Monday, March 25, 2013

Dropping out of Diabetes



First of all, I want to tell anyone who might be reading this that I am not a writer. Also, any information presented on this blog is my opinion and my experience and is not given as medical advice to anyone. I wish to simply give you the information and allow you to know about my experience. I do feel that this information is valuable to everyone because as many of the professionals I have spoken with have stated, “I am proving the medical industry wrong”.
I have type 1 diabetes. I do not like saying “I AM” type one diabetic because A) It does not define me and who I am and B) I believe that diabetes occurs by lifestyle, so diabetes is something you do and not what/who you are.
I was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes on February 12th 2013. Looking back at the events before this date I should have known long before. Since the beginning of the year I could not keep hydrated. I was always thirsty, I could not quench my thirst no matter how much water I drank and I always had to pee. I was getting up 4-5 times every night to use the bathroom. Then, shortly after the dehydration started I began getting muscle spasms in my calves. I could no longer stretch in the morning upon waking up because if I did I would get very painful cramps in my legs. This went on for a while and I did some minor research online and I decided that it could be a number of other things. I hoped it would eventually just go away. In March I got constipated, then after a few days I started to vomit. This went on for several days and got to the point that my esophagus burned so bad I couldn’t ignore this anymore. It was like the worst case of heartburn I have ever felt only it would not stop or go away. I was in no shape to drive so I had my wife take me to the emergency room. Upon arriving at the emergency room the nurses knew exactly what the problem was. I was in ketoacidosis. The nurses knew this because they could smell it on me. One nurse even asked my wife if I had been drinking because of how I smelled. Side note: I don’t drink, so she found this particular question interesting. Also, I don’t remember much of this because I was close to going into a coma (according to the doctors and nurses at the hospital) I remember arriving at the hospital and then I remember being in the Intensive Care Unit wearing one of those sheets that only cover your front side and leave your back side exposed. I don’t remember anything in between.
So four days later I get out of the hospital. I jumped right in to a change of diet. The first things I eliminated were white foods. White rice, flour etc. are too refined and turn to sugar very quickly in your body. I soon found that even whole grain made my sugar jump extremely high so I decided to cut that out as well. By this time my mom had introduced me to the GAPS diet. I tried to research how the GAPS diet would benefit a type one diabetic but the information was extremely limited. All I could find were vague references about how someone heard that it seemed to help someone on a blog or that someone they knew was trying it. No solid information for diabetics no matter where I looked. There was significant evidence however of many people having wonderful success reversing their "incurable" autoimmune diseases. So, my intent is to provide diabetics with the information based on my experience as a diabetic on the GAPS diet in my efforts to completely drop out of diabetes.

1 comment:

  1. That's crazy man, but I like how you're taking it. Head on. Good on ya.

    ReplyDelete