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06-24-2005, 11:22 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: The mighty shire. England
Posts: 1,225
| | | If you are a breakfast skipper If you are diabetic and skip breakfast when you don't feel like eating could I please ask you to post that you do, and that it's ok for us to do so if we like.
I'm on a mission to prove to my mum that I don't 'need' to eat breakfast if I don't want to. To prove that I can have excellent control without it, and that I won't pass out before lunch.
I don't live with my mum and dad, so I eat how I like when I like and have pretty ok control of my bg at the moment and I do eat a good balanced diet.
But when I go home (next weekend I will be) My mum insists I eat all sorts that I don't usually. Usually she insists I eat cerial and even then that I don't have enough. But I hate breakfast, usually I just eat some fruit which I think is great.... but I know what my mums gonna be like when I eat nothing but a peach and atempt to hit the shops all morning  she aint gonna let me I know that much!!
So how many of us actually skip breakfast? I need as many of you as possoble who do, then I'm printing this out and serving it to my mum at the breakfast table
I've already printed some of the 'Misconceptions about Diabetes from our own members' thread, but I need more back up. I usually put on weight just from a trip home
My mum gets quite confused about diabetes because I've never lived at home whilst i've had it, so she knows as little as she needs to. But she thinks i need carbs, carbs and more carbs and looks on worryingly when ever I'm running around with my nephew for too long, she thinks I'm gonna conk out.
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06-24-2005, 11:26 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Sep 2004 Location: Savannah, GA USA
Posts: 1,519
| | | I usually skip breakfast during the week. The more important thing is that you stick to your schedule. If you don't normaly eat breakfast, then you will screw up your sugars changing up your routine like that.
__________________ The only way to manage diabetes is to CURE it... Diabetes since December, 1983 Meds: Humalog/Pump since 1998, Synthroid 88mcg, Zetia 10mg, Altace 10mg, Prevacid 30mg, Benfotiamine 600mg, 1-a-day multivitamin, Aspirin 325 mg, Garlic-geltab 4,000mg, methylcel. fiber therapy 2,000mg(for cholesterol) So, what's in your lunchbox? | 
06-24-2005, 11:29 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: Garland Tx
Posts: 630
| | | yup, meech is right. When my schedule is changed for me (ala my kids or wife), my sugars go kinda wacko for a little while...
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Last A1C - 9 Type 1 Rider Want to Feel Better? | 
06-24-2005, 11:30 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: North-Central Indiana
Posts: 3,730
| | Hi Mum,
I am a T1 and I skip breakfast ALL the time. I hate breakfast and only eat breakfast if it is a family occasion. I am on a insulin pump right now which allows me to eat when I want to instead of when my insulin tells me I need to.
Some diabetics need to eat breakfast as sometimes their insulin regiman requires them to do so. If your daughter knows her body well and if she thinks she can miss breakfast and not worry about a low then I would say let her go for it.
Hope this helps Mum. 
__________________ ~Sandi~ Pumping for almost 6 years
MM Purple 722 with Humalog
Symlin Just because I've been on df for a whole day doesn't mean I'm ADDICTED... my chair is just COMFY... | 
06-24-2005, 11:43 AM
| | Junior Member | | Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 75
| | | Not unless hungry I seldom care to eat in the mornings. I am up by 5:30am and out the door shortly after 6am to work from 7 - 4 each day. Around 10am I start to het a little hungry and eat a small apple with a little peanut butter on it.
When in the hospital both after gall bladder operation and after thyroidectomy someone brought it to my doctors attention that I was not eating in the mornings. My endo told them that was fine because with a pump I was fine without eating.
Also Meech pointed out that changing your regular schedule (thus eating more than usual) can throw off your BG. You need to explain to your mom that your normal schedule and patterns of eating can be too hard on your diabetes and ask her if she would mind helping you keep your habits on even keel while you are with her.
This will accomplish two things. It will allow her to "do for you" which is what moms do and she will realize how to actually "do for you" by seeing what you really need, not just what she thinks you need. | 
06-24-2005, 12:08 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: The mighty shire. England
Posts: 1,225
| | Quote: |
Originally Posted by camjen1 Hi Mum,
Some diabetics need to eat breakfast as sometimes their insulin regiman requires them to do so. If your daughter knows her body well and if she thinks she can miss breakfast and not worry about a low then I would say let her go for it.
Hope this helps Mum.  |  Now I feel Like I've got back up 
__________________
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---------------------------- The pages I've turned are the lessons I've learned - The rest is still unwritten.. | 
06-24-2005, 01:22 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 691
| | | I eat breakfast all the time... if you can call a cup of coffee at 8am or a bowl of cereal at NOON breakfast. I like breakfast food, but I don't like to eat in the mornings. So, there you go.
And my mom, who knows quite a bit about how diabetes was treated in the early 1990's, when I was living at home with it and needed considerable support, does the same thing! She thinks I still have to eat breakfast at 9am, load up on carbs, and eat dinner like an old lady at 5 o'clock in the evening... (I live in NYC, dinner's at 8 or 9pm!) The new insulin regimens and new insights into diabetes management have given us much more flexibility, and much better control at the same time! So, let the girl eat her peach if that's what breakfast means to her.
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That would be a good thing for them to cut on my tombstone: Wherever she went, including here, it was against her better judgment.
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06-24-2005, 01:27 PM
| | Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Sep 2004 Location: Nevada, USA
Posts: 165
| | | Ok I am a breakfast eater...but only because I WANT to. My body does better when I eat smaller amounts more often. But everyone is different. Like others have said, as long as you can keep control and maintain a schedule, I think skipping breakfast is fine.
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Amanda
Type 1 4/00 -- Animas 1250 | 
06-24-2005, 04:02 PM
| | Junior Member | | Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: North Texas
Posts: 34
| | | Another no-breakfaster Just to add to your list, I typically never eat any food before noon.
Been like that for years.
My Endo has no problem with it either.
In fact, we discussed it just today. | 
06-24-2005, 09:40 PM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Aug 2003 Location: CT
Posts: 4,588
| | I love breakfast  (maybe I am one of the few). I actually look forward to it  . If I try to skip it...I find myself only thinking of food until my next meal or whenver it is I can get my hands on something to eat. Plus, it's not really a way to save calories (which is probably why I would try skipping it), most of the time you make up for it later on in the day.
Sorry Laura, I guess this isn't the kind or response you are looking for so I'll try to get back on topic. Yes, it's true that in the past skipping any meals (and even snacks) was a taboo thing for us diabetics, but now that there's new insulins and treatment plans...you can be a lot more flexible with your meal plan. I don't know if you are on the pump or if you are on Lantus, but I think being on a basal/bolus system would be the most convenient and appropriate option if you are planning to skip meals like that.
Anyway...I think that everyone is different and if skipping breakfast works for you and you have no problems then I don't see why you should change anything. Apparently it works for others here in the forums too. 
__________________ I’ve faced myself
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Erase myself
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Put to rest
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Well I cleaned this slate
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I’ve faced myself
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Linkin Park~ "What I've Done" | 
06-24-2005, 10:59 PM
| | Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Australia
Posts: 157
| | I have to eat breakfast- im not on the pump and take morning and night injections so it needs to be balanced out with food.  | 
06-25-2005, 02:49 AM
| | Ex-moderator
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: May 2003 Location: Dubai, UAE
Posts: 3,004
| | | I haven't eaten breakfast regularly for about 4 years now. Usually I'll have something at around 11.30 or 12ish but then I tend to call that 'lunch'.
I'm also on a Novorapid/Insulatard regime and take half my daily Insulatard requirement at around 8am, and still don't eat breakfast. So I'm not even on what most people would regard as a 'flexible' routine and I manage just fine. Indeed, occasionally I've had days where I haven't eaten anything until around 4pm, nearly 24 hours after my last meal.
This bit is for your mum:
If you're on MDI there is simply no need to eat meals regularly. Your liver naturally releases glucose throughout the day anyway, and this is processed by your basal insulin. If you choose to eat, then you take your bolus dose, and this bolus dose covers what you eat. If you don't bolus, you don't have to eat.
Furthermore, thinking about diabetes has changed rather drastically in the last five years or so. The old advice was to eat loads and loads of carbs because this would keep your blood sugar from going low, which indeed it does - it makes your blood sugar run high, which in the long run can be far worse than the odd low. Current thinking is now a moderate amount of carbs, or even low-carb for some individuals.
Unfortunately Diabetes UK are still peddling the frankly dangerous 'advice' that people with diabetes need to eat lots of starchy foods. This is bad advice because it rockets your blood sugar and your calorie intake, which means you put on weight and need to take even more insulin, in what becomes a very viscious circle, since larger doses of insulin actually loose their effective bg processing ability per unit.
This old advice was also created prior to the development of synthetic insulins, which offer a far higher degree of flexibility than older analogues such as those that were around 10-15 years ago.
The bottom line is, if you carry your MDI gear and some glucose tablets with you at all times, you're basically indestructable because you've got all situations covered.
As a personal note, I find that eating breakfast now usually makes me feel sick in the morning, and so I avoid it. | 
06-25-2005, 04:43 AM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Tennessee
Posts: 2,371
| | I generally eat a light breakfast. It is my daily dose of caffine , piece of fruit and maybe a toast. I do better with this where I am not starving by lunch. If skipping meals is a problem for mom it should not be...my mom is the same way!!!!!! it is 12 you need to eat, 2 time for your snack...ack!!!!!!! but that was the good old days when first diagnosed..it this helps I haven't eaten a thing since breakfast yesterday and it is breakfast time now..unless you count the 3 glasses of wine I had last night 
__________________  Belinda
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06-26-2005, 01:52 AM
|  | Senior Member
I am a: Type 1 | | Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Ontario Canada
Posts: 3,213
| | I ate brekky while in Elementary School, but mostly during High School I
did not. Even now, I usually have something small to eat(but I also take a smaller doseage of Humalog)a couple hours after I wake up. However when we go home to visit my Mom, she hints at me to have something to eat, so I have something small to keep her happy.(And I'm 46 for Heavens Sake  )
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Last edited by KickStart101 : 06-26-2005 at 01:55 AM.
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06-26-2005, 03:00 AM
| | Member | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: London
Posts: 161
| | | Surely it depends on what your reading is in the morning and what you are doing that day first thing? If I wake at 9mmol then I don't bother with breakfast and just go to work - if I wake up at 5 or 6mmol then I need to have a little something before heading out otherwise , with rushing to get ready and getting to work, it's likely to drop. I want to avoid having to have sugary drinks or tabs as much as poss! All depends on readings and itinery with me!
On 4 injections a day so tend to change times of eating depending arrangements etc. Sometimes I don't even inject at breakfast if quite low and I know I'm going to be active that morning - small piece of granary toast and no insulin.
Everyone different I guess! Which makes it difficult to advise doesn't it? |  | | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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