Category: Random

Overtreated?

By shannon, March 6, 2010 9:00 am

Two nights ago, I had a horrible low.  It wasn’t that my BG was all that far south (only 47 mg/dl – I’ve been much lower), it was that once it hit me, it hit me like a giant bus.

I was shaky, dizzy, sweating, starving, and exhausted.  I still don’t know which of these was the prevailing symptom at first, but I know what quickly took over:  STARVING. 

I did my usual juice box thing (I ALWAYS correct lows with a single juice box), but then I lost control.  In the span of five minutes, I consumed:

  1. The aforementioned juice box
  2. 2 granola bar packages (with two in each package!)
  3. A handful of Sun Chips
  4. 1 glass of milk

By the time I was finished, I was so exhausted that I could barely keep my eyes open.  Brian came home from work to find me on the bed surrounded by the carnage of my eating binge.  If I hadn’t felt so shitty, it would have been really funny.

Actually, looking back, it’s pretty damn funny!

Freedom

By shannon, March 5, 2010 9:36 am

There comes a time when you realize that sometimes it’s better to cut and run than to stay and fight.  For my entire life, I’ve had a pretty horrible relationship with my father.  I’ve been reading LeeAnn’s blog lately, and it’s made me realize that I am far better off without the pain, anger, and stress that having any contact with my father inevitably creates.

My parents divorced when I was six years old.  I remember almost nothing before the divorce, except for a few fuzzy moments inspired by photographs.    I remember a lot of what happened after the divorce.  Almost relentlessly, my father pressured my sister and me to live with him.  His reasons are, even now, a mystery because he doesn’t like children and never has.  He was a strict parent, placing more emphasis on tidiness and order than love and affection (I was once spanked pretty harshly because someone left a small piece of tissue on the floor). 

So, with every visit, he pressured us.  He would play the role of the affectionate father until we said that we didn’t want to leave our mother.  Then, he’d show his true colors.  It was an experience that we both learned to dread.  But, he is a brilliant manipulator, and with each visit, he would nurture that small seed of doubt he had planted.  He would prop himself up and make it appear as if he alone cared for me.  He would tell me how proud he was when I got good grades (after all, my mother was not really interested in my school performance).  He would encourage me to do the best I could so that I could go to college one day.  But, none of it was sincere.

Finally, after 10 years of his manipulation and brain washing, I decided that living with my mother, her husband, and four other kids was too much.  After all, if I lived with my father, I could have my own room and be the only child (he and his 2nd wife had no children).  So, the summer before my senior year of high school, I packed up my belongings, loaded them into my car, and drove with my father from Rhode Island to Mississippi.

Almost as soon as I moved in, I noticed that things were not as rosy as I’d imagined.  My father was surly and distant, and my stepmother was downright resentful of my presence.  I was a messy teenager; a contradiction to the organized, neat person I am now.  I kept my bedroom pretty untidy, but I know few teenagers who didn’t.  For some reason, this drove my father crazy.  Actually, I know the reason.  It was all about control.  He wanted to control everything, including how I kept my room.  He also expected me to clean the entire house.  It was if he brought me to live with him so that I could be their maid.

A few weeks after I arrived, I started to get a sore throat.  I also became incredibly fatigued after doing very basic things.  After two or three days, my throat was so swollen that I couldn’t talk properly, I couldn’t eat anything, and I was in constant pain.  Rather than take me to a doctor, I was given OTC cold meds.  Finally, I called my father at work and told him that I needed to see a doctor (keep in mind that I was terrified of doctors at that time).  I told him I’d found an urgent care clinic in the phonebook and that I really had to go.  He told me that he’d “try” to meet me there.

So, I got into my car and drove myself.  After a while, my father actually showed up.  I couldn’t believe it.  The doctor said that I had a pretty bad case of Mono and that I would need bed rest for six weeks.  After that, I could only do minimal activity for another six weeks.  He wrote a prescription for Prednisone to help open up my very swollen throat.  Since I had given the clinic my insurance information (thanks to my mother), we left.  Outside of the clinic, my father tore up the prescription and told me that I had contracted Mono due to a lack of exercise.

When we got home, I went to bed.  I woke a few hours later to hear my stepmother loading every dish into the dishwasher (very loudly).  She had presoaked everything in bleach (to kill my germs), and resented every minute of it.  After all, her maid was sick – a very good reason to be angry.

After a week, the swelling in my throat started to come down (thanks to nothing more than my immune system).  I was able to speak, eat, and breath normally again.  Naturally, this caused my father and step-mother to assume that I was all better.  I still had that incredible, insatiable fatigue that comes with Mono, but they didn’t believe me.  One night, they decided to go out for the evening.  I was told to take care of the laundry while they were gone.  Before I got to it, I fell asleep.  As you can imagine, they were not pleased. 

Life continued in that way for a few months.  I started school (which I hated because I was the freak Yankee with the accent) and worked at my father’s rented office space as his secretary after school.  He was always trying to appear more important than he actually was – I can look back now and laugh at his pretentious attitude.  I actually thought I might be able to get through the year and then go off to college somewhere.  But, the worst possible thing happened – my car (that I had saved for years to buy) needed a new clutch (something my father blamed on me).  He gave me a choice:  he would get the clutch fixed or I could have my senior portrait.  I got neither.  Instead, I was subjected to constant ridicule and resentment from them both. 

In the end, I called my mother and said that I wanted to come home.  She sent a plane ticket, and I left.  I left almost all of my belongings, including that car.  My father drove me to the airport, never saying a word.  When he stopped, I got out, and he drove away.  I did not hear from him for years.

I spent the rest of my senior year in a state of depression, self loathing, and suicidal thoughts.  I don’t know how I got through it, but I did.  It was, without question, the bleakest time in my life.

After a while (i.e., after he and his 2nd wife divorced), my father insinuated himself back into my life.  He said that he accepted full responsibility for what happened.  He apologized and asked me to forgive him.  Like an idiot, I did.  And so began a new pattern of manipulation.  There was another period of estrangement after I disagreed with him on something insignificant.  But, once again, he dragged me back in.

I included him in major events in my life, including giving him the honor of walking me down the aisle at my wedding to Brian.  I gave him a father/daughter dance.  I was a fool, but I wanted that relationship with my father.  Don’t underestimate me, though.  I didn’t have blinders on to his manipulative ways.  I recognized that almost everything he said was bullshit, and almost everything he did had some ulterior motive.  He married again; this time to a woman whom I absolutely adore.  She was the only reason I was willing to give him another chance.  But, being who he is, he’s treating her like shit now, too.

Then he got sick.  After years of abusing his body through untreated high blood pressure (something I now have to deal with), both of his kidneys had failed.  He went on dialysis and waited for a kidney.  It took two years, but he finally had the transplant and decided that he’d been given a second chance.  He claimed:

“My health issues caused me to examine my mind, heart and conscience, and in so doing, I have made a determined effort to seek forgiveness from those I’ve wronged in the past and to offer forgiveness to those who have slighted me.”

So, here we are.  This past week, he showed me his true colors once again.  He established contact with wife #2 so that he could “offer her his forgiveness to her for hurting him.”  Evidently, she cheated on him (I find this incredibly amusing because he cheated on my mother, hence their divorce), which is why he divorced her.  Until now, I had always thought that he left her because of me.  Yes, I was a naïve fool again.  Anyway, for some reason, he felt the need to tell my sister and me that he was in contact with her.  When he received admonishment from us both, he became defensive and angry.  He lashed out at me for many things including those few months when I lived with him.  He wrote:

“Keep in mind, however, that you were not entirely without blame for the problems that occurred during that time.  Apparently, you thought that since you were so miserable living with your mother and her “new” family, you could come live with me and be allowed to do as you pleased.  Hell, you couldn’t even manage to keep your room clean let alone offer to do anything around the house.  And you thought that I would allow that behavior and choose you over her, when it was I who objected most to the mess.  If I asked you to choose between me and Brian, do you really think I would expect to be the one chosen?  Even if you and I had the idyllic father/daughter relationship, I would have to be self-delusional to think that you would choose me over your husband.”

He actually thinks that it’s the same thing.  Speaking of morons . . .

Then, there was this gem:

“If you cannot accept what I’ve said without reading something into it based upon your “assumptions”, maybe you need to learn something about trust, young lady.”

I find it so ironic that the one person responsible for my lack of trust in EVERYTHING is lecturing me on the subject. 

What I’ve learned from this back and forth nonsense is that all of his apologies and pleas for forgiveness were really just bullshit.  His “determined effort to seek forgiveness” is really just an excuse to establish contact with the woman he probably still wants (I feel so sorry for my current step-mother).  He is, once again, willing to sacrifice his relationship with his children for his own selfish wants.  I have washed my hands of him and his toxicity once and for all. 

I know that some of you might think that I’ll change my mind.  Others will tell me to “honor thy father.”  Don’t waste your time.  I have spent 30 years being dragged in and out of a manipulative web so complex that I didn’t know which way was up and which was down.  I’m finally free, and I won’t be caught again. 

I wrote this post as a sort of exorcism.  It worked.

Thirty-Six

By shannon, March 2, 2010 1:06 pm

Today is my birthday.  I don’t really feel older, but I am acutely aware that I am.  Today, I am 36 years old.  When my mother was 36, she had two (almost) grown daughters.  That’s some perspective I didn’t need this morning, but there it is.

I share my birthday with Dr. Suess, Jon Bon Jovi, Mikhail Gorbechev, Chris Martin, Daniel Craig, Karen Carpenter, and Reggie Bush

So, Brian and I spent most of the morning meeting with our new fertility doctor.  I admit to being a little (or a lot) overwhelmed by all of the information, but I’m optimistic.  I’ve got a full battery of tests ahead of me depending on when I get my next period (yes, guys, I’m talking menstruation – deal with it).  The good news is that I’m not really considered “past my peak” until I turn 37, so I’ve got one year left to get it done!

I have to find a high-risk OB, which is a little confusing because when I called my regular OB/GYN’s office (to find out which high-risk OB she prefers to work with), I was told that she handles high-risk patients herself.  However, I was also told that I would be “sent over to the diabetes center” at the hospital.  This sent some red flags waving, so I tried to clearly communicate that I am a Type 1 diabetic who sees an endo on a regular basis. Here’s the response I got:

“Oh, well, if you’ve already seen an endo, you probably won’t have to do the diabetes education class.”

Um, you think? 

I can’t stand it when people don’t listen.  Anyway, Dr. S. and I have talked extensively about how we’ll handle pregnancy, and I’m very comfortable with that.  I don’t want to throw another doctor into the mix when I’ll likely be seeing at least four of them on a regular basis.

Of course, I’d do just about anything to have a baby, so in the end, I’ll sit through whatever bullshit education for gestational diabetics they want me to.    

On a different note, last night, I spoke with Roddy’s good friend Bob.  Things are looking extremely grim at this point.  I’m becoming more scared with each day that goes by.  Roddy is suffering torture like I can’t even begin to imagine.  Please continue to keep him in your thoughts and prayers.

Advice, Please.

By shannon, February 23, 2010 2:57 pm

I need some advice, guys.  This is completely non-D-related, but I’ve got to get it out.

On Monday afternoon, one of my coworkers, who is always loud and obnoxious, made a ridiculous statement that he proclaimed to be fact.  A lot of us laughed and brushed it off, some made innocuous comments, and I made a joking statement about his “source” because he has a tendency to believe everything he reads. 

Instead of letting it go, he spent the next hour digging up various “studies” to support his claim.  When I said that the studies were, in my opinion, subjective, he accused me of not knowing the definition of the word.  He continued to declare that the studies were done by the government and, therefore, must be true.   I disagreed.

Well that’s all it took.  He completely unloaded on me (from across the room, each of us sitting at our respective desk).  He called me a “conspiracy theorist” who “only gets her news from Fox News.”  He called me a “Tea Bagger” – I’m not kidding.  He became positively rabid.

When I pointed out that only one of the three studies was actually conducted by a government agency (the first was done by a liberal think-tank; the second was done by a college), he claimed that the college study was also considered “government.”  He asked, “did you go to college?  Did you?  Huh, did you?”  He must have yelled that a dozen times.  When I responded with “yes, I did go to college” he became even more belligerent.

Finally after about 10 minutes of the insanity, I said, “That’s it.  I’m done.”  Throughout the entire ordeal, I never raised my voice.  He tried to continue the argument, but I just ignored him.

Here’s where I need advice:  I was approached by a fellow coworker/manager (who, FWIW, has differing political beliefs than I) who felt that this person’s behavior was way out of line.  It was unprofessional, disruptive, and abusive.  The coworker urged me to report the incident to our boss and offered to bear witness to the entire fiasco.

So, should I take this to my boss, or should I just let it roll?  I will say that this guy is also the only one in our entire group who, more often than not, shows up for work at 10:30, takes a long lunch, and leaves at 5:00.  He’s so loud that most of us have to wear headphones just to focus on our work.  BUT, he’s worked here for a while; I’ve only been here for six months. 

So, what do you think?

Murderer, Not Martyr.

By shannon, February 19, 2010 9:31 am
Photo Credit: Trey Jones via AP

*****Non-D-Related Post Ahead******

By now, we’ve all heard about that horrible, intentional plane crash in Austin, TX.  A man, clearly disgruntled (side note:  Is anyone ever gruntled?  Just asking.), flew a plane right into a Texas office building.  Located in that building was the local branch of the IRS.  This guy managed to take only one life in addition to his own, but that one life was valuable and didn’t deserve to die in that way.

I have some pretty conflicting emotions about this.  On the one hand, I can relate to the frustration and anger that this guy felt for the IRS.  Brian and I have thousands of dollars withheld from our paychecks every month, and still, we end up owing another $2600 on our return.  We are NOT rich, especially when you factor in the cost of living in the DC/Baltimore area.  Around here, a tiny one bedroom condo will cost you $250,000 minimum!

And I actually agree with some of the stuff this guy wrote in his “manifesto.”  This led to an interesting debate with Brian last night (I’m so glad that I married a guy who knows how to debate!).  At first, Brian felt that the actions this guy took long before his suicide mission were stupid.  His exact quote was “you can’t fight City Hall.”  Naturally, as the crusader I am, I disagreed.  Although Joseph Stack, III was unsuccessful in his attempts to “change” things, I admire his willingness to try.  And he’s right; our tax system is so complicated that no one can truly understand it.  That’s by design, I’m sure.  But, by taking his plight to the level of murder, he lost all of the respect and compassion I might have had.

There are many things about our tax law that drive me crazy.  I can’t stand the fact that because I worked my ass off for years, and finally achieved a certain income, that I have to pay more than someone who just floats along.  I personally know someone who had ~$1200 withheld in taxes throughout the year.  But, with all of the credits available, is getting a refund of ~$5000!  Is that fair?  I don’t think so.  How can you get a refund of more than you paid?  I understand and completely agree that for some low-income families, a zero tax liability is a necessity.  This is not my issue.  What angers me is that there are people who are already receiving thousands in State and Federal aid, and income tax time (which is dreaded by many of us) is actually their own, personal Christmas morning.  Sorry, but I call bullshit on that one!

Does this mean I’m going to fly a plane into the IRS?  Of course not.  I might despise our tax system, but I don’t personally blame the people who are just going to their boring jobs every day.  It’s not their fault that our Government has lost sight of what this country is about.  That The American Dream is no longer something to aspire to because you’ll be taxed right back to reality pretty quickly.  I don’t agree with Stack’s actions, and I’d NEVER do something like that, but I can understand his anger and desperation.

But, I’ll be honest, these incidents frighten me.  I work for a Federal Agency (as a contractor) and it scares the crap out of me to think that I could be sitting in a meeting on the 4th floor of this agency’s headquarters when someone with a grudge flies a plane into it.  I’m not a bureaucrat; I’m just a simple woman trying to earn a living so that I can have a good life.  Why should I lose my life because of rules and restrictions that I had nothing to do with implementing?  That’s what Stack and others of his ilk seem to forget.  Killing innocent people won’t change anything.  It will just make you a villain.  Stack tried to be a martyr.  He failed.

Snowpocalypse!

By shannon, February 4, 2010 11:11 am

Evidently, it’s going to snow this weekend.  Not just a little, annoying snowfall.  Nope, we’re expecting a Snowpocalypse with 18-to-24 inches predicted.

Normally, I don’t have a lot of faith in the weathermen of the world, but this storm seems to be right on track, and all computer models are agreeing.   Since my car doesn’t move in the snow (seriously, it just sits there with wheels spinning.  And where the fuck was all of this snow for the last two years when I drove a freaking Tahoe? </rant>), I won’t be going anywhere once it starts. 

So, the question is, am I absolutely insane even to be considering going to the grocery store after work today?  Probably, but I’m gonna do it.  If I don’t make it out alive, thanks for the good times!

Things I’ve Been Wondering

By shannon, January 27, 2010 9:00 am

What exactly is Catnip?

When did “catsup” become “ketchup?”

Why does no one in the Mid-Atlantic area know how to drive properly?

Why do I make deals with myself?  Seriously, I always cave anyway.

How is it that this woman has kids, but I don’t?

Why do we need House Committee hearings about athletes and steroids?  Is it because Representatives want to meet athletes?

Why is the escalator I need always on the other side?

When my cat just stares at me, is she plotting my demise?

Does Brian ever regret marrying a T1 diabetic?

Why are American Idol updates on the news?  This is not news.

Why do I hate American Idol so much?

Where the hell are my tax dollars going?  I’m dishing out tens of thousands of dollars per year for what?

When I get my nails done, and the technicians start talking to each other in another language, are they talking about me?

How is it possible that my BG can be high all day no matter what I do (including using a syringe and a new bottle of insulin)?

Why do people Facebook friend request me when I have no idea who they are?  And why don’t they include a little note to refresh my memory?

How is it possible that I’m going to be 36 in a few weeks?  THIRTY-SIX?

Does anyone actually find the Verizon FIOS commercials funny?  Their Mac vs. PC -like schtick is just annoying.

Does anyone look at those inspirational posters in offices and not roll their eyes?  Is it just me?

Am I just a cynical bitch because I love these instead?

When was basic grammar, spelling, and punctuation removed from high-school curriculum?

Is it weird that Brian and I have conversations FOR our pets (no, not with our pets)?  We actually have voices for them and say what we think they’re thinking.

Does *anyone* other than a fashion model have the body of a fashion model?  No?  Then why the fuck are clothes made for fashion models?

What is the proper way to tell someone at work that their cologne stinks?

And, last but certainly not least, when will diabetes finally be cured?  I’m tired of it.

Dizzy

By shannon, January 26, 2010 10:03 am

I know I’ve been a slacker with my blogging.  Truth be told, I haven’t really had much to write about.  Things are, well, boring.  But … (oh, you knew I’d have a “but”)

For the past few months, I’ve been getting these weird dizzy spells.  Although, dizzy isn’t even the right word; it’s more like a light-headed feeling.  

My initial thought was that it must be related to my blood pressure because I’m hypertensive, and one of the symptoms of high BP is dizziness.  So, I checked my BP when I was feeling fine (it was slightly elevated) and when I was dizzy (it was slightly elevated).  This tells me two things:

  1. It’s not related to my BP.
  2. I need to increase my BP meds because I shouldn’t be elevated at all.

So, BP ruled out, I started to wonder if it was some inner ear disturbance.  I’m horribly prone to ear infections (been that way since I was a little squirt), but after a few visits to the ENT doc, I seem to be keeping them at bay.  So, while I’m not ruling inner ear disturbance out completely, I’m thinking it’s unlikely.

Then I started to think about when this dizziness nonsense first started.  It was in November, but I can’t remember exactly when.  A few things happened around that timeframe:

  1. I caught a pretty nasty cold, which resulted in my doctor putting me on antibiotics.  The symptoms went away quickly, but I’ve had this residual stuffiness/sinus issue ever since.
  2. I got my H1N1 vaccine. 

I keep expecting the dizziness to just go away, but it’s not happening.  So, I’m going to make (yet another) doctor’s appointment to (hopefully) figure it out.

And before you ask, I’m not pregnant.

Two Years

By shannon, January 7, 2010 10:36 am

Two years ago today my life changed.  I was on my way home from an uneventful day at work.  I was on day four of my first attempt at a low carb diet.  I was looking forward to getting home and trying out a new recipe for dinner.

But, in the blink of an eye, my world turned upside down.  For me, the crash was even worse than my diabetes diagnosis because with D, I had some time to get used to the idea.  The crash was instantaneous.

On that day, my beautiful BMW 330xi gave her life for me.  I loved her like I’d never loved a car before.  When I crawled out of the wreckage, I mourned her.  Later, when we went to the salvage yard to get my personal items that survived the impact, Brian warned me not to walk down to see her alone.  I didn’t listen.  I should have.

When I saw her, all crunched up like an accordion, I sobbed.  Then I got angry, especially when I saw the Jaguar that killed her in the same salvage yard.  I wanted to beat the shit out of that car, but with my injuries, I was barely able to walk.  Kicking ass was out of the question.

So, we grabbed my stuff, took some photos, and drove away.  It was the last time I ever saw her, and I can’t seem to form any other image in my head when I think of her.

I swore off cars that day.  We immediately went out and bought a brand new Tahoe.  It had everything you could want:  Navigation, overhead DVD player (for the kids we don’t have), heated seats, Satellite Radio and, most of all, it made me feel safe.  

But, for the last six months or so, I’d been getting my groove back.  I was feeling more confident on the road; I even stopped freaking out every time I was stopped in traffic.  Most of all, I began to miss the speed and power of my BMW.  I like to drive fast, and the ‘Ho is not exactly a performance vehicle.  

I started checking out BMWs everywhere.  I browsed the CarMax website daily.  Then, I stumbled across the BMW Certified Pre-Owned (CPO) program.  Basically, if you buy a CPO BMW, you get a 100,000 mile warranty (as well as some other goodies).

So, I got serious about it all.  I decided that it was time to give up the ‘Ho, and get back to my roots.  Brian, while not fully on-board with my plan, at first, quickly came around after that first test drive.  We found a true beauty – a 530i.  Like my old girl, she’s got everything I need:  6-speed manual transmission (I hate automatics), Nav, Satellite Radio, leather, etc.  She’s awesome.

So, today, on what is the two-year anniversary of the worst day of my life, I drove my new girl to work for the first time.  We’ve already bonded, and if someone hurts her, watch out!

Roddy Pippin

By shannon, January 2, 2010 1:14 pm

I’m usually not one for feeling sympathetic towards those who break the law.  I’ve always believed that old saying, “don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.”

But what happens if the so-called criminal is a type 1 diabetic? What happens if his crime is a non-violent theft of cattle?  Not exactly victimless, but not really armed robbery, either.

Today, I read about the reality of being a T1 diabetic in prison.  It’s something I’ve thought about – maybe we all have.  What would happen if I went to prison and was stripped of my insulin pump, glucometer, CGM, endless supply of fast-acting glucose, and all of the other tools I keep in my arsenal?  What would happen if my diabetes had to be managed by people who weren’t really interested in keeping me healthy?  It’s a terrifying thought, and one I hope never to face.

Roddy Pippin is facing that reality right now.  You can read his entire story here; I won’t attempt to tell it better than it already has been.

When I think about his crime, which absolutely WAS a crime, I cannot reconcile the ultimate price he’s paying for it.  Roddy is not receiving proper medical care, he’s experiencing many of the complications that we all fear, and he’s getting worse everyday.  There seems to be some sort of personal vendetta against Roddy, but I can’t see the reason for it.

I’m afraid that I’m going to read of Roddy’s passing in the near future, and it absolutely breaks my heart.  He seems to be a kind, respectful, gentle, handsome, and honest (he turned himself in, after all) young man who made a stupid choice as a teen.  I made lots of stupid choices as a teen, too. Fortunately, none of them were illegal (well, except for underage drinking), but if I’d grown up in rural Texas, who knows what I’d have done.

So, I ask my fellow bloggers and anyone who follows my posts to ask yourself this:  Should a person be sentenced to death for stealing cattle?  How about losing one’s sight or even a limb or two?  Is that enough payment for this debt?

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