RX for health

RX for health

Monday, June 25, 2018

I wanted to share some positive results in hope that it will provide a little encouragement to folks new to this WOE.
Back in February, my A1c was 10.7 My doctor put me on Lantus insulin, with dosage increasing weekly for 2 months. That scared me. They also added more Metformin to my daily meds.
When I got home from the doctor, I joined this group. I started following this way of eating. I got rid of the carbs throughout the house. EVERYTHING that was off plan. I put it all on the table. Frozen stuff, stuff from the pantry and fridge. Gave it away. Returned it to the store (in some instances). Threw out stuff that was old.
Fast forward to this week.... and my A1c was 5.4. I can't say how happy I am. I feel vindicated. This WOE is totally worth it. Eating to my meter is just how things work now.

Monday, March 19, 2018


35 mins
I got my lab results today. Boy was I shocked! My A1C dropped from 9.2 to 7.2. The reason I was so shocked? I was on steroids for 15 days the later part of Jan.to around the second week of Feb. B.S. running 435 and 325 to 365. So I expected a jump in my A1C. I've been eating LCHF since Jan. 28 th but figured the steroids and the numbers I was seeing there was NO way it would be down! My Good Cholesterol and bad cholesterol were all way down. My triglycerides were also down. My Dr. said he was very happy with my lab results! My cholesterol and triglycerides were all high last time. This time they are only half the normal range! This is one very happy lady! And I know my A1C will be even lower in 3 months!

S Watkins
I love this group and eating lchf. Eating like the Dr said put my bs at 486 in 2016. I had dizziness, palpitations, terrible pain in my limbs, couldn't think, thought I was getting dementia. I was eating a whole food plant based diet for decades. Now I eat to my meter with 20 carbs a day or less. I make delicious meals from the food list I have. My fasting number is now consistently 100 and I don't spike because I know what to eat. I never ate fast food, sweets or junk so I don't miss them. I did miss fruit but it spikes me very badly so oh well. No carb is worth losing my sight, my limbs, or my kidneys. My IBS, neuropathy, dizziness, palpitations have all disappeared. I lost 35 pounds and I feel great. I hope I can encourage others.

P. Buncic, Type 2 Diabetes global  


Friday, March 9, 2018

Patricia M.s menu for a day



BREAKFAST:
- 2-3 eggs cooked in butter (scrambled or omelette), with cheese plus a couple of low-carb veggies thrown in or on the side (could be spinach, mushrooms, peppers, onion, tomatoes, etc.). Sometimes I'll add ham to the eggs or have bacon or sliced avocado on the side. 
- Baked egg casserole with similar ingredients as above, served with a dollop of sour cream on top. Sometimes I add dill or other herb to the sour cream.
- 2 almond flour muffins which I have made in a variety of flavors. I will add the recipe link in the comments. 
- On weekends I may make LCHF pancakes, served with a few berries and sugar-free whipped cream or sugar-free syrup. But I haven't found a favorite recipe for pancakes yet, so I'm still experimenting.
- Breakfast always includes a cup of coffee with Truvia and some heavy whipping cream (HWC).
LUNCH:
- 4-5 deli meat and cheese roll-ups with Duke's mayo (or cream cheese for salami). Sometimes I put a pepper strip inside and/or wrap it in romaine leaves. Maybe a salad or veggie on the side - e.g., pepper strips or celery with cream cheese, a few olives or dill pickle spears, coleslaw made with Duke's mayo and Truvia. Or maybe a few almonds, walnuts or pecans.
- Homemade soup made with chicken broth or tomatoes and whatever food I have left in the refrigerator at the end of the week, and an almond flour muffin. My favorite soup so far has been tomato/roasted pepper/shrimp bisque (my own made-up recipe).
- Dinner leftovers (see DINNER, below).
- I pretty much only drink water with lunch, or an iced tea with sweetener.
DINNER:
- Steak sauteed in butter or olive oil. Plain or with onions and/or mushrooms. Sometimes I turn the mushrooms into a sauce with a little chicken broth, spices and HWC or cream cheese. Veggie on the side - broccoli, cauliflower (sometimes riced or mashed), asparagus, green beans or zucchini. Plenty of butter on the veggies, and sometimes a pat of butter on the steak, too. 
- Baked or sauteed pork chop or chicken "breaded" with pork rinds, parmesan cheese, garlic powder, salt & pepper. (Dredged in a beaten egg first, then coated with the 'breading.') Sometimes I top the chicken with tomato sauce and mozzarella. Salad or veggies on the side, as above. If I make the chicken Italian-style, I may serve with zucchini noodles or spaghetti squash. Or not.
- Fish - baked, broiled or grilled in foil, with olive oil and/or butter, lemon and maybe some capers. I make dill sauce with mayo, olive oil, lemon and dill to serve at the table. Salad or veggies on the side, or maybe zucchini noodles with homemade Alfredo sauce.
- Shrimp scampi on spaghetti squash and a spinach salad. 
- Water, flavored soda water, iced tea, or occasionally a glass of wine if I can "afford" the 4 grams of carbs that day.
- Occasionally a small dessert - a few berries with sugar-free whipped cream, 85% chocolate square, or LCHF pudding or cheesecake. Again, only if I can afford the extra carbs that day and no more than once or twice a week.
I hope that's helpful to some of you. And I recognize that I am still learning, so questions and constructive criticism are invited!

Thursday, March 8, 2018

SUCCESS STORY

I don’t know where to put this. It is just some informative information for those of us who are non compliant diabetics.
There’s probably none in these groups or why would you be here right??
This is a story of what I did to myself:
When I was first diagnosed with type two diabetes I was 220 lbs I was working night shift so my eating habits were off the wall I tried going to the gym with work mates to loose the weight but I was eating Cheetos and drinking Pepsi by the 12 pack daily. I was tired all the time had no energy. Like I said working night shift. I was not sleeping well and up to the bathroom hourly. Always had a drink in my hand. Usually frozen Pepsi. Suddenly I started loosing weight a lot of weight like 40-50lbs but I still wasn’t feeling right. I kept going to the gym thinking I as doing something right. Wrong!!
This is the beginning of my diabetes life. I was diagnosed. I started on metformin and the diets. I hated it!! I was pissed my life has changed so much. I just was so darn mad that I had diabetes. At that point in my life if I just followed the rules and did things right I would of probably taken off 20-30 more lbs and the diabetes might have been in control. No I had to fight it. I went completely non-complaint. Stopped going to see my doctor. Started eating and drinking what I wanted etc ....just completely out of control
Fast forward quite a few yrs. on and off I would try to follow the rules but I got to a point in my life I had no choice. I had the 3 F’s. 1) frequent Urination
2) frequent Thirst
3) forty
Yup I turned forty that yr and all hell would break loose. I woke up one night my feet felt funny. You know that feeling when you smack your funny bone? It was like that but in both my feet. I got up and tried to walk it off to no evale. I ended up going to the emergency room. By the time I got there my feet and legs were pure white. They hurt so bad. My A1C was double digits like 13 or something outrageous like that. They shipped me to a trauma center. I was admitted with bilateral blood clots to both my lower legs. Long story shortened a bit, they tried to remove the blood clots through my femoral artery’s. The nerves in my feet were left with out oxygen via blood flow for too many hours which left me with severe nerve damage.
The whole point to this long story is:
They weren’t blood clots. My blood sugar was so high for so long that my blood was caramelized. It was too thick to travel back up. I have permanent nerve damage to the nerves in mostly my right foot. The pain is so severe. It is irreversible I am lucky my kidneys are still working and weren’t damaged enough for dialysis.
No matter how mad you are that you are a diabetic. Please monitor your sugars, if your cheating your only cheating yourself. I was given another chance to live although it is with this horrific pain in my feet. I am alive to watch my grand baby learn to walk, go to kindergarten and even to draw pictures of her Grammy.


Saturday, February 24, 2018

Your body makes far more cholesterol than you could ever eat, and it makes it out of excess carbs. Inflammation is what causes blockages, which is caused by carbs as well. We've been fighting an excess carbohydrate problem by eating less fat for decades, and the results are predictable: increase in heart disease.

Virtually everyone diagnosed with diabetes is also diagnosed with high cholesterol, because the body's inability to process carbs means we turn it into blood cholesterol. That's why diabetics with uncontrolled blood sugar also have a highly elevated risk of heart attack.  A. wells

Thursday, February 1, 2018

What we are. It's in the rules (pinned post) and the group description, and in an ideal world that would be enough: but I know not everyone looks that closely at the rules. I'm going to apologize in advance if this comes off a bit intense at points, but please know that everything we do and say here comes from a place of passion and concern.
We are a Type 2 Diabetes support group that focuses on using diet as the primary method of approach on diabetes. You'll see this in posts and comments from both admin and our members who have seen the benefits of this approach. We are a place to get information, seek advice, and discover the benefits of a diet-first approach. This does not mean we do not take meds: many of us are on medication (I am, for now, on insulin and metformin). It just means that medication is used to supplement our dietary approach: not the reverse approach used by many in the diabetes medical community.
What that means is simple: we (members, admins, mods) will bend over backwards to get you the right information. We're human, so there may be some time lag, but we will get it for you and help you.
What we won't do is intentionally allow information that runs counter to our approach to go uncorrected. It often gets deleted and it often gets corrected in discussion. If your comments get deleted, please don't get offended: feel free to ask why.
What we are not is a place to debate and argue against the merits of our plan. That's the approach we have chosen. We will explain things, we will answer questions, but we do not really have the time in this setting to get into an internet debate. We know medical science is split, and we have evaluated both sides and determined that this is the best option.
What we are not is a group that will support whatever way of eating you choose in an effort to keep you happy. We're more concerned with your long term health than your short term concerns. We're concerned with making sure newer members, especially, get correct information based on the science that backs our way of eating.

Like
Comment

Thursday, January 11, 2018


Group Modera I've deleted the comments, but wanted to address something. Patricia just perfectly addressed the issue of eating off-plan foods even if they don't currently cause spikes (our primary goal is glucose management, but a close second is to prevent the progression of insulin resistance).
That leads me to my point: we're not all different. Sorry but that's a myth. We are all at different stages of the progression of diabetes, but diabetes works the same for everyone with type 2.

More carbs requires more insulin, so if you're eating high carb foods like apples or potatoes, you're forcing your body to use more insulin. This will makes you more and more insulin resistant every time you do it.

No one really disputes this, they just think it's inevitable.

You can have normal numbers. And you can significantly slow or even stop the progression of your insulin resistance. You can't do either of those things eating apples, potatoes, bananas, or any of the other foods that cause insulin and glucose spikes.  A. Wells

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Another Success Story

In August I was out of shape gaining weight and sugars up to 300 with an A1C of 12 and on Metformin. No motivation and depressed, actually looking different in the face and body.
Today my A1c is at a 5.7, I’m over 30 lbs down with muscle gain and confidence and NO METFORMIN. Oh, yeah, also fitting my clothes that i haven’t been able to fit in some years is a real confidence boosters. I owe a lot to this group for the WOE that you guys helped with.
I’m not gonna lie when I first joined I was like “WTH??? Crazy people” now I realize how important this is to getting rid of our symptoms of Diabetes.
Thank You once again

B. Palmer