My Type One Diabetes Diagnosis Story
When I was in the sixth grade I ran cross country and track. Near the end of track season I started feeling out of breath on my runs and getting exhausted to the point where I couldnāt finish some of our runs at practice. I even had to drop out of a race because I just couldnāt finish it.
At the same time, I began having trouble seeing the board in class. I told my parents and they took me to get my eyes checked for glasses. My teachers, friends at school, and family started asking me if I was okay. Iāve never been one to complain so I always responded with āIām fineā.
I got my glasses on a Friday and wore them all weekend. By Monday, I wasnāt feeling well and I had barely eaten the day before, so I stayed home from school. I didnāt eat anything that day until my mom came home with watermelon, knowing I couldnāt pass it up. I did eat the watermelon, however, I got sick and could not stop throwing up.
My parents rushed me to the hospital and the people working the emergency room took me back as soon as we got through the doors. I donāt remember much from the emergency room but I do remember that I started feeling a lot better. I spent that first night in icu.
I was at the hospital for a week and kept begging them to let me go back to school. I didnāt understand at the time what diabetes meant and how it would affect my life. The doctor and nurses were in and out checking on me all day and night. They taught me to check my sugar and give myself a shot. The nutritionist came to talk to me about what I could eat and what I could not eat. At the time, I didnāt think it was a big deal. It was a lot harder on my parents than it was on me. It didnāt hit me until the day we left the hospital when we went to buy groceries and I broke down crying in the juice aisle.
My doctor wanted me to learn to do everything myself from the start since I was 12 when diagnosed. My parents helped some but we understood that I needed to be able to do this on my own. I really respect that. I was on mdi for six months before I got my insulin pump. That way if I ever needed to go back on shots for any period of time I would know what to do.