's such a lefty. What a lovely thing. And but you know, like you, everybody deserves a chance, and you know, it's not your fault and everything, like all that stuff, generally speaking, I believe that. I also think that the world works because of people that get up off their ass and do stuff, and that complaining about your situation and expecting people to treat you in a certain way, I find it to be childish. And so, like, that's why, if you ask me where I am politically, I'd say I'm probably nowhere. Politically. You don't even mean, like, I know people are insulted to say that you're in the center and you see both sides. Like, it's like, well, I'll pick a side. I'm like, I'm picking our side. You don't even mean like, I'm picking your side. Like, there's some people have good ideas on all different kind of ideologies. You should try to soak them up as best you can. I don't. I just don't understand. And it's this time of year. And I mean, in fairness, the political cycle now runs like two and a half years. So it's like, you know, 18 months after an election, it goes away, and then it's back again pretty quickly. But I don't understand not wanting something enough to work for it, and I don't understand blaming somebody for being run over by a system or a world that is out of their control. And
Tom Taylor 37:54
that's, I think, the key there, is the out of your control, because I, you know, having been a kid, needed needed some help, needed some help, needed some instruction, and needed to learn some lessons for myself. You know, I do have a lot of sympathy for for folks who just taken it on the chin. Man. I mean, like life is a series of choices, and it's a series of inheritances, luck, whatever it is that you're getting, but neither are determinative. The choices are probably more determinative. But, you know, some people were born on third base and nothing hit the triple, and some people keep swinging and missing, and they don't realize they're facing the wrong way, you know? So it just all I can take it is, and your head starts to swirl, if you think about it, all at once. But from my perspective, all I ever want to do is try to make people's days a little bit better. I try to smile at people. I try to say hi to people, and then if I'm fortunate enough to tell my story, and you know anything about my outlook on life, I think it's about trying to elucidate, cast light upon the real choices that you make every day. You know, if you prioritize that there's like, also a sequential order of things you have to get an order in your life. I think, I think that it's like, you know, it's your physical body is very important in order to have order in your life. Then it's, it's clean your room. It's, it's, it's good, get some sleep. Find peace in your relationships. It's drop your resentments. Be honest with yourself about things, and then be honest about what it is that you want. You want validation from your peers. Do you want praise? Do you want security? You know, I think we all want those things a little bit, but I think just basing them head on is the first step. And like I said, you know, the batter facing the wrong direction keeps swinging and missing. If you just turn them around and say, hey, look, the pitcher's over there. Now they got a shot. A lot of people never get that shot. Yeah, no.
Scott Benner 39:33
And it's also can be very, very off putting to continue to put effort into something and watch it fail over and over and over again. I get that like, you know, in your parents didn't point you in the right direction, and you're just beating your head against the you know, like you said, you know you're facing the wrong way. You're beating their head against the wall. There's people too,
Tom Taylor 39:53
and you gotta, everyone's gotta just take accountability at some point their own life, do their best. And then we, you know, who have. Platform and, you know, have kind of come to these realizations. We just do our best to tell people, you know, the lessons we've learned, and hope that they can do it themselves as well. Yeah, well,
Scott Benner 40:10
for sure, listen. It doesn't change my life one way or the other people listening are like, I'm gonna try. Or they don't like, I just, I agree with you. I didn't know what you were going to talk about when you got on today. Now I know we're going to call this episode The Tao of Tom, you know, interesting to have the conversation and to let people listen and think maybe I am putting my effort in the wrong place. You know what I mean, like, because I'm not one foot in front of the other, one foot in front of the other. And if you're a diabetic, who was like me in my teens and 20s, who you know, was just like, you know, this sucks. Was given a bad deck of cards. You know, no one else has to deal with this. I'm playing life on hard mode totally. But you know what? That's gonna be a great story when you figure it out, and you will have earned it, when you feel good every day, and then that's something you can build on. I genuinely believe in that, like, I think that nothing feels better than something like hard fought, yeah, to be able to step back at the end and say to yourself, like, I started in a hole, and I got out of that hole, and then I looked around, absorbed some sunshine, made some good decisions, made some bad decisions, I'm moving forward. Don't hold yourself up against other people. I just think that in the Kim Kardashian world of like, you know, watching rich people do rich things, and thinking, that's my goal, I don't think that's your goal.
Tom Taylor 41:29
No, it's about again, it comes back to that snapshot. It's like, you know, you imagine what it's like to be. Insert celebrity here. Insert whoever your you know, load star is. And you think, oh, you know, they must feel perfect all the time. You know, they're beautiful, they're rich, they don't have any worries. They don't have the anxieties that I do. Yeah, they do. What is the one thing that every rich and famous person says is it's like, you know, you think you get all this and it's going to make everything better, and it doesn't, you know, you you know, my favorite public people are the ones who say, Look, you know, I have fears and anxieties just like you. It seems kind of condescending in a way, and pedantic but, but I think it is true, and you just have to understand that there's no easy way life is is motion, it's progress, it's work every single day. If you are willing to accept that and just be present in the moment and do your best every single day, no matter how you stumble, then you can actually find that thing that you're searching for and just realize it doesn't feel like this imaginary, perfect snapshot that you think it might
Scott Benner 42:29
right. What you're trying to do is hone your life and your situation, not create someone else's. And examples
Tom Taylor 42:35
are good, by the way, example, I think examples are good. That's why I kind of, you know, we do this, and you need to be able to point to somebody and say, hey, look, all right, I don't feel like I can do this, but they did. If you
Scott Benner 42:45
listen to the podcast, you know, I agree with that too, because it's been for a long time in the diabetes spaces. You don't celebrate in public because you make people who aren't doing as well feel bad. No, you gotta show them how. I always think like if you're not having success, nothing could be easier than looking at someone who is and asking them, like, what are you doing? And then looking at yourself and going, they said they're doing this. I'm not doing three of those things in diabetes. The way it occurs to me is you go putting up a graph that somebody else would kill for, and then they come ask you, Hey, what is it, you know, I don't know. And they start telling you about, like, well, I got my settings right. My basal is good, you know, like, that kind of stuff. And they're like, Oh, I haven't looked at my basal in years. Or, you know, like, you Pre Bolus a meal, like, of all the crazy things, yeah, go for a walk after you eat. All these little things, they add up. Like, all these different like, so wait, I know I can Bolus for a bag of chips, but you're saying you don't eat chips. You don't even like back all that stuff like so you hear what? And then you can keep some of it. You can say, Look, you know what? I'm still eating chips, but I will Pre Bolus for them. I didn't realize that, and let me go find out what the math is on my basal insulin. And then you have some successes. And you say to yourself, like, wow, that worked. Now you fine tune and hone. And then one day, you find yourself back in that square. You know, often for me, it's either being on the podcast as a guest or being in the private group. And then you put your graph up and you go, you know, six months ago, this is what my graph looked like. But look at it now. And then someone else comes along and says, Oh my god, that's amazing. How did you do that? And then it all starts over again.
Tom Taylor 44:18
Hey, man, you know one of my favorite lines of all time, and you know, a song, or any kind of media was, you know, song, Atlantic City, the guy, he says, you know, there's winners and there's losers. I'm south of the line. There is no line. There's no line. You are not south of the line. You're not a loser. And, you know, all it takes is little choices, believing that you actually can make a difference. And I hope that doesn't sound too you know, cliche or, you know, or repetitive, but it's real.
Scott Benner 44:42
Well, you know how it sounds Tom to people who have done it and it's worked for him, it sounds like scripture. And to people who were struggling, it sounds like, yeah, the point is, is that everybody who made it was struggling at some point, I felt like a loser. I felt
Tom Taylor 44:57
like this wasn't going to happen for me. You know? It. Never was going to but then little things every day, you know, for instance, like losing weight. Like, one of the things I tell you to do is take progress pictures every, every single day, because you can't notice it's not one day to the next. You're not going to lose, you know, an inch off your waist, but over after a month or two, you will Yeah, and it motivates the hell
Scott Benner 45:15
out of you. After you realize it too, exactly, yeah, you go, Wow, this actually is working. Because you can't you get, you know, they say things like, you get sick the same way you get well, like, that stuff like, you know, slowly and, and it's very true, you didn't notice yourself. Like, you didn't notice you going to 290 pounds. You didn't notice it on the way. And you might have noticed it coming down a little bit because it happened more quickly. Because you're lucky and you're young and you were, you know, you put something into action, start happening. But if you're an older person, you're trying to lose 50 pounds, it could take you years,
Tom Taylor 45:46
yes, but it's worth it, yeah. And you got to zoom out and say, I'd rather you know if I'm 40 years old and I want to lose 50 pounds, yeah, it's going to take you two years. But you think about when you're 50, and you look back and you said, Thank God, I did that. And yeah, it took some time, but I've got a lot more time now on the back end, because I did that an earned feeling. We're talking about is
Scott Benner 46:04
that losing weight, finding a job after college, or honing your diabetes care. In the end, they all work the same way. It's slow and steady, right? Like again, I like checking in and saying, here's where I'm at. I can see progress. This is awesome, and give yourself some credit for it, because you can get tired, you know, I listen. I watch my son come out of college. I'm gonna guess, based on what you do for living, your degree and my son's degree are probably reasonably similar. Are you doing this? Yeah, basically, are you doing coding in your job?
Tom Taylor 46:35
Little bit, yeah. Little bit, okay, yeah, writing, analysis, modeling, coding. So
Scott Benner 46:40
he comes out of school and he's got a an econ degree, and then he comes to me one day and he goes, I don't want to be involved in like, money. Basically, he's like, I know I have this degree, but I have it because I'm good at math, like, not because I wanted to go get involved in finance. He's like, I don't want to do that. My son's had a couple of opportunities coming out of college that he's turned down for personal reasons, that I was proud of him, because they're not things I could have turned down when I was like, right? And one of them was like, somebody got him an interview at a at a place, and he interviewed, and he said, I don't want to work for a company like that. I'm not going to do that. And I'm like, okay, and it's a big company, and it would have done well for him, trust me, but he just that's not the part of society I want to be involved in. No, it's important
Tom Taylor 47:26
to him and unfortunate. You know, obviously he's had, you know, good parenting and tutelage to be able to recognize his values. Well,
Scott Benner 47:34
it's also, and I don't say privilege very often, but is also privileged, because when I was 2223 I needed a job. Like, I would have, like, if you came up to me and said, like, Hey, we're gonna pick dead skunks up off the road, here's what it pays. I'd be like, All right, I'm there. Let's do it. Yeah, my son might have been like, I'm gonna hold out for something better. So he has the opportunity to hold out because of whatever, but he still made a choice for, like, a valid reason. He was trying to be a better citizen. Like that was really the answer. There's another job. Another job would have been great for him. And he said that, I do not want to carry a gun. I can't take this seriously. And I was like, Okay. I was like, well, then stop talking to them. But he was super interested in the rest of it. He just that one piece of it. He's like, I don't want to do that. All this progress in life is about realizing what matters to you, whether it's your health, whether it's being around, whether it's feeling good, whether it's it's, you know, being a good citizen, and then figuring out what you can control about it, and then doing those steps every day. You can do those things for your diabetes, though, is, I think what Tom's saying, and what I'm obviously been saying for years, so, but you can't be mad, like you can't hear this, and go, Sure, well, it's easy for you. At some point it wasn't easy. Like, I didn't know what the hell I was doing when Arden was younger. Like, I actually heard a woman recently say it helped me a lot to go back and listen to the beginning of the podcast to realize that Scott's been on a journey too. I came in so late, it was hard not to just look at him and go, like, well, sure, you can do it because you're the guy from the thing. But she's like, and I realized he hasn't always been this person, and that really, like meant a lot to her. She's like, I can grow too. Then I think that's
Tom Taylor 49:11
why humans love stories of journeys, right? Whether it's the Odyssey or whether it's, you know, a person's life journey, sure, it's like, we all started somewhere, we got a path to take, and we're all gonna end up somewhere. And yeah, your journey, my journey, their stories of figuring it out slowly but surely, having patience and you can control your diabetes again. It will not be a flip of a switch, but it is worth it to put in the time and to when you zoom out on your life that year, whatever it takes will be minuscule, and it'll be worth it.
Scott Benner 49:39
Yeah, what do you think you learned along the way that got you to where you are? I know you made a decision to do better for yourself, but once that decision was made, what are the steps that got you there?
Tom Taylor 49:49
I think it was a relatively slow process at first, but you know, like anything with inertia, you know, there's resistance to change, and then then all of a sudden, the change, kind of it has momentum in and of itself. You know, I think the biggest things were those realizing those values, you know, and what I wanted to, you know, you think about what makes me feel good, right? And you think about, some people think about their bank accounts. To think about, you know, how many friends they have, any likes they get, whatever it is that you get these sources, basically, of dopamine, you know, I thought I really want to feel good, you know, I just feel I wake up and I feel blah, you know, I'm tired, I'm sluggish. I want to see what it's like to feel good. I would love to know what it's like to be fast, to be able to run quickly. So I, you know, I started kind of searching. I asked friends, but you know, they do friends who are in shape. And eventually I connected with a friend of a friend who's a trainer and nutritionist, and you know, he said, you know, I'll help you out. And so I got a plan, and I we talked about my goals, and I said, I want to lose weight, and I want to get strong. Want to get stronger and faster, and I want to feel good. And so we come up with a plan. And it was a, you know, a 16 week plan, or whatever it was. And, you know, there were time I remember, you know, a couple months in, I injured my shoulder because I really had never lifted before. So he said, All right, so downshift and do something else. Do active recovery. Do you know, until your shoulder heels up and then get back on the horse? Because this isn't permanent, and you need to keep it up. And this is a lifestyle once I've figured out that created that virtuous cycle for myself, where working out, eating, right, sleeping, hydrating, being on top of my Pre Bolus, saying and going for a walk, figuring out the right dosages for my insulin, checking my blood sugar, making sure I'm good before bed, all that made me feel good. It was over. It was it was a cycle from there, and all of a sudden my motivation wasn't the quick dopamine hit from the bag of chips. It was, No, I'm gonna feel worse and I'm honest with myself, yeah, worse about having that. I'm gonna feel worse when I look at myself in the mirror and myself in the mirror. And I wanted to look in the mirror and feel good as well. And eventually I got
Scott Benner 51:48
to a place I wouldn't say I'm fast, yeah, never
Tom Taylor 51:50
was. And I feel good when I look in the mirror, and I feel good when I wake up every morning. And you know what? I know that I earned that.
Scott Benner 51:57
Yeah, my wife bought something that she thought I wanted, like a food product that she thought I wanted, right? I like it. I like what she bought me, but it's like a frozen, kind of processed version of something that I like. And then I saw it in the freezer, and I was like, Well, I am in a hurry today. I do like this. It's not my choice to eat it, but my wife bought it for me, and that made it feel like I should eat it. Like, do you know what I mean? Like that idea? So I had it, and I wake up the next day, I'm like, two pounds heavier than I was the day before, because it's, you know, like, processed, and there was, like, all this crap in it and everything. And I thought, What in the hell am I doing? Like, why didn't I just throw that away? Why didn't I just say to her, thank you so much for getting this for me, but I know if I eat this, it's gonna hit me tough, and I don't want that to be involved, but I did. I ate it and then, but then the next day, I thought, do something right now. And I went downstairs, and I grabbed what was left, and I threw it in the trash. And I was like, I was like, I lost a couple of dollars there. But I think it's better than eating it out of guilt and then throwing off the next three weeks of my life somehow, which is what it would have done. Like, I know that sounds crazy, but my body is I'm delicate.
Tom Taylor 53:07
I hate Listen, yeah, I feel you. And, you know what? I just take that as you know again, what motivates you and what motivates you, I think it's sweet is you want to, you know, make your wife feel good for getting having gotten something that you appreciated. And you know, you, but you then you have these competing values and priorities, and you're like, Well, you know, in this moment, the appreciation that I had for her, and let's be honest, a little bit of self indulgence won, but it's not permanent. And you said, All right, well, you know what? I'm gonna make this other competing priority take precedence over that going forward. And you're a human and you can't beat yourself up over it and just say, Yeah, learn a little lesson there.
Scott Benner 53:44
Yeah. I think I was eating it for her, because she was like, she bought it out of love. And I was like, I didn't want to reject it and make her feel like, oh, I try to do something nice and that. So I had some and then I'm like, she's not even gonna remember this is in the freezer, like, I can just get but I'm gonna tell her, I'm just gonna tell her, Look, I really appreciate it. From now on, let's get this version of that food instead of that. And
Tom Taylor 54:04
you appreciate what she's trying to do for you. But this is, you know, this is something I want to be, you know, this is, this is something that I prioritize and, you know, I appreciate it, I acknowledge it. But you know what? Let's, let's stick to something a little bit more clean or, you know, whole food or whatever, whatever motivates your diet.
Scott Benner 54:20
Yeah. I mean, listen, we're like, we're cooking. We're having people here for Thanksgiving this year. And I said to my wife, I'm like, they don't expect me to, like, make carrots with like marshmallows on it, or something, like one of those things that people eat. I'm like, I'm not doing that. Yeah, I'm not doing that. I'm, uh, I'm gonna make like, staple foods. I'm gonna make it out of Whole Foods, and they can eat what they want. And if that's then we'll have a pie. And if that's not enough, then they should, you know, they'll bring it with them or get something from somewhere else later. But like, I'm not, like, I'm not gonna make candy food. That's okay, right? My wife's like, I don't think anybody cares. I was like, All right, I might be the only
Tom Taylor 54:57
one anyway. And I have found, I think one of the. Kind of, like last highlights from my experience with diabetes that I had to come to understand the hard way was anything with syrup or any kind of, like, crystalline sugar structure like that is just deadly.
Scott Benner 55:09
Hits you fast, hard, you know, and
Tom Taylor 55:13
it just, it just accelerates. And, you know, I rarely ever, and I take pride in this. Get the, you know, the double arrows and my my CGM like it's rising rapidly. You know, I always say, you know, if I have some maple syrup or something, that's, there's my day, you know, honey, it's unfortunate, because that stuff is great. But, you know, when I was a kid, I would just spend entire days just feeling terrible. You know, high blood sugar is, is a very low, slow burning health that the syrup is. I mean, it's heinous. And the fact that high fructose corn syrup is in everything, it should motivate people as well to be conscious of the ingredients they're putting in themselves. If it's a plastic packaged product, it's probably not what you want, and just anything with syrup or high fructose corn syrup, whether or not you're diabetic, it's gonna cause inflammation, it's gonna spike your blood sugar, and you're better off without it. You just don't realize how it throws you off. You know, so many people walking around saying, Oh, I'm tired or, you know, but then sometimes they go back to it again because they felt good when they were eating it. So like, oh, I eat this crappy food. I'll eat more of it because I get a nice jolt when I eat it, but then it ruins hours of day cycle. Yeah, and it's remembered. It was, it was the glycemic index. That's what I was trying to recall earlier. This phenomenon where, like, you know, you eat something with a simple carb, no other nutrients, and, you know, it causes a large insulin release, and that's inflammatory, and it also causes you to crave more carbs, and then you're just, you're a snowball going on a hill, versus, if you break that cycle, it's hard. You're probably gonna have basically withdrawals. But if you can power through it, and you can zoom out and say, this is worth it, protein, fats, whole grains will break that cycle, and you won't need to crave the simple carbs, and your body will have less inflammation. And you're you're on a much, much better path.
Scott Benner 56:48
First of all, there's an episode in the Pro Tip series about glycemic index and load. There we go. It doesn't mean you can't have something sweet once in a while. It's just you're not on a Benner that you don't realize you've been on for years. You know, like conscious of what
Tom Taylor 57:00
you're putting in your body. I love ice cream. I love chocolate, but, you know, like and to my detriment, I have a tremendous sweet tooth, but it's a treat. It's got to be a treat. And you can't be sitting there housing a bowl of ice cream every night. And I think that, just in general, in life, giving yourself a little bit of work for to earn an indulgence, and not just making it a given is also a great I mean, that's a great I mean, that's a personal philosophy. I'm not prescribing anything for anyone, but this is what works for me, and I feel a lot more imbalance with my life and everything else, especially my health. If the treats are treats, and they are not just part of my diet, and you're conscious of the ingredients you're putting in
Scott Benner 57:36
your body, yeah, no, I appreciate you sharing that. Is there anything we didn't talk about that we should have, anything that you have on a list somewhere or in your head.
Tom Taylor 57:43
No, sir. We covered a lot. I'm really appreciative for the opportunity I love, you know, trying to help folks the best I can. I'm really appreciative of what you do. You know, I listen to probably 90% of the episodes. I think you're doing really great work. And I hope that, you know, diabetes is, is obviously a topic close to my heart and thinkers, but I think that this is a message that's applicable to everyone, and that's kind of why I wrote my college essay about it. I think whatever it did, you know, helps me get into the schools I got into because I learned a lot about life from having to deal with this. I think a lot of people probably do too, and if they haven't yet, there's an opportunity to it's any any obstacle can become a vehicle, you know, if you just kind of orient it correctly and figure out how to ride it.
Scott Benner 58:26
Well, that's awesome. No, I appreciate that very much.
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Returning guest, FB group expert from episode #829 "Chinese Hamster Ovaries," shares exciting updates on her PCOS and gastroparesis success.
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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 00:00 Hello friends and welcome back to another episode of The Juicebox Podcast. Today I'm speaking with Cassandra. She's a returning guest who was initially on episode 829, called Chinese hamster ovaries. She is giving us an update on how things are going with her PCOS gastroparesis. She had SIBO. She's an awesome guest. She's had a lot of success. Jump on here with us today, find out what she did to help herself. It is really, really exciting. Nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan. AG, one is offering my listeners a free $76 gift. When you sign up, you'll get a welcome kit, a bottle of d3, k2, and five free travel packs in your first box. So make sure you check out drink AG, one.com/juice box. To get this offer, don't forget to save 40% off of your entire order at cozy earth.com. All you have to do is use the offer code juice box at checkout. That's Juicebox at checkout to save 40% at cozy earth.com Are you an adult living with type one or the caregiver of someone who is and a US resident? If you are, I'd love it if you would go to T 1d exchange.org/juicebox, and take the survey. When you complete that survey, your answers are used to move type one diabetes research of all kinds, T, 1d, exchange.org/juice, box. It should not take you more than about 10 minutes. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by Medtronic diabetes and their mini med 780 G system designed to help ease the burden of diabetes management, imagine fewer worries about mis Bolus is or miscalculated carbs thanks to meal detection technology and automatic correction doses, learn more and get started today at Medtronic diabetes.com/juicebox the show you're about to listen to is sponsored by the ever since 365 the ever since 365 has exceptional accuracy over one year and is the most accurate CGM in the low range that you can get ever since cgm.com/juicebox
Cassandra 02:28 Hey, my name is Cassandra. I'm a returning guest, and some of you may know me as a group expert from the Juicebox
Scott Benner 02:36 Podcast. What do we call you online? Princess in Cassandra, excellent. So nice to talk to you again.
Speaker 1 02:44 Yeah, I'm so happy to be back because I have, I guess, a lot of new things to share. Yeah,
Scott Benner 02:50 no kidding, I'm looking at your list here. We're gonna, we're gonna really get into some stuff, give people maybe just kind of a high level overview of what your last episode was about.
Speaker 1 03:00 Oh my god, about so much and nothing at the same. I feel like,
Scott Benner 03:05 how? So, you know, everyone says that. So let me, I'm gonna get somebody's opinion here. So everybody listening. What you don't know is that when most of the interviews end, people say the same thing, hey, if you don't want to use that, it's okay. Everyone always thinks that their episode was about nothing. It wasn't good, like I listened to the podcast and all these other episodes are so helpful to me. And I know I didn't help anybody, but I always say to them, I'm like, delete episodes like the ones you're feeling helped by those people thought the same thing as you when it was over, that this just was not valuable at all. Right? So
Speaker 1 03:40 I don't think necessarily it wasn't very valuable for anyone. I just think, like we covered so many topics, and probably the main thing for me was, even if life gets complicated, especially with diabetes, especially with complications, you still can have a good life and perspective matters.
Scott Benner 04:05 Yeah, yeah, for sure, excellent. So we don't have people back very often, so you're special, of course. Do you want me to call you Cassandra or princess? Where you at with us? Cassandra? Okay, so Cassandra, I guess let's keep it then last episode. Tell people your episode number. Do you know it? 829, 829, okay, so medically, what did you tell people about? We
Speaker 1 04:29 talked a lot about Chinese hamster ovaries, about immunosuppressants, about chronic urticaria, about retinopathy. We talked thyroid.
Scott Benner 04:44 What do you have going on that brings you back? I kind of want to jump into it. Yeah.
Speaker 1 04:48 Well, at that point back then, when we recorded the PCOS, I suffered from since, like forever, was kind of at bay and didn't. Bother me as much as the last couple of years, and it kind of got urgent or more severe, I feel like, towards the end of my 30s now, and maybe that played also into it. And every time I asked my gynecologist about it, she just told me to eat healthier and do more sports. And maybe one thing you should know about me, I have a pretty active lifestyle, and I try to eat as healthy as I can. So it was basically just gaslighting
Scott Benner 05:41 so your ovaries were giving you trouble. And she was like, have more kale and go for a walk. Yeah? That seems helpful. This
Speaker 1 05:49 works, but not when your BMI is 22 Yeah, right, yeah. I was at a perfectly normal weight. I mean, a lot of people who suffer from PCOS, obviously, are overweight or obese, but that wasn't my problem. I had an a hormonal imbalance. Even
Scott Benner 06:09 if they have a hormonal imbalance, you can help your hormones back into balance by being at a healthy weight, not carrying fat. Has a lot with your hormones. So I get it. If a person was in that situation. They're like, hey, let's get you active and and maybe get some weight off of you and see if that helps. But you're saying not your situation at all. No, right, okay. And
Speaker 1 06:29 then I switched endos, and there again, the topic PCOS came up, and he told me, like, well, I could try some anti testosterone medicine, blah, blah, blah and all this stuff just didn't convince me, because they came with an array of side effects that you don't want. Yeah, and then I told him that I want to go to a specialist who is only specialized in PCOS and talk to them. And in the back of my mind, I had kind of a plan what I wanted to do, because I did some research, also, how you can manage PCOS without hormones, like because I knew when I walk in there, the first suggestion they will give me is just take the pill. Yeah, and I didn't want that. I found out that they actually perform a surgery on some women when they try to conceive. But it doesn't work. They use a treatment called laparoscopic ovarian drilling, and that kind of drill. They drill holes into your ovaries for what, so they can get babies.
Scott Benner 07:48 And does that work or no? Yeah, it does. Wow, okay,
Speaker 1 07:52 well, but that wasn't also wasn't my situation. I don't want to have a baby. I think we talked about that also last time. But, I mean, I wrote this, read this paper a little further, and they saw in this research that it also normalizes hormone levels and gives you a regular cycle. And I thought, yeah, bingo. That's all I need. I don't care how fertile I am, right, right. The main thing is, I have a regular cycle. Did you do this? And it worked well, and then the whole gas lighting started over because Doctor said, Well, no, it's, we don't do this here. It's far too dangerous. Just take the pill, because it could be that you enter a perimenopausal early and it will be far too dangerous, okay? And then another doctor told me, Well, yeah, it's just you talk to manage and babysit your diabetes. And I really was at the point where my cycles were anywhere from like 28 to days to three months, and ovulation started at day 14. And there is where the craziness started. My body tried to build up. The hormones to ovulate. Insulin needs went up. The ovulation didn't take place. Hormone level dropped, insulin needs dropped, and that for weeks and weeks and weeks and then all over again. And he just said, yeah, that's just your job. Now, the only other thing he could offer me would be the pill, but only the pill would be much too dangerous for me, so I need, would need to take blood thinners. Additionally, tell people
Scott Benner 09:45 why you didn't want to take a birth control pill. Today's episode is sponsored by a long term CGM. It's going to help you to stay on top of your glucose readings the ever since 365 I'm talking, of course, about the work. World's first and only CGM that lasts for one year, one year, one CGM. Are you tired of those other CGMS, the ones that give you all those problems that you didn't expect, knocking them off, false alerts not lasting as long as they're supposed to. If you're tired of those constant frustrations, use my link ever since cgm.com/juice box to learn more about the ever since 365 some of you may be able to experience the ever since 365 for as low as $199 for a full year at my link, you'll find those details and can learn about eligibility. Ever since cgm.com/juice box, check it out. Today's episode is sponsored by Medtronic diabetes, who is making life with diabetes easier with the mini med 780 G system. The mini med 780 G automated insulin delivery system anticipates, adjusts and corrects every five minutes. Real world results show people achieving up to 80% time and range with recommended settings, without increasing lows. But of course, Individual results may vary. The 780 G works around the clock, so you can focus on what matters. Have you heard about Medtronic extended infusion set? It's the first and only infusion set labeled for up to a seven day wear. This feature is repeatedly asked for, and Medtronic has delivered. 97% of people using the 780 G reported that they could manage their diabetes without major disruptions of sleep. They felt more free to eat what they wanted, and they felt less stress with fewer alarms and alerts you can't beat that learn more about how you can spend less time and effort managing your diabetes by visiting Medtronic diabetes.com/juicebox
Unknown Speaker 11:49 because I don't want to gain weight.
Scott Benner 11:50 Yeah, that was, that was your main concern. Yeah. Okay. Why would you have to take blood thinners?
Speaker 1 11:56 Yeah, because I'm over 35 and they are concerned for your cardiovascular health, then,
Scott Benner 12:03 oh, if they put you on the pill, they put you on a blood thinner as well. Yeah,
Speaker 1 12:06 okay. And I mean that this plan already sounds ridiculous to me. And then I went to a third doctor, and he said, Yeah, let's do it. And and then
Scott Benner 12:20 what happened? And I did it well, tell me what happened. What was that like?
Speaker 1 12:23 And also in the same time frame, I know, can I this all took so long to figure out I was desperate and I wanted some relief, and it was also at the time where you started talking about authentic Okay, so I went to my end all and said, Please put me on the lowest dose of authentic. I want to try this. And it was all kind of in the same time frame, seven months ago. Now, okay, ever since the surgery and the authentic, I had a regular I have a regular cycle. Wow. I mean, it's not picture perfect 28 days. It is somewhere between maybe 28 and 3540 but it is regular, actually. And I never had that before in my life. It's
Scott Benner 13:14 awesome. So my question here is, with some hindsight now and out of the problem, the, I mean, the bleeding, forever and ever, the pain and everything else that came with it. Can you look back on that time that you felt that way and really quantify it, like put it into words for people, what it was like? What, what was that thing you were so desperate to get away from? I mean,
Speaker 1 13:35 there's not really words for that, because I was just chasing a monster, like six weeks, eight of us out of eight,
Scott Benner 13:46 yeah, like heavy bleeding. I didn't
Speaker 1 13:49 have any bleeding at all. I don't have had I didn't have pain, I didn't have bleeding. It was just kind of could tell when my hormones started to raise, and then went down. And that's what my insulin needs. Just constantly changed, and, like, they doubled, and then in one hour, I was back down to normal.
Scott Benner 14:13 And so for you, it wasn't as much about the classic problems of an extended period, it was about taking care of your diabetes, yeah, yeah. And how long had you been doing it this way? Like, how much of your life? Like, tell people how old you were when you got type one. And when did this all start with the PCOS? I
Speaker 1 14:30 mean, I got type one when I was 11. I never had a normal period, so it's the you could say I was diagnosed with 14 when my period never started. And
Scott Benner 14:45 do you look back over that time and see insulin issues the entire time? Or did it start when you got older?
Speaker 1 14:51 I mean, I was so unmanaged, you can't tell, but probably, probably, yeah, and then, I mean. Some years I had an IUD, and that was better, not good, but better. And then when the replacement came up, I tried an IUD again, but I was basically just crying out of nowhere for a month and that IUD had to go out.
Scott Benner 15:19 The hormones from the IUD just put you into a tizzy, as they would have called it in the 50s.
Speaker 1 15:24 I was just crying out, starting to cry out of nowhere, right? I wasn't myself anymore, terrible. And that's also a reason why I said I don't want to try a pill. Yeah,
Scott Benner 15:36 right, right. Okay, you did the ovarian drilling and you started a GLP med. Do you think it's a combination of the two that helped, or do you think one of them is doing something and the other one wasn't valuable? I don't
Speaker 1 15:49 know what I can tell you from the TLP side is that I was able to lose some weight on parts of my body where I always had like a little extra,
Scott Benner 16:05 where did that? Would you mind sharing, where it gathered on you, on my belly, your belly. Okay, I'm
Speaker 1 16:11 a lean person to begin with, but my belly just always stored some fat, and I started out on the authentic at around the 130 pounds, and went down the first week five pounds and lost now in total, 23 pounds. Wow,
Scott Benner 16:35 you didn't feel good for so long. But can you like separate the things? Can you tell how just weight loss itself has impacted you, or is it more about the fat being gone? I feel
Speaker 1 16:45 now that I'm at the weight that is reflecting my lifestyle, and it's kind of fair. Do you know how I'm mean?
Scott Benner 16:56 Has it changed things for you, socially, or just the way you feel about yourself.
Speaker 1 17:00 It hasn't changed anything socially. No, okay,
Scott Benner 17:04 your attitude about who you are and everything that hasn't changed. No, okay, what about this? The way you feel, health wise, do you notice a difference? Yeah.
Speaker 1 17:15 I mean, my cholesterol, for example, was always like, not high, but a little bit on the higher side where they want you as a diabetic, it's completely normal now. They were always concerned about my kidneys. They are functioning completely normal now, and that's all since I started the TLT, you
Scott Benner 17:42 didn't go up, right? Are you still on a low dose? No.
Speaker 1 17:44 I mean, I always stayed at the point two, five milligram because, I mean, my BMI is now almost underweight, so I even I can't afford to go up.
Scott Benner 17:58 My point was that you're getting these benefits without ramping up the medication more and more and more. Yeah, yeah. How about the eating? Are you able to eat? Or are you having, like, what are your fights with glps? I mean,
Speaker 1 18:10 the fight is that that I'm actually, I had gastroparesis before I started the authentic so that was a concern. But from what I can tell, it didn't get worse on the authentic so it's it was a bit worse, like the first two weeks, I wasn't able to eat that much and had to divide portions and eat more snack type things. But like, after two weeks, this was fine again, but only, like, maybe two months ago, I found out something very interesting. Go ahead, I started to log my calories because I was pretty certain I'm not getting enough calories with your Sen big I would say I was able to eat more and still lose weight. If I had eaten that much prior to authentic, I had gained weight, I'm sure
Scott Benner 19:11 interesting, I will tell you that. Well, I'm using zepbound, which is, you know, a GLB from a different company, and I didn't eat poorly before. Do you understand? Like I Yeah, me neither, yeah. I found myself thinking this. Arden and I went out yesterday afternoon, and she helped me pick out glasses, and I took her to lunch. First, I got a sandwich. It was a, it was a brisket sandwich, right? So it was a, it's not really what I wanted. Cassandra, but I was at a restaurant. I was limited options. I got a brisket sandwich, just two pieces of rye bread, some shaved brisket inside the tiniest bit of cheese. They sent it out with some fries. I think I had eight fries, and I was like, oh, it's enough. And I was able to eat half of the sandwich, yeah. And I looked back and I thought, prior to the GLP, would I have eaten? All of this, maybe right? I might have, I don't think I would have cleaned my plate, but I probably would have eaten a little more of the sandwich. I might have had a few more of the fries. I drank an unsweet tea with it, you know, in a glass of water. But my point is, is that I looked around the room and there were other people in that restaurant eating far more than I was eating, and they were all thin, and they didn't look like they had health, you know what I mean, like visually they and I thought if I ate this without the GLP, get it, I'd weigh 50 pounds more than this. Yeah, I just would. So did it change how I eat? I don't eat quite as much, but not to the degree that you know, you guys have, if you've listened to the podcast, you've heard before, like, I would say all the time, like, I'd eat the the tiniest little bit of thing, I'd wake up a pound heavier. I was always like, I'd wake up the next day a pound heavier, like I either had to eat nothing, or, you know, really restrict down to, like, little bits of protein and stuff like that. My digestion still sucked all these other things. Yeah, but on the GLP, I'm not saying, like, I could go out eat a quart of ice cream every day and still be thin, but there's part of me that wonders if I couldn't, like, I don't test it, you know what I mean, because I don't care and I don't want that food. But I think some people are losing weight on it because they're taking in too many calories, and it's restricting their calories, and they're losing weight. And I think other people like you and me, and probably other people with autoimmune stuff in their families, something else is happening with it.
Speaker 1 21:29 Yeah, you know, I mean, I talked to my endo about it, just like a week ago, and it's like, you're talking to a ball. Yeah? They don't know. He just tells me, Oh no, no, you're just eating less than before. And I mean, I eat dinner every day with my partner, and I trust that he can touch pretty objectively if I eat more or less and it's the same portion size. And then he said, Oh yeah, maybe you had, like, snacks in between, and didn't even notice you had them, and you don't have them. Now, did you
Scott Benner 22:07 try explaining to him that that's not it, or did you just go,
Speaker 1 22:10 Okay, I mean, it's, it's ridiculous, and he's, he's, listen, no, he didn't, but no, it's just, there is no explanation. So it can be
Scott Benner 22:21 it's funny, because I'm sure you've heard Dr Blevins on the show, right? I did. I've had great conversations with him about glps, and he's much more forward to thinking than most people. But it always sticks in my head that at one point when I kind of broached the subject with him, his answer was, well, people are eating fewer calories. And I thought, yes, for some people, but I think for other people, for everyone, yeah, and, and I know he gets it, because you can tell by the rest of the conversation that he's very open to the idea, yeah. But at the same time, I wonder if doctors are just trained not to say more than the label says it does. You know what I mean? It must be that, yeah, yeah, because I don't know how to argue with what you're saying. I started
Speaker 1 23:06 to log my calories, and I've figured out I've eaten probably for the last decade, not more than 800 calories a day.
Scott Benner 23:16 Yeah, so you shouldn't be carrying 20 extra pounds.
Speaker 1 23:19 No, right? Also not losing weight, because 800 calories for sure, don't cover my knee. Yeah, should
Scott Benner 23:26 put you in a deficit, right? Exactly. This is awesome. Listen, Cassandra, I don't get enough credit on this podcast. So you learned about the glps on the podcast. I did. Yeah, basically I saved your life. Is that what you're here to
Unknown Speaker 23:38 say again and again and over and over.
Scott Benner 23:42 I'm teasing for the people out there, and for those of you who hate me, you're like, oh, he really, really needs this. No, I just want to point out that getting information like this can really change things for you. There are things you're not going to hear in other places, and the only reason you hear them on this podcast is through random events. Like, you know, we had to put Arden on a GLP for a similar idea. Like, we really consider that Arden has PCOS, and, you know, her struggles are different, and we put her on a GLP and injected, gosh, she started with ozempic, but Arden also has a significant needle phobia that we don't talk about a ton on here, because I don't really know how to talk about it. I'm actually going to do an episode with Erica about it, to try to dig into it a little bit. But so she had trouble with the ozempic pen, having to give herself because the visible, the needle was visible, right? So we took her to a self injector. But she just has a lot of psychological pain, like she just does from from the needles. Like, if you don't know a person with a needle phobia, I don't just mean like, I don't like needles. I mean like running for your life when you see them, you know, like, that kind of thing. So she powered through it for a while, and was doing it, but on the self injector, you're stuck with whatever the lowest dose is in the self injector. And it was too much for it was. Handling her blood sugars beautifully, and her acne would just about completely go away. And, you know, belly pain that she would have, like, gone, or periods got better, like all that stuff, worked really well. She just really struggled with the injections. So she did just start this week. We're doing a experiment with rebellious so a GLP, yeah, I was going
Speaker 1 25:23 to ask you if that wasn't an option, yeah. So we're
Scott Benner 25:27 trying it now. She's three pills in and right now the doctor has her. She's like, let's start every other day, because we want her to be able to eat, so we're watching it, but I think she's going to be able to go to it daily and still be able to eat, but it's a, like I said, an experiment. We're going to be at it for a little bit before, before we figure out exactly
Speaker 1 25:46 how to handle it. Well, I hope it works for her. Thank you. Thank
Scott Benner 25:50 you. We're also going to try working on the phobia. It's, you know, little bits at a time.
Speaker 1 25:55 Yeah, that's not something you accomplish, like, in a week, no, no,
Scott Benner 25:59 when it got bad at the end, I wasn't sure if I was gonna ever share this on the podcast. But when it got bad at the end, she was home for a little bit from school, and she was at that time away at school, about a six hour drive. So I said, Look, well, I can inject it for you before you go back. And that buys you a week. And she's like, Oh, great. Well, what do we do next week? And I'm like, I don't know. Like, we'll figure it out, right? So she and I together in a room. We couldn't do it. She just, she was like, no, no, no. Like she turns into, it's almost like she's in the electric chair. That's terrible. And she'll say anything to keep you from pushing the button. It's, it's crazy how like, she turns into, like, a life or death situation for So finally, in that moment, she said, just have Cole come in and hold my wrists, like I'm giving you permission to just give it to me, but I'm gonna defend it. I think I'm gonna swat it away when you come at me with it. So have Cole hold my hands. And I was like, okay, so Cole came in, poor Cole. Was like, what is happening? And, you know, so he kind of just restrained her around her wrists, like holding her hands together. And, you know, it was difficult, right? It was really one of the more difficult moments I've been through recently. And as I do the and you know how quick these injections, if they take eight seconds, you know what I mean? And like, so I'm doing it, and I just hear colgo. She's biting me. She's biting me. Oh my god. And Arden, like, I look over and she goes, I'm sorry. I thought I was biting myself. Like she actually went to bite her own hand, like, out of like, desperation, I guess, and she got him and didn't like she couldn't feel anything she's like. So I just thought I was biting myself. And then Cassandra, as as horrible as that was and is, like, fraught with tension and peril and, like, honestly, seriously, I'm not doing a good enough job of telling you how tense it was. She just starts laughing, because it's over now and all that's gone. It just disappeared. Wow, that's crazy. We started talking about it later, and she said, I'm scared of the needle. She's like, I can I picture it like puncturing my skin. And she goes, but I'm also disappointed and embarrassed that this is my reaction. So she's fighting with all that at the same time. Yeah, so what are we gonna do next week? The GLP is helping her so much, and she now she's going to be away at school, and so I am a little embarrassed to tell you that every Sunday morning, got up really early and drove the six hours to her, gave her the injection. We had lunch, and then I drove home. I spent my whole day Sunday going to give her the shot. I did it like three weeks in a row, and then one day she was just like, please, I can't keep doing this. She goes, I'm dreading it the entire week. And I was like, Okay, well, then that can't be like, so took us a little time to get the rebellious, oh, we got some samples, and now we're trying it. So I'm definitely gonna knock terrible. But you know what she's trying to avoid, because you've been through it too, yeah, with the hormones and the impacts on your blood sugar and your life and everything anyway, my point was, is that you heard about glps and what they can do for that, because my daughter had a problem, and I'm trying to figure it out, and I talk about it on here, and that's just a weird combination, like so you could have gone your whole life and not heard about these.
Speaker 1 29:19 Actually, I heard about them like in the media, because obviously they're everywhere at the moment you and what helped me back was always the talk about gastroparesis, and that I actually have gastroparesis, and actually only one word or one sentence you said, with something in my head that I said, thought like I need to try this. That several times, this is not even a therapeutic dose,
Scott Benner 29:53 right? So maybe I'll just go down and try that and see if it doesn't hit me. Yeah, the hard i. I would not minimize anybody's problems seriously. And gastroparesis is super serious. There are two ladies on the Facebook group that anytime glps Come up, they'll race in and leave a comment about, like, you know, people have gastroparesis, and these drugs are going to bind their stomachs up and like, and I'm not saying that couldn't happen, but you have to know your situation, like, if you've had type one diet,
Speaker 1 30:23 and then in the end, every medication has side effects. Sure,
Scott Benner 30:27 yeah, no. I mean, yeah, the greater risk is, like you said, everyone's flipping a coin when they take a drug, right? But for the people who have had type one for 3040, years, you know, can look back with honesty and say, like, you know, I had high a one CS, I had a lot of variability. The technology wasn't as good back then. The drugs weren't as good back then, like I have gastroparesis. Now, this is not a thing I want to risk. I understand that. But if you've had type one for, you know, three years and your a one C's been, you know, six and a half the whole time, you don't have gastroparesis, you're not just going to magically get it for injecting the drugs. But I think some people,
Speaker 1 31:01 but I feel like that's what some people are worried about.
Scott Benner 31:06 Yeah, so. And then they worry about that, and they think that, and then they say it out loud, and it scares everybody off by the people they're tolerated by are very well tolerated by those people like you just have to figure out who you are in the situation now, and
Speaker 1 31:17 I think also you have to be aware that you have to carefully choose what you eat. Yeah,
Scott Benner 31:26 so you're making another point that I've seen with this is that some people think magic weight loss drug, right, like
Speaker 1 31:32 if you infect the authentic and go to McDonald's in the evening and eat, I don't know what? Three burgers. It's probably not gonna go well, yeah, exactly.
Scott Benner 31:44 You do have to put an extra effort, and it sucks, because I don't think doctors are gonna tell you about it, but yeah, that's true. Listen, I've been on it for a year and a half, maybe more. I'm at my lowest, literally, today, my lowest weight. Yay, congrats. Thank you. And forget the weight like you should see, like the other measurements, you know, like the other measurements of health. So I use this scale that measures a bunch of stuff, weight, BMI, subcutaneous fat, like, all this stuff, right? And when I started, all my numbers were red, and then slowly they became yellow. And now of the 369, 12, of the 13 things it's tracking. I have four items that are yellow and the rest are green. Wow. So it's stunning. It just it's and I feel awesome, you know?
Speaker 1 32:35 But, yeah, I mean, it's similar to my story. I always had the thing with my kidneys, where they were always concerned and always on the brink of putting me onto medication again and just gone now,
Scott Benner 32:51 yeah, I talked about it on here a couple times, but they did a study about the impact of GLP on kidney disease. Yeah,
Speaker 1 32:59 I know, and I was hoping I get some effects from it as well. And there you are. And then, like a month ago, I was at my lowest weight, and was concerned I'm losing more, because it was really like my BMI was only 18.1 then, and talk to the doctors, what we do about it? And I also had tried to up my calories, because obviously I'm not getting enough calories, but I can't eat more because not working, I don't think to eat and I would feel too full, probably also partially due to the gastroparesis. And I started now drinking high caloric drinks, which is a little insane. When you're on a PLP, to bring high caloric
Scott Benner 33:51 drinks, you're trying to get in the calories somehow. Yeah, and it's working the way it's back up. I drink up protein drinks sometimes, just because they Yeah,
Speaker 1 34:01 but they don't have enough calories for me. Yeah, I need like, 800 calories in drinks.
Scott Benner 34:07 What do you drink that does this for you? A doctor
Speaker 1 34:11 can prescribe those really, yeah, that's awesome. They do this like for people who have cancer, or for all people that don't have appetite, or for people with eating disorders, yeah, it's like, it's similar to a shake, and you can have like, 100 different tastes, and not
Scott Benner 34:37 bad, right? And you know what? It's funny, because you're basically, you're bio hacking yourself. The way I'm hoping for people to think about it is that you have all these different systems in your bodies, right in your body, and they all have different settings, basically, and your settings are off, and your body's not putting them back to where they belong. So you're, you know, use the GLP to move some of the settings, but now it's causing a problem with my. Caloric sense, so I'll put them in here. Yeah,
Speaker 1 35:01 and I actually was very worried that the doctors would see this the wrong way, because the TLP isn't the problem. My body is the problem exactly. There is no reason to take away the TLP because my body works now the way it's supposed to work. So we need to add the calories and not take away the TLP. And luckily, all of my care team agreed it's
Scott Benner 35:29 excellent. Well, and did you have to do a lot of explaining to them to get them, or did they just kind of go with it? They basically
Speaker 1 35:35 just went with it. Oh, that's awesome, because they also see all the benefits. Yeah,
Scott Benner 35:40 well, they're paying but, yeah, but yeah, but sometimes they see the benefits. I mean, think about the people with type one who find the podcast and go to their doctor three months later and they're like, Hey, how are you? I know my a 1c, has always been eight, but it's 6.4 now, and the doctors go, you're having too many lows. We need to cut back your insulin. Like they panic and like they see them out, yeah? So who knows when that happens or doesn't, yeah,
Speaker 1 36:02 yeah. And I guess also, because I was very proactive and told them, hey, my weight is dropping. It's not something I want to happen. We need to address this, and this is my solution. They were probably, yeah, more prepared to help.
Scott Benner 36:20 Yeah. Also Cassandra. If they're reasonable people, they probably thought, hey, this person's really paying attention. Like, you know what I mean? Like, they would probably like it if more people came in with solutions like this for their problems. So probably good for you. No, seriously, do you feel like we covered that part of the conversation well? Because I want to ask about the G poem surgery. Yeah. Okay, so think younger, excellent, excellent. It's great. It's great story. Actually, you have gastroparesis from years of I mean, what do you think? Why do you think you have it from
Speaker 1 36:49 years of not paying tension, from in checking insulin, from high blood sugars. Okay,
Scott Benner 36:56 so now you're trying to decide to do something about it. Did you get this G poem surgery. Yeah,
Speaker 1 37:02 I mean, last time we talked, I had the procedure where they dilate the pylus, and that worked great for three months, and then I had another one, and it worked again, great for three months, but it always was kind of destroyed by some side effects from meds that delayed gastric emptying, and I was basically back to square zero, and also got SIBO, the bacterial overgrowth in my stomach, also due to the gastroparesis and then my gastro suggested to make the cheap poem, basically, not even better my situation, or Sure, partially also to better my situation with the gastroparesis. But I didn't have, like, super bad symptoms, but because also, mainly to prevent that the bacteria return again. Can
Scott Benner 38:05 I read this real quick during G poem, a flexible endoscope is inserted through the mouth into the stomach. The surgeon makes a small incision in the stomach lining and creates a tunnel to access the pyloric sphincter, the valve controlling the passage of stomach contents into the small intestine by cutting the muscle around this valve, the procedure relaxes the sphincter, facilitating better gastric emptying. That's the idea, right? Exactly, okay. And so you had this done, yes, and it wasn't fun. I mean, beyond that description,
Speaker 1 38:36 I mean the surgery itself was easy, because obviously they put me under and the preparation wasn't that much fun, because the surgeon told me, Well, yeah, just don't eat after midnight and come in in the morning and we do the surgery. But I knew they need an empty stomach, and if I fast for just shy of 12 hours, my stomach won't be empty, right?
Scott Benner 39:00 Did you say to him, I have gastroparesis, that's not going to work. Yeah.
Speaker 1 39:04 And then we agreed on seven on a 72 hour fast, wow. And yeah, that was hard. How'd
Scott Benner 39:13 you keep your blood sugar up for 72 hours? It
Speaker 1 39:15 was actually pretty easy. With the loo. I didn't change any of the settings, and it was just smooth sailing. I was
Scott Benner 39:23 gonna say, Arden got up this morning early to go to the dentist, and so she's been up for a couple hours now, and her blood sugar is incredibly stable. So
Speaker 1 39:33 and that's also something I wanted to point out, because I see that very often in the group, that people are scared to go in with an empty stomach for anesthesia, if it's a planned surgery, it's actually the best time to basal test beforehand, and then you don't have to change any settings, and you just go in and change nothing. Yeah, I understand.
Scott Benner 39:59 Why it's scary. But once your settings are good, especially on an algorithm that's, you know, really dialed in, you can go a fair amount of time without eating, yeah, yeah. But it sucks not eating for 72 hours, I imagine, yeah,
Speaker 1 40:11 yeah. And then, I mean, after surgery, I couldn't eat for two more days.
Scott Benner 40:16 Oh, gosh, no kidding. Yeah. Oh, how hungry were
Speaker 1 40:21 you? Kind of the wound had to heal, and they couldn't the muscle had to relax, and yeah, the stomach chest shouldn't
Scott Benner 40:29 work. Did they give you IVs? Or did you stay in the hospital? I
Speaker 1 40:33 had to stay in the hospital for two nights for that reason, particularly, and actually on after the surgery, my sugar started to grow, and then I turned back the basal, but it wasn't enough. And they said, Yeah, you can have one or two dextrose tabs. I was like, yeah, one do nothing, but let's try.
Scott Benner 40:58 You say I need an IV with some dextrous and it is what I need. Yeah,
Speaker 1 41:03 well, they offered me that, but I was scared I'm gonna go high and I don't want high blood sugars when my body should be able to heal. Right now, I hear you after a few dextrose tabs, I agreed on the dextrose iwi, but said I'm deciding how much goes in.
Scott Benner 41:21 Nice look at you, and they listened. Yeah.
Speaker 1 41:26 I had a very, very nice nurse who listened, and that just rang the bell every 10 minutes. Like, go little back, go little up and like, within an hour, it was perfectly dialed in. I had some insulin going, I had some dextrose going, and it was smooth sailing again. Did you
Scott Benner 41:47 have like, daydreams about having access to this dextrose in your real life? Not use this at home some days?
Unknown Speaker 41:57 Yeah. Honestly, nice. The SIBO
Scott Benner 41:59 overgrowth. How did they handle that? Probably
Speaker 1 42:01 around 200 rounds of antibiotics.
Scott Benner 42:06 What kind oral or inject? Yeah,
Speaker 1 42:10 it's like a special antibiotic they only use for SIBO, and that always worked short time I felt great on the treatment, and maybe, like two weeks after, but I did a fair amount of research there as well, and there are also a lot of natural treatments, and basically the natural treatment worked better for me.
Scott Benner 42:37 Let me ask first about the medical intervention. So they're giving you the antibiotics, trying to get your gut to balance out, right? But do they know why it's like, Why do you have the overgrowth? They
Speaker 1 42:49 think it's from the gastroparesis. Okay, that's what I was just so much food in there. Oh, and actually, what I wanted to tell about the 72 hour fast after the surgery, I asked the surgeon, like if there was any food left in my stomach. And he said, Yeah. I mean, it was almost empty, but not completely. 72
Scott Benner 43:09 hours, and your stomach wasn't empty yet. Yeah. Wow. And then what did you find naturally to to address the SIBO
Speaker 1 43:16 Berberine, and then oil of oregano, and there's also a third one, like a combo of three mats that you have to take for three or four weeks. And, I mean, if you Google it, there are, there is a ton of research around that. There are dosing schemes. You can figure that out on your own. And actually, even my gastro knew about those treatment options and said For some the natural remedies just had better and that I should try
Scott Benner 43:53 it. Berberine and oregano oil, yeah,
Speaker 1 43:57 and something else. Are you still taking them every day? No, no, no, it's just like four week course. And I had to, I mean, I was on it, maybe on and off on meds for half a year, so it took quite a while to heal. And then I also did the low fault map diet, and just to help manage symptoms, and I still can't eat everything again.
Scott Benner 44:27 Where are you now? Like, in like, where's your health? Do you feel like you're still working towards something, or do you feel like you got there? I'm not
Speaker 1 44:35 back 100% but I'm fine where I'm at. I just tried to minimize my Gluten intake, I can't have too much garlic, and that's about it. And, oh yeah, and I have to pay attention around fruity stuff with fructose. That's still a bit tricky. But I mean, if I go to a restaurant and have spaghetti for one. Night, nothing will happen. I just don't do it three nights in a row.
Scott Benner 45:03 Yeah, the fructose, because it it kind of like, what does it seed your stomach with all that sugar, and you get the overgrowth. The low
Speaker 1 45:11 fault maps is all about different sugars that can ferment in your stomach and that that helps the overgrow to happen, I have
Scott Benner 45:22 to tell you, I'm really happy for you, because it's probably been a year or more now, for people listening who don't know like Cassandra is a group expert in the private Facebook group, and there's a pretty big handful of lovely people who kind of bang around in there and they see people's questions and they'll answer them, like, Hey, you should try this episode of the podcast. Or, you know, here's a post about that, like, just, you know, trying to help. It's a really big community, and you know, people need to be directed. Sometimes. A Facebook group is not a perfect way to introduce you to a podcast, but if people are there to say you should try this episode or check out this list, it's really helpful. And so Cassandra and a number of other great people are doing that, and I couldn't possibly begin to thank them enough. But at the end of the year, I usually call everybody and, like, we chat for a long time, usually, like, it's usually an hour or more, like, just kind of get on the phone and say hello and stuff like that, and you and I spoke. I don't know if it was last Christmas or the Christmas before that. I really don't know. But do you know last Christmas? Last Christmas? Okay, while I was driving to see Arden, I think, yeah, I remember we talked for a long time, and I remember getting off the phone and thinking, Cassandra's really going through a lot, and you sounded tired from it. I was, yeah, yeah, you found it really beat up. Like, not like you were giving up or anything, but just like, like, this had been going on too long for too many days without enough answers that how you felt, yeah,
Speaker 1 46:52 yeah. I mean, it was exactly in that period where I tried to figure out the PCOS. And then I guess also, shortly before our call was I switched over to Iaps and just couldn't figure the darn thing out. And felt really like a failure.
Scott Benner 47:15 When we got off that call, I thought, oh gosh. Like, I don't think Cassandra is okay, but you sound so much better today. I am better. Yeah, it's awesome. That's really great. I'm still very, very happy for you, is all I wanted to say. Thank you. Yeah, it's a interesting to check in on people's lives and see they mean, I'm obviously not there every day while you're doing the work or or, you know, feeling the pressure to see you in, you know, gaps of time, gaps of time, and to watch it get better. It's just, it's uplifting, because you didn't give up. You figured out a lot on your own. These are not easy things to figure out. This gut stuff is not easy to figure out. You know, most doctors around gastroparesis are just going to tell you to eat a gastroparesis diet, and that's all, that's it. That's all. It's going to happen, and they'll give you pain medication for your stomach. They won't actually give you something to help you, because
Speaker 1 48:05 there also isn't that much for diabetes, gastroparesis to help
Scott Benner 48:11 you get something to numb your stomach, basically, yeah, and then that's that. But you mean, look at he did the, by the way, the G poem in surgery that we talked about as gastric parole endoscopic, my Myo to me, geez, no wonder they call it g poem, you know, like, that's the thing you had to go find out about, you know what I mean, and like, do your research about, and go through the, you know, the whole process of doing it, just to try to get some relief. How long ago was that surgery?
Speaker 1 48:41 It was in June. So six months is it still working?
Scott Benner 48:45 Yes, that's awesome. So did you have to adjust your insulin because of the rate that you were digesting? No, I
Speaker 1 48:53 also didn't have such a big effect as with the dilations. I feel like there I had to adjust my insulin more, but I feel like, since I'm on your same pick, my basal went down quite a bit, but I have to be more aggressive with my Bolus, because
Scott Benner 49:15 you don't have a lot of background basal. I'm not sure it might be are you using less? I mean, you probably are. But how much less insulin are you using now than a year ago? Listen,
Speaker 1 49:26 this is a very difficult comparison, because I'm eating much more now, but I can tell you my basal went down by around 40%
Scott Benner 49:37 Wow. Do you have a different relationship with food today than you did prior? I mean, not crazy.
Speaker 1 49:41 I always was a healthy eater. I don't use a lot of processed food at home. I tried to cook a meal every day. The only thing I probably noticed is, for example, if we go out. Out and then have dinner. And then the waitress comes again and asks if you want dessert. I'm like, nah, nah, it's fine. And before the authentic I would have thought about it more. Yeah, it's not that I don't like it anymore, but it says, In the grand scheme of things. It doesn't matter that much if I don't have dessert or something sweet doesn't
Scott Benner 50:25 bother you, don't feel like you're missing anything. Yeah, CNN did a special about glps, and I put it on, and I watched it, and it was a little like this. Part of me it was like, Is this an ad? Like, you know, I couldn't tell exactly what was happening. At one point, they go to this person who tries to make the argument like, you know, well, it's ruined eating for me. And I'm like, I don't understand the argument here exactly like, you were very unhealthy prior to this, and you're describing this insane improvement in your overall health, your weight, you know, all these other measurables, like, have gotten better, better, better, better, and at the end you cry like you're like, ah, but I want cake after dinner, and I'm like, go get a different hobby. Yeah, I
Speaker 1 51:12 actually had a very funny discussion a couple of weeks ago with my family doctor. He told me that he has a patient on a TLP, and he's on it for weight loss, and he said he wants to stop it every few weeks so he can eat normally.
Scott Benner 51:32 I don't understand. So people are
Unknown Speaker 51:35 like that,
Scott Benner 51:36 yeah, listen, I understand if that's how you feel. I guess what I don't understand is seeing all these improvements in your life that create such you know, I think
Speaker 1 51:47 you know what, Scott, I noticed this also from your stories that you're not so emotionally bound to Food. Sure, yeah, that's fair. And that's also something I'm not that emotionally bound to food. And some people are very, very emotionally bound to food. And for them, it probably feels like more like missing out, even if they see all the advantages it brings. Yeah,
Scott Benner 52:19 I mean, I would say, go talk to a therapist. Don't stop your medication for a week to eat differently. I mean, you know, and I don't even mean that funny, like, I'm just like, you know, obvious. Obviously you've got to, like, an issue. Yeah, you have an issue. Go figure out what it is. Like, you're so close now. And I, you know, my heart goes out to people who feel that way. I know people who have that attachment. I've seen some of them be able to push through it with GLP. And I've seen others like you describe I talked to this one person this past summer, and they clearly have pre diabetes, right? But it's probably type two already, and a weight issue, and their job requires a certain A, 1c, so they go on a GLP long enough to bring their A 1c down, and then get the test so they can keep their job. And then they go off and go off it immediately because they want to eat. And I had a very frank conversation with the person. I was like, You're killing yourself. You're you're gonna die, like, running around with an A 1c like, in double digits, you know? And I was like, just, don't, you know, like, and the person described to me that one of their joys is to come home after work, take a bag of frozen french fries, put them on a sheet pan, bake them and put cheese over top of them and eat them. Wow. And the person was like, I don't want to not do that. Yeah,
Unknown Speaker 53:43 you can't do that.
Scott Benner 53:46 No, no. TLP, yeah, you made the point earlier. There are going to be people who have stomach issues because it interacts poorly with them. Their body morphology is not able to handle it like but there are other people who slow their gastric emptying down with the drug, and then just continue to push in foods that are high fat, processed, not good food for you. You get stuck in there. Yeah, it's not like you're trying to digest a bunch of, you know, natural food. You're, you know, it's chemicals and additives and etc, and you're just jamming it in there in a slower digestive situation, and they're like, Well, I have stomach problems for the GLP, I would argue you have stomach problems from the bag of French fries, from the way they eat. And we need doctors to see the difference in that before they make blind judgments about, like, what this medication is for and what it's not for. You know, because I
Speaker 1 54:37 also had a person in my social circle who is overweight, and they tried the TLP as well. They tried it after I started. So I knew quite a bit to tell her how to handle the start and some tips and tricks. She couldn't do it. She just said, I can't eat such small portions. That isn't healthy for me,
Scott Benner 55:01 but they're significantly overweight. Yeah, yeah, I understand. Well, you tell yourself whatever. You tell yourself, I had side effects from GLP in the beginning, like, I probably didn't take what you would consider to be a well formed bowel movement for quite some time. And you know, my wife and I were doing it together, and she's like, are you gonna stop? And I'm like, I'm losing weight. I was like, No, you know, if this is how I gotta pay the piper to, like, you know, to get where I need to go, then I'm gonna find a way to get through this. And yeah, I had to take magnesium oxide to keep going to the bathroom. And it led to, you know, loose stool. And I was like, I guess this is the price I'm paying for, you know, for getting back to good. So I'll keep going, you know. And now it's not like that anymore, but it was like that for longer than I wanted it to be. I'll tell you that much. But I was like, I'm persevering. What have we not talked about that we should have? This is a good conversation.
Speaker 1 55:58 I think we covered everything that I wanted to talk about. Awesome,
Scott Benner 56:02 awesome. Hold on a second. Arden's texting me. Hi Arden. She said, the dentist, let me see if she's out now. She said, Are you recording? And I said, I'm almost done. Why? Let's see what she says, a drum roll. She's gonna want breakfast. What is she asking about? A lot of times, my kids just want me to cook for them. I'm hungry and I have to leave to get naughty in an hour or two, are you home? She could be in the house. I don't know. This is so boring, texting with Arden on, yeah, okay, I'll be down. She just wants breakfast. She's 20, by the way. She could use her hands and make it herself, but apparently it's better when I make it. But I think that's just convenience, yeah, well, that's it, yeah, exactly, right. They're like, Oh, it's better when you make it. I'm like, You mean, because I make it,
Speaker 1 56:44 yeah, in every aspect of it, you know, yeah,
Scott Benner 56:49 exactly I want to cook or clean up, or any of the stuff I have to get her back on. I've recordings with her. I'm starting to run out of my recordings of things she doesn't understand. Have
Speaker 1 56:58 to go do some love this series. You definitely have to continue. Oh, okay,
Scott Benner 57:01 good. I'll have to tell her, that's awesome. We were talking about the one that's coming out next week. It's about Bridget Mendler, like the Disney actress. No idea, nothing about this girl's like, a, you know, on a Disney TV show as a kid. Then she, you know, pumps out a couple of, like, hit pop songs, then she goes off to college, and, you know, who knows where she goes, and now she's running, like, running a satellite company, okay? And I'm like, What the hell? So Arden's just like, there's these crazy she's like, how did this happen? So we talked about, but I do love this guy. I like them. It's funny. I like them with Jenny too, because we talk more about, like, diabetes stuff in those Yeah. I think it's a great concept. Yeah. So I want to get more people to come on and do it. I'm going to, in 2025, I'm going to kind of put the call out for people and try to get people to pop on and just like, pick one topic, just like, I don't understand this, and I want to talk about it. And so together, we won't understand it. We'll figure it out. I'm definitely looking forward to that. Good, good. I'm glad. Oh, it's awesome to talk to you. Well, I'll see you. Oh, no, you're the oh, we're doing a group. What we're doing a group expert like, get together on Zoom. But we had to do it at a certain trying to stay up. What time of the morning? What time would it be for you if you were there 2am
Speaker 1 58:21 tell people where you live in Switzerland. Yeah, we
Scott Benner 58:26 adjusted it. We usually do it at one time, or Cassandra can come. But then it seems to mess up the people on the West Coast of America. So we moved it around a little bit so they could make it. But then it puts it like super late at night for you. So I will understand totally. Obviously, if you can't come, I'll try to manage you should pre record a message and send it over to us. This was really great to come back on and do a follow up like this. I really do appreciate it and all the hard work you put into the group,
Speaker 1 58:53 too. Thank you. Yeah, thank you for having me again. It's a pleasure.
Scott Benner 58:57 You're awesome to talk to. You're great to talk to because you have struggles, you pay attention to them, you research them, you put stuff into action. It works, or it doesn't work, you move on. And I think that's how more people should handle their health. Probably all people should handle their health. People like that are always very good at retelling their story, because they so authentically came to the answer that they really do understand the journey that makes sense. Makes sense? Yes, thank you. No, you're good at you're good at explaining your story. So it's always great to have you on. It's a pleasure. Hold on one second for me. Thanks for tuning in today, and thanks to Medtronic diabetes for sponsoring this episode. We've been talking about Medtronic mini med 780 G system today, an automated insulin delivery system that helps make diabetes management easier day and night, whether it's their meal detection technology or the Medtronic extended infusion set, it all comes together to simplify life with. Diabetes. Go find out more at my link, Medtronic diabetes.com/juice box. I'd like to thank the ever since 365 for sponsoring this episode of The Juicebox Podcast, and remind you that if you want the only sensor that gets inserted once a year and not every 14 days, you want the Eversense CGM, ever since cgm.com/juice, box, one year, one CGM. I can't thank you enough for listening. Please make sure you're subscribed, you're following in your audio app. I'll be back tomorrow with another episode of The Juicebox Podcast. Are you starting to see patterns but you can't quite make sense of them? You're like, Oh, if I Bolus here, this happens, but I don't know what to do. Should I put in a little less? A little more? If you're starting to have those thoughts, you're starting to think this isn't going the way the doctor said it would. I think I see something here, but I can't be sure. Once you're having those thoughts, you're ready for the diabetes Pro Tip series from the Juicebox Podcast. It begins at Episode 1000 you can also find it at Juicebox podcast.com up in the menu, and you can find a list in the private Facebook group. Just check right under the featured tab at the top, it'll show you lists of a ton of stuff, including the Pro Tip series, which runs from episode 1000 to 1025 Hey, what's up everybody? If you've noticed that the podcast sounds better and you're thinking like, how does that happen? What you're hearing is Rob at wrong way. Recording, doing his magic to these files. So if you want him to do his magic to you, wrong way. Recording.com, you got a podcast. You want somebody to edit it. You want rob you.
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