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198 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
198 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2580
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Title: HPR2580: Diabetes
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2580/hpr2580.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:01:17
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,580 entitled, I'm eating, and is part of the series, health and health care.
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It is hosted by AYUKA, and is about 14 minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, this is the story of how I became diabetic, and what I did about it.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support Universal Access to All Knowledge by heading over to archive.org, forward slash, donate.
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Hello, this is AYUKA, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio, and another exciting episode.
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And at this time, I'm going to be continuing the series that I started on health.
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And this show is called Diabetes, interesting little topic there, huh?
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Now, I seem to have gone through much of my life with no serious health issues.
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I had the usual complement of broken bones, various colds and infections, and so on, but
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nothing you would call really serious.
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But while I was going about my business, unaware something was happening, I didn't recognize it.
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When a change is gradual, you often don't notice it.
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I was a professor of economics at a local college, and got in the habit of having a drink
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with me.
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Usually, it would be a diet pop because it seemed I was always trying to lose a little weight,
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but if necessary, it would be water.
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And I needed it.
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After all, as a professor, I was lecturing for as much as an hour at a time, sometimes
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even longer, and all that talking made me thirsty.
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And drinking diet pop is not a problem, right?
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Once a semester I had a class that was in the library, and there were signs at the entrance
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that said you couldn't bring in any food or drink.
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But that didn't apply to me, I thought, since I was faculty.
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I do remember one of the librarians glaring at me, but what was his problem?
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I didn't realize my thirst was getting worse as time went on.
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And one day I was at the computer, and I didn't feel right.
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I had trouble describing it.
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But I called my doctor and said, well, it was kind of sort of like when you're on a roller
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coaster and your stomach is that funny feeling, except I was not on a roller coaster.
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I was sitting in front of the computer.
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My doctor quite understandably said he had not any idea what that was about, and that
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I should go to the emergency room.
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And I did so, and again, tried to explain what I was feeling.
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They did some tests, and we're not having much luck diagnosing the problem.
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When a nurse said, you know, your blood sugar is 300, maybe that's the problem.
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I had become diabetic.
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Well this began a journey that I am still on, because this is one of those things that
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when it happens, generally does not go back.
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More testing confirmed the diagnosis.
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I was around 50 at the time.
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So it was not like some people who get the disease as kids and grow up with it.
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My doctor started me on oral medications to help control the disease and told me that
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the key to control was diet and exercise.
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As it turns out, that's the key to a whole bunch of health issues.
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I was not someone who did much exercising on a regular basis.
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I did on occasion play some volleyball, but not as part of a league, just, you know, with
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the neighbors.
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And I did walk the dog pretty regularly, but I was overweight and not in particularly
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good shape.
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Obviously that contributed to my getting the disease, but I don't know if anyone can
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say that for certain.
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In any case, my doctor made it clear that I needed to make some changes.
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For exercise, I looked around and found that the local high school offered water aerobics
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several times a week.
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That is mostly doing calisthenics well in a pool, and I've always enjoyed being in water,
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so I signed up.
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I've since added more exercises of various kinds, but it was a start.
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On the diet side, my doctor had me focus on reducing fat intake, so I did.
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I remember talking to my sister about it, and she thought it was odd since diabetes is
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about sugar, not fat, but I went along with what my doctor said and reduced fat intake.
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I remember getting up on a Saturday morning, picking up a couple of donuts, and heading
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for the pool.
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I realized now that was a serious mistake, and I've learned that my doctor thinks fat
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is the culprit for most problems.
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I now allow for that.
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But overall, he's a pretty good doctor, just a little bit overboard on this one issue.
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So now, what is diabetes?
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Well, my disclaimer, first of all, I am not a doctor.
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I have had the incentive to study up on this, so I think I have it right, but as usual,
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you should always talk to your doctor if you have any concerns.
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Put this another way, you would have to be an idiot to rely on me for medical advice.
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Clear?
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So diabetes is a disease of the sugar metabolism.
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There are two types, called unimaginatively type 1 and type 2.
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The kind I have is type 2.
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What the two kinds have in common is a high level of sugar in the blood, which in turn
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is due to issues with insulin.
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Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas and has the purpose of taking sugar from the
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blood stream and moving it into cells where the sugar can serve as a source of energy.
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In type 1 diabetes, what you have is an autoimmune disease where the body mistakenly targets
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the cells in the pancreas that produce insulin and destroys them.
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With no cells, you have no insulin, so the blood sugar builds up.
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In type 2 diabetes, the insulin is being produced more or less normally, but your cells
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are much less responsive.
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So you have both sugar and insulin in your blood, but the sugar builds up.
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Your body knows that too much sugar is bad, so it tries to get rid of it in other ways,
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such as by having the kidneys remove it and put it in your urine.
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So you start to pee more and develop a raging thirst as your body tries to keep up a
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flow sufficient to remove the excess sugar.
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That is why I could not go an entire hour without a drink in my hand.
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This also explains why, in the days before more sophisticated testing, the main symptom
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of diabetes was sugar in the urine.
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Now, there are health issues, okay?
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Diabetes can cause serious problems if not controlled.
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Among the problems are, first of all, retinopathy.
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The blood vessels in the back of the eye may start to bleed.
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Initial symptoms may include flashing lights and spots in your vision, cataracts and glaucoma,
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and if untreated, blindness can result.
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All right?
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That sounds exciting.
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What else do we get?
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Old neuropathy.
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That means that the nerves in your extremities, particularly legs and feet, become damaged.
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You may begin to lose sensation there.
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You could injure yourself and not know it.
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Sores may not heal, and in extreme cases, gangrene can set in and lead to amputation.
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Frequent infections is another possible consequence of diabetes, and then there are kidney problems
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like nephropathy.
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Now I've got links in the show notes to a lot of this stuff if you want to follow up more
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on it.
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But in other words, when you're looking at all of this, this is not something to take
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lightly.
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Something can make you go blind or cause you to lose body parts is a serious bummer.
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Okay.
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So obviously I had a problem to deal with here.
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I started with oral medications, began to add exercise.
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I did reduce my fat intake.
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I got a blood glucose meter, and I take a reading every morning.
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This is called fasting glucose, and it's important.
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And that reading I take every morning lets me know if I'm in the right ballpark.
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It gives me a reading of my blood glucose in terms of milligrams per desoliter.
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And then my doctor would also have me go to the local lab every few months for a blood
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draw to do a real detailed testing, which he would get a report on.
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Again, a fasting blood test first thing in the morning.
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So that would test for a number of things, but most importantly something called hemoglobin
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A1c, which is a measure of the average blood glucose over the previous two to three months.
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Now for the daily blood glucose, a normal reading in the morning should be under a hundred
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for a non-diabetic, and the HB, the hemoglobin A1c, normal reading is below 5.7 for a non-diabetic.
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My numbers were not like that.
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Most mornings I'd be around 140, and when my HB, A1c was measured, it was around 7 or 8.
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These are not the worst numbers ever, but they're not particularly good either.
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Over time, the levels of my oral medications were raised to keep me from getting any worse,
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but there were limits to what you can do with oral meds.
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My doctor was hinting that insulin injections were next on the list.
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And that is when I read a book that changed my life, and there's a link to this in the
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show notes.
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The book is called Dr. Bernstein's Diabetes Solution.
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His approach is based on extensive experimentation, and the essential insight is that you can
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manage your diabetes through a combination of diet, exercise, and medication, to the point
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where you are functionally a normal non-diabetic person.
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And the key I was missing is that I was focused on fat in my diet when I should have been focused
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on carbohydrates.
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I learned that carbohydrates are always turned into sugar in your blood, so minimizing
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carbohydrates becomes the essential move.
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At the beginning of 2013, I decided I needed to try this after reading his book.
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Fortunately, we have labeling laws in the United States, and I assume probably in most
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other places as well, to require prepared foods to list the carbohydrate count.
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And I could get charts for unprocessed things like fruits and vegetables.
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I started by eliminating all grains and starches from my diet, then went to much higher levels
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of fruits and vegetables.
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That means no bread, and no potatoes for this particular Irishman.
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No rice, no corn, no oatmeal.
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You get the idea.
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I now read labels like a hawk searching for carbohydrates.
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I've learned that food manufacturers are very sneaky about putting in sugar in disguised
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forms, such as calling it something like dextrose or maltodextrin.
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I really think the food industry is out to kill people like me.
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And I eat a lot of salad.
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At least one meal a day, sometimes two is all salad.
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And how has it worked?
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On almost every day, my fasting blood sugar is between 70 and 80, and it would be very
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rare to ever get over 100.
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My hemoglobin A1c is in the low five range, and has never really gone above 5.7 since
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I made that change.
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Usually it's around 5.3.
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I have now had three different doctors tell me that my blood sugar number is no longer
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look like those of a diabetic.
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To me that means that as long as I continue on the path I am on, of diet, exercise, and
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oral medications, and I'm still doing all three of those things, I can go about my business
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like I don't have a disease.
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For instance, in 2016, my wife and I went on a bicycling trip in Europe.
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In 2017, we went hiking out west in the United States in places like the Grand Canyon and
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the Rocky Mountain National Park.
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So I think I'm actually in pretty good shape for an older man with diabetes, and I planned
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to stay that way.
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So this is the first of what will be an ongoing series of things looking at these health issues.
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Well, actually it's the second because I didn't introduce you a little while back.
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But anyway, this is Ahuka signing off for Hacker Public Radio, and reminding you as always
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to support FreeSoftware.
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Bye-bye.
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the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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