contact us

Use the form on the right to contact us.

You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right.​

         

123 Street Avenue, City Town, 99999

(123) 555-6789

email@address.com

 

You can set your address, phone number, email and site description in the settings tab.
Link to read me page with more information.

Screenshot 2023-03-12 at 2.41.02 PM.png

Podcast Episodes

The Juicebox Podcast is from the writer of the popular diabetes parenting blog Arden's Day and the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal: Confessions of a Stay-At-Home Dad'. Hosted by Scott Benner, the show features intimate conversations of living and parenting with type I diabetes.

Filtering by Category: Interview

#183 Oh, Mandy

Scott Benner

You gave without taking...

Mandy is the mom of a little girl living with type 1 diabetes. 

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon Alexagoogle play/android - iheart radio -  or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends and welcome to Episode 183 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's episode is sponsored by Dexcom Omni pod and dancing for diabetes. Today's episode of course is episode number 183. It's with Mandy who is the mom of a little girl who has type one diabetes. This episode is sectional, not like a sofa. But it happens in sections. There's like the beginning section, the middle section and the end each uniquely interesting. Each unto itself. I had trouble much trouble choosing the name for today's episode, I've written down eight option, wrong hospital right diagnosis, don't trade 29 days. The first lie we told ourselves insulin, I need more insulin. Everyone sit down. Let's figure this out. But I couldn't decide what to call.

Unknown Speaker 0:54
I still don't know.

Scott Benner 0:56
I'll surprise myself when I type it into the you know, the type thing? Right? Put the words. Two last things. One, please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should ever be considered advice, medical or otherwise. And two tickets have just gone on sale for dancing for diabetes. Big Show in Orlando. The shows coming up on November 10. It's at the Bob Carr theater in Orlando. Those of you who know it know it's a beautiful facility can get your tickets now good at dancing the number four diabetes.com

Unknown Speaker 1:35
Hello. Hello, can

Scott Benner 1:38
you hear me? You're so clear. Two days in a row. Everybody's been clear. So exciting.

Mandy 1:45
And I don't have my video on I don't think right?

Scott Benner 1:47
You should know okay, because it just eats up bandwidth. All right. So I tried last week with someone three different times and every connection they had was terrible. Then I got into a panic and the person I did yesterday was so crystal clear like you are like with this exciting. One less thing to think about.

Unknown Speaker 2:09
That's right.

Scott Benner 2:09
Look at your picture. You have like a whole family full of people.

Unknown Speaker 2:12
I do I do. She's the youngest. Kayla's our youngest. She right in front and that image? That's right. Oh, wow.

Scott Benner 2:18
Okay. All right. Um, okay. So Maddie, I think that this is going to be interesting. We are going to be battling a little bit with Arden's taking a quiz right now. And her blood sugar's the tiniest bit low. So I'm going to be doing that at the same time.

Unknown Speaker 2:33
No problem.

Mandy 2:37
I'm Mandy, and my husband is Paul. And we have three girls. And they are 1311, an eight, and our eight year old Kayla is the one that has type one diabetes, and she was diagnosed. She was diagnosed when she was five and a half.

Scott Benner 2:52
You guys started with just like a meter and pens and stuff like that, right?

Mandy 2:57
Yeah, she was in the beginning of kindergarten. And when we went to after that, when we left the hospital, we left with injections, and really no conversation of any other options at that point. So

Scott Benner 3:09
it's interesting is like no one mentioned to you there are these things that pump insulin or like none of that really happened. No, any type one in the family, endocrine issues, anything like that, that makes us less like, oh, how did that happen?

Mandy 3:24
Actually, Kayla joined our family through adoption. And we had some medical history and type one was in that. So we we didn't know that there was a possibility. I was not familiar with the odds of that of as far as whether or not that made her very likely to get it or just somewhat likely. So when she was about three, I actually remember talking to the pediatrician about it and her saying, you know, it's something we definitely need to watch for. And so I think in my head, once we had that conversation, it was like on her plate to remember that we needed to watch for it and I don't you know, and so for me, when signs and symptoms started to appear, it did not. It did not cross my mind until actually the day that she was going to the doctor, because she had been having she'd been wetting her bed at night multiple times. Some nights she would she actually would bed hop. She'd wet her bed, and she decided I'm not sleeping in this. And so she'd go climb into bed with one of her sisters are us and then she'd wet that bed. And it was it was one of those things where she hadn't been out of pull ups for more than probably six months at night. So I just thought, Oh, that's weird. Why is she wetting the bed again? And then, after about a week of changing sheets and doing multiple loads of laundry, I kind of had this moment where I was getting really frustrated with her and thinking like what is going on and then I just had this moment where I went, something's not right. This isn't normal. I should call the doctor and I really thought she must have like a UTI or something like that. Sure. And so I called the doctor and scheduled for her to go in for a year analysis after school. And that day at school, she had an accident at school. And I just thought, This is so weird. And so I was at lunch with a friend that day, and I was just kind of telling her what was going on. And in that conversation, in the back of my mind, I went, I wonder if this is diabetes? And I remember dismissing it and thinking, no way. It's not. And so it can't be that. And then so when we went when my husband took her to the doctor after school, you know, she did her urine test, and they left waiting for, you know, thinking we'll just get the results when we get them. And so the nurse, let them go. And while they were driving home, the doctor called me and said, is Paul home with the girls yet? And I said, No. And she said, I think I needed to turn around. She said, I need him to turn around. And can you call him? And I was like, Yeah, why? And she said, Well, we found glucose in her urine. And I needed to come back. And I just at that moment, I knew, and I was like, okay, and actually, I didn't know, I would say that my thought was like it could be I didn't realize that. The only way that happened, usually was with type one. So we creeped into your head, but it didn't like flip a light switch for now.

Scott Benner 6:24
And now and we're having lunch with your friend Vic, did you verbalize your? Your thought? Or it just kind of popped into your head?

Mandy 6:30
It just went through my head and never came out of my mouth? Yeah, I just thought, Oh, wait a minute. Now that I'm talking about this, I guess, I think that could be diabetes. So so it was actually a comedy of errors from that point. She they called my husband, they turned around, they went back. And they they did a finger prick. And I guess Of course I'm not there. So I'm at home like googling, you know, glucose and urine and trying to like, you know, put my wrap my mind around the options. And I guess when they checked her sugar the first time, she's actually low. And the doctor I now know this, you know, after she called me explained what happened, it was low. And so that panic them too, because now that she has glucose in the urine, but her sugar is low. So they had a cookie at the office. So they gave her a cookie and waited a little bit of time and tested her again. And I guess her sugar at that point came up to about like 90 days after the cookie. And so the doctor called me as Paul was driving home and said, Lindsay said, Our she said, You know, this is what I want you to do. She said I wanted to come home, this is really weird. It's it's a little weird that she was low. But our I don't trust our machine. Which that's, that's reassuring. And so she said, She's a great doctor, and she said, but I, I feel like this is I feel like this is you know, you're gonna need to go to the emergency room. But here's what I want you to do. She said I want you to when she gets home, I want you to feed her a normal meal. But I also want you to give her like to have like Gatorade or apple juice or something like that. And I said, Yeah, I have that. And so she said, Okay, I want you to give her a normal meal, but also give her make sure she has a drink that has high sugar and and then I want you to get packed and I want you to take her to the ER, she said I'm going to call ahead and let them know you're coming. I know somebody's over there. And I just I just want them to have a heads up and I was like, Okay, so that's what we did. And I packed up and I took her to the ER, and it was so funny because the ER acted like, they had no idea we were coming. And so I kept thinking that's weird. But then they tested our sugar pretty soon after we got you know, back to a room and she was 609. And so they were like, okay, you know, she has diabetes. Actually, they didn't even tell me that that moment. They just said, we need to admit her. And we will, we'll be back, you know, kind of thing. So it wasn't until we got admitted and up to the pediatric unit that I think I finally asked the doctor. So does she have type one diabetes? And they said yes. And I said for sure. And they said yes. And so what's funny about that story, though, is that the pediatrician had called the Children's Hospital an hour away. And that's who she had warned we were coming to the wrong hospital. We went to the wrong hospital. I either I either she forgot to mention that. Or I was just, you know, in my own state of shock and trying to figure things out, but I didn't hear that part. And so when I called her from the hospital, I said, well, we're here and here's her sugar, and they're admitting us and she's like, that's so weird. Where are you? And I said, I met, you know, therapists at a hospital and she said, Oh, I wanted you to go to St. P and I was like, Oh,

Scott Benner 9:56
well you're allowed Layla was an older and she'd be like, I can't believe all the people Could have adopted me these people got me.

Mandy 10:03
I know. But you know what's crazy is if we had gone to St. Pete we found out later that they wouldn't have admitted us, because she was not in. What is it D? Yeah, she was one. That's what they want. And so they would have literally given us an on, they would have given us what we needed to go home, right and then start things. And so instead, we ended up staying in the hospital for three days and got all of our training and everything while we were there.

Scott Benner 10:33
That ends up being lucky for sure. Because, yeah, I don't like the idea of just being like, hey, okay, well, you have diabetes. Here's your stuff, and we'll see you

Mandy 10:40
later. Oh, I can't imagine

Scott Benner 10:42
we don't have any beds for this. And yeah, we spent three days in the hospital I think. Okay, and and that was, that was just enough to panic me and teach me nothing.

Unknown Speaker 10:53
Yeah, that's actually somewhat familiar to Yeah,

Scott Benner 10:56
I felt pretty firmly sure I was gonna kill her by the third day. I was like, Okay. It's just been explained to me that I'm I'm outmatched. Yeah, well, okay, so, jeez, that's a lot. You're gonna do, let me just type something into my browser, my Omni pod.com Ford slash juice box quest, a free demo kit. There's a handsome man holding a book and smiling. boy do I scroll down it says, Hey, you like freedom? Don't you try a pod for free to experience how literally it can truly be. Actually, that works liberating, which now makes more sense. Try a pod for free to experience how liberating it can truly be. I do not practice these ads. If you're considering insulin pump therapy, it goes on to say the best way to understand the comfort and convenience the Omni pod system offers is to try it firsthand. I could not agree more. So get a free demo kit, which includes a sample nonfunctioning pod and see what you think there's no obligation to buy. It says here that you can wear a non functioning pod to see how it feels, you can find the area on the body that works best for you. And you can feel the freedom you could have with the Omni pod system. That's it. And there's this adorable little kid here playing with the toy dinosaur. Request my free demo kit. What do I have to do? First Name, Scott. Easy. Last name. Better. I know this easy zip code. I know my zip code, it's five digits. Then an email address, which I also know, I'll use my Arden's day email address, and a phone number. Okay, and then click the big red thing that says request your demo. That's it. Listen, please go to Miami pod.com forward slash juice box. Or if you want to help out the podcast, find the links at Juicebox podcast.com. Or in your podcast player. Because when you make the clicking on those links, you know, Omnipod knows she came from here? You're gonna do it. You should. There's ways people do things. And the minute you disrupt them with, not what they're expecting stuff does get thrown into upheaval. Yeah. And you see at the doctor's office, like the doctor's office is accustomed to things going in a certain way. And then the minute it doesn't kind of work out, right. Everybody gets nuts. Like I mean, you know, like, it really is, do you ever call someone on the phone like a customer service person? And if you if you get chatty with them, and don't let them go through their script the way they're supposed to? inevitably at the end, nothing works out the way it's supposed to for you. Right, because they're on autopilot, and then you start interjecting different information that they're not accustomed to dealing with. I think that happened to you. Maybe maybe twice, by the way.

Mandy 13:40
Yeah. Yeah. So that was our that was our entry into this world.

Scott Benner 13:45
Okay. And you and I are talking because, yeah, this this poor podcast needs to come out more frequently than once a week because I I'm so slow to get to people. But you and I spoke originally back at the beginning of 2017. This is all free people out when they end up listening to it, like in the spring of 2018 or something, right? But um, but you were just like, like, Hey, I'm I think I'm I found the podcast, and we're getting a pump. And I think it's great. And you were just like, do you have any ideas of things I should know or wonder about prior to going in for this pump class. And I much like I usually do email back and say, I really don't want to type all that out. So I'd be well, I'd be willing to talk to you on the phone. But I there's no way I'm going to type any of this out. Right? Because I'm lazy and my typing skills are not great. For a person who wrote a book. I don't type well. Look sort of fascinates you. Yeah, it definitely is. I was much better during that that period of time I was writing but now I I look down again. I'm like, Oh, I'm not as good at this as I was. Oh, so we had this really nice conversation when I thought well, and you know, Time passed. I must have mentioned during the conversation that this would be interesting like hearing about the transition from you know, because you were really going to Do it from needles and meter to a pump in a glucose monitor. And you did end up with a dexcom and an omni pod, right?

Mandy 15:07
Yes, I did. Yes, I did. Yes. After we spoke really your podcast, it was so enlightening. I don't even remember. Like, you know, the process of my brain going like me, maybe there's a type one diabetes podcast out there. I should try to find and but I did, and I found yours. And it was, it was one of those moments where I just I realized that there was this whole other side. That I can't say I was, I definitely understood that there were pumps out there. And there have been some conversations between my endocrinologist and AI about a pump at some point. But the CGM for some reason that was nothing that that was not ever mentioned, or on my radar, to be honest, the only thing I had been hearing about or diabetic alert dogs and I was thinking, well, we need to get one of those because that would be fabulous for something to be able to notify us of her sugar, either rising or dropping and, and so when I found the podcast, and I started listening, it kind of felt like a foreign language for, you know, several episodes, because I'm thinking I've just not ever, these are mind blowing concepts. And there's actually a device out there that could do what I felt like sounded like what a dog would do. And it sounded maybe more manageable. I think Kayla would still like a dog at some point. But for right now, it was just like, wait, we could do this.

Scott Benner 16:32
I have to say this. And I don't know why Dexcom doesn't use this in their marketing materials. But the Dexcom does not crap in your yard.

Unknown Speaker 16:42
Dancing for diabetes, dancing. Number four diabetes.com. type it into a browser dancing for diabetes. By

Unknown Speaker 17:02
really huge upgrade, really edge upgrade.

Unknown Speaker 17:04
Yes. Very true. Yeah,

Scott Benner 17:06
no, I, I do think that that's I struggle with the idea that there should be an entry episode maybe. But I've watched over the years blogs struggle with that idea too. Like there should be like, hey, if this is your first time, or here's some definitions, but it's so dry and boring. And like, I just think that when people listen, if they really want the information they'll listen through and they'll figure it out. If Yeah, you know what I mean. And maybe that's the best way to reach the people who are ready for it is kind of my expectation at this point.

Mandy 17:38
Well, and I think it's true, my personality is definitely one to like, be an information gatherer first and kind of think through all the options and think about the things that could go right and things that could go wrong and play out the scenarios. And that's what happened by listening to real people tell their stories, you saw a lot of variations by listening to the podcast of, I don't know, it just it allowed me to just kind of quickly, I felt like, get a bunch of information and play out some scenarios. And it really piqued my interest. And I went to my husband, I was like, Okay, I know what we need to do. He was like, okay,

Unknown Speaker 18:19
so it's gonna cost them Yes, exactly. Exactly.

Mandy 18:22
To the bed, probably his first question. But, you know, he, he has like, okay, and sure enough, I was having a, you know, she was having her three month appointment with the endocrinologist coming up. And so we went in and, and I started asking questions, and she said, Well, the first step for us is to do so I definitely think that, you know, you guys are great candidates for both pieces of, you know, the both devices and the but the way we do it is you have to go to a class first. And so that was really what then made me start thinking, Well, is there a right way to do this? Do we do the Dexcom first, or do we do the pump First, we do them at the same time and be super overwhelmed. I mean, you know, that's what I was thinking and you kind of help say, helped me realize like, just just start the process just well, however it ends up you'll be happy, whichever comes first, which if it happens at the same time, you'll you can do it. And that was very encouraging. And so the class was great. They had vendors there from all the different pump companies. And they had Dexcom there. And so we all five of us went to the class and that was good for my husband a lot of like the terminology I was already familiar with thanks to the podcast, but for him it was it was like really him hearing it for the first time and so he left excited and Kayla seemed excited. We got to the rep locally for Omni pod is also type one. So she was wearing her she was wearing her Omni pod and so Kayla was you know, intrigued by that with the sticker and whatever she had. And so we took the sample and I had heard you mentioned you know, on the ad to order your free sample so you can just wear one and I We all happen so fast that I didn't get to that point and set that we were just at the class and she had them. So we came home with that and put it on her. And that was, that was great, because I would encourage any parent who's thinking about it for that to be, you know, something they do, because we wanted to know if she would, how she would react to it. And she forgot about it quickly. And, and really was like, Yeah, it's great. I think I think it's gonna work. And so we then put in our prescriptions, and the Dexcom got approved quickly and pumped, took longer. So it was April that we went to the class and we got our Dexcom. The end of May. And

Scott Benner 20:41
what that is quick, yeah, that's great. And yeah, it was great. But then you got but then you started getting data feedback without the Oh, like, manipulate the insulin as well as you could with the pump. Does it make you crazy? At first?

Mandy 20:53
incredibly frustrating. Yes, that was, I would say that was it was a downside and an upside because it actually made us, you know, just that much more eager to get the pump. We thought, okay, that's okay, now we can see what's going on. And it's insane. And we can't wait to think that the pump is going to be able to allow us to fine tune, you know, her doses and hopefully get this under control better. Yeah. And so. So then, yes, we were frustrated waiting for the pump waiting for the pump. But

Scott Benner 21:24
it's like I have good news. I have bad news. The good news is we did the right thing ordering this pump. The bad news is we're really not very good at this. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Because they because when they put you in that situation, where it's like, well, you put some insulin in and then you test Three hours later. And you go, oh, wow, look, she's 180 we didn't do bad. And then you get the dexcom. And you realize that her blood sugar went to like 300, it sat there. And then it came out at 250. And it slowly drifted down. And by the time the three or four hours went by, you were at 180 thinking, Oh, we only missed by a little bit. But yeah, not the truth.

Mandy 22:01
No, it's not. And I did, I felt very, I kind of felt angry, because I felt a little deceived. You know, like, why is this the Why is this? What we've been instructed to do? It's, it's not the most effective way. So yeah,

Scott Benner 22:14
it will mean the answer ends up being that I don't think they, they, they just don't go about it the right way. I mean, in my opinion, it all starts it ends, it starts and ends with understanding how to use the insulin. That's why it sounds so simple and probably annoying to hear. But you have to understand, when the insulin starts working, how it starts working, how to balance it against the carbs, you know how to stretch it out when you need to how to Pre-Bolus when you need to, if you if you don't do those things, it's just a I don't know, it's just a crapshoot laughs crap twice in one episode, I don't think I've ever said it before. And I also can't get the thought out of my head that I have to slip in at some point, the Omnipod will never pee on your carpet, but it just it just, you know, it's like, it's just such a simple concept, then they give you this thing that doesn't work the way you're coming in from the outside with a simple expectation of like, hey, insulin brings your blood sugar down. So it makes sense that you put it in and it starts to bring your blood sugar down, but doesn't work that way. But no one tells you that no one, no one goes, Hey, you're going to inject this, it's probably not going to do anything for 1520 minutes, some people a half hour, some people longer some people shorter, you know, yeah, there's three different, you know, main brands of insulin, and they all work sort of differently in different people. And no one says any of that to you.

Mandy 23:38
Right? It's and, and with the Dexcom I felt like not only did we not feel like we could, you know, fine tune doses because of using injections, our pens, our whole unit pens, so, you know, we were okay, well, should we give two or three, you know, I mean, we couldn't do 2.3 work we would want to and then also, because you're still using injections, we would want to maybe we would want to correct when we would see the Dexcom showing us something was making her going higher than we if we missed it, you know, but then that meant, you know, sticking her again. And so because she was not used to we didn't want her to feel like the Dexcom was suddenly you know, a bad thing because it meant that I got you know, seven shots a day instead of four. I was getting you know,

Scott Benner 24:29
this thing you said was gonna make things better is getting me stuck with this needle. Yeah,

Mandy 24:32
right. Yeah, yeah. And so the pump we knew would eliminate that once we got it. But one of the you know, one of the things I would tell parents that are making the transition is, you know, we well, one good thing was that we were headed into summer, which for us, we felt like hey, this is a great time to, to kind of go down this path because we're going to have a learning curve that we're going to have to go through and my husband is a teacher, actually at Kayla's school. which works out very well. But we were like, okay, it's gonna be summer. And so that was a plus timing wise for us. But because we didn't get that we ended up go ahead and tell you we didn't get the pot on the pot until a week and a half before school started. So what we, what we thought would be a wonderful transition said we spent the whole summer at the beach in the pool watching her sugar go, you know, nuts. But we did take we did one thing that ended up being in hindsight being a good thing was that we waited for a Saturday even though I think we got the Dexcom like during a weekday, we waited until a Saturday and we just kind of cleared our calendar. And we, we just allowed as many hours as needed to set everything up. And it was definitely being about a four hour process, which I'm going to say is probably pretty long, because there was probably things that were happening in our household during that time. But, you know, it takes a little while to get all of your smartphones hooked up the way you want, and just do everything. But so we just we kind of took all that pressure away by just having an open day to do it. And one thing we had done also was I had pre screened this some YouTube videos, because I wanted to understand what we were about to do. And I will say that that ended up being really helpful for me, even though it kind of scared me because I did see some videos of kids crying, you know, when they got it done to them. And I thought oh boy like this maybe what advice? What are we getting ourselves into? Yeah.

Scott Benner 26:36
What a benefit. I didn't realize. Yeah, exactly.

Mandy 26:38
But I was able to go ahead. And then I found the ones of kids about her age that were doing it and weren't crying. And those are the ones I showed her. Because I felt like if I didn't want her, I wanted her she was nervous. I could tell she was nervous. And I was nervous trying not to show it but she was showing her nerves a little and so watching those videos and familiarizing myself with it. And her was a huge plus, I think because then when we all like, you know, gathered around to do it, I was the one to do it. Because I told my husband I said, if I do if I don't do it, and it hurts her, then I don't know if I'll ever be able to do it. But if I do it, and it hurts her then well too late. I mean, I already did it, you know, but if you know so that was Yeah, so that was my that was my process of thinking on that and it worked out she she actually did great with it. She actually looked at me afterwards like oh, okay, that was it. That wasn't nearly what I expected or whatever. So yeah, that was a plus.

Scott Benner 27:39
I think most of that crying is anxiety.

Unknown Speaker 27:41
Like Yeah, what's

Scott Benner 27:42
the what's good what's about to happen feeling especially with you know, and then then it the one thing about the pod too Is it with self insert so it clicks Wow, there's a there's an audible payoff at the end and almost I guess almost like reinforces the idea that like Oh see something was gonna happen. So you're all you're all ginned up and like tight, then you hear this click. Yeah, but nothing really happened.

Mandy 28:08
Right? Oh, he's still she's still dropped, jumps at the click, even though you know, she continually says like, no, it's fine. I didn't hurt you know, only one time and dad did it. I will say he didn't pinch up the skin well enough around it. And she looked at me like he's never doing that again.

Scott Benner 28:28
That job but my wife messed up one time putting a dexcom sensor on and Arden like talks about her like she's completely inept human. We don't let that woman near me with that stuff. And I'm like, I gotcha. But yeah, just it's it's ridiculous. My wife's fine at it, you know?

Unknown Speaker 28:45
All right.

Scott Benner 28:46
But no, I hear that like Arden does the um, she wants people to be quiet when she puts it on because she counts clicks. It clicks is it's like click click, click and then it inserts Ardennes like in but it never really inserts on the same click.

Unknown Speaker 29:01
Like for the pod. Yeah, sometimes it's the fifth

Scott Benner 29:03
one, the sixth one the fourth. You never really know. And she just like she wants to hear them. I don't. I'm like why do you care? And then she then she flinches, and I inevitably did hurt and she is No.

Mandy 29:16
Yeah, that's exactly right. That's exactly how Kate was with the pod. Yeah.

Unknown Speaker 29:21
You know, and she's like, Yeah, I

Scott Benner 29:23
don't know. I was like, okay, so well. So okay, so you lied. So you you went in, you asked for your stuff. It took a little bit of time, but you got it. And then it's interesting because you got the CGM first. So guys, listen, this episode was obviously recorded a while ago so you hear me talking about Dexcom g five and calibrating and everything but today's today, and the Dexcom g six is available now and it doesn't need to be calibrated. It's also FDA approved so you can make insulin decisions without any finger sticks. This morning while I was editing the show art it asked me if I can make pancakes because this is her last day of summer vacation. So I made her three huge pancakes from scratch. actually use a simple recipe that's on my blog. But that's not the point. This isn't a cooking show. Anyway, I made her three big pancakes, put them on a plate, give her a little turkey bacon, she put a little syrup on the side took a drink left, we made a big Bolus. We did a Temp Basal increase. About 45 minutes later, blood sugar was like 110 diagonal up and we gave her more insulin, and it's still one den. How do I do that? I mean, you listen to this podcast, you know how I did it. I watched what the Dexcom was telling me. And I did it. While Arden wasn't with me, by the way, sure she was just upstairs. But I would have been just as comfortable doing that because the Dexcom share and follow features. If she was at school, or at a friend's house Dexcom share and follows available for Android and Apple products. There's no time left in the ad now to talk about how amazing it is to be able to see someone's blood sugar when they're not with you to see how fast it's moving and what direction it's going. But it's amazing. All you have to do to get started today is to go to dexcom.com forward slash juicebox. Or again, if you could use the links at Juicebox Podcast comm or in the show notes of your podcast app that would make me happier. But it would just make me happy if you tried the product. Back to the show. Isn't Mandy good? Should probably just call the episode Mandy. Before I get to that, I want to I want to just go backwards for a second and say that what you experienced like not understanding what a glucose monitor was, and no one telling you about it. That is I think quite literally next. coms biggest hurdle is that it's just it's it's one of those crazy things. I always liken it to TiVo, I don't know if you have a DVR right or not, right? But TiVo is an incredibly better version of a DVR, like it's just any any of your bank, whatever you have from your cable company is nice, I'm sure it's great. And it records your television and blah, blah, blah. TiVo is so much better. But how do you tell people about that? Like, how do you let them know there's a thing out there, when it's not something that everyone has, when it's not, you know, it's not intuitive to believe that there's even a thing that would tell you what your blood sugar is doing? Like, it's not something you would just know, when you're bringing brought in from the outside. And you know what I mean, like, and you don't know anything about diabetes a day before. So their biggest their biggest hurdle still is just people who live with Type One Diabetes, even just understanding what it is. And it I find that to be terribly tragic, like, yeah, it just really is like that. There's something like, forget the business of it or anything like that, that there's something that tells you how fast your blood sugar is moving, what direction it's going in? And it's not something people know about. That's sort of terrible.

Mandy 32:50
Yeah, trying to deal with it with static information, trying to make decisions based, you know, based on something that is a standalone number that Yeah, you have no idea like you said, the direction it's moving or what it's been doing. It feels like you're just it's like it's like you're dosing blind before and now it just feels like, I mean, are there still times where things go totally nuts? Yes. But it's been a huge, like emotional and, like mental relief. Once we once we felt figured out, we could trust the information. You know, I mean, that took a little bit of time, but then it was like, it changed our fatigue as caregivers immensely.

Scott Benner 33:34
I today, like just before you and I got on is a great example. Arden's at school, had her blood sugar is I think she was 104 going in the door at school, and it was nice and steady. But she was having she was having this, you know, the drift down where the the numbers moving, but the arrow never indicates that it's moving that fast, right? And I kept thinking, like, I it'll be okay, it'll be okay. And she got the ad and I went, Alright, you know what, I'm gonna shut her bazel off. But then I'm texting her and she's not answering. Like, this timing of this is gonna get messed up, because by the time I get her, the bazel is not gonna work. I know, right? But, but Okay, so, you know, I'm texting her texture. Finally, I get the text back. I'm trying to take a quiz. And I'm like, I don't care. Just, like, shut your bezel off. And I suffer an hour. I'm like, I'm gonna give this a shot. I said, but look for another tech soon, because we might have to put a little juice on this. And I waited and waited and went 80 and 76 and 72. And I was like, come on, come on. And right. As you and I were getting on about a half an hour ago, it was right at 70. I'm like, Oh, is this gonna work? And you and I were on for about 10 minutes when I was like, Alright, she needs like a little bit of juice. Because she went to 68. I was like, Yeah, right. So she drank a half a juice. She waited, and now it's holding at 68. And I can tell on the Dexcom the bend of the line, that it's coming back up again. Yeah, so not only did you know, Arden didn't have to go to a nursery Go, you know, like, drink a ton of stuff and have her blood sugar shoot back up again. But her blood sugar is gonna sit right around 70 for probably end up being like 40 minutes. And I can tell by the bend in the line for my experience, she's going to go back up to about 85 or 90 and sit there again. So we address this kind of drifting low blood sugar without creating a high. Yeah, all that comes from the information that I get back from the glucose monitor, and the the ability to shut off or bazel. And all these things that I find myself repeating over and over again, but I don't think anyone really appreciates until they get the stuff in their hands and they can try it. What was your experience? Once you had the gear, and you were trusting the information, because that is I don't know if you've ever heard me say this convoluted sentence on the podcast, but you have to make these decisions. You have to trust that what you know is going to happen is going to happen, which is not always easy to do in the beginning, I guess.

Mandy 36:00
No, it's not. And I think that, well, the first the first lie we told ourselves was okay, well, I'm like we're gonna set you know, we set the low, right? I mean, I think we, you know, we put it for at as far as an alarm, you know, for an alarm to go off. And but we, you know, I just thought, oh, man out of the gates, we are going to like, we're going to put the high, let's put, let's be a little realistic, and let's just put it at like 200. Well, for now, for the first I mean, within within, like 12 hours, you know, she's like, we're it's beeping, it's going off. And it was always because of the high. That's what we definitely, we kind of felt like we got it. So we would not feel as anxious about her going low. Because I think you know, as parents, that's what you're, that's what you're taught to be really scared of. and

Scott Benner 36:53
common sense tells you to be more scared of that in the boat.

Mandy 36:56
Right? Right. And it but it took it took listening to your podcast to realize that I needed to be just as concerned about the highs To be honest, and the long term things that would come come into play by just you know, her allowing these high blood sugars to continue. So we were obviously over ambitious at how well we thought we were going to control things once we could see it. Because that's when we realized that, you know, the pump was going to come into play, hopefully with the highs. But so we took the we just removed the alarm for the high for a while, like we just didn't even want to know, we didn't want to be going off because it was going off all the time. But yeah, I think that for us, it was once we learned to trust it, I first I think my husband thought I might I think he thought the same for himself honestly, that we might become a little obsessed with watching her numbers. But I would say that it took about a week before, you know, we might we were still you know, testing her here and there, not just that the calibrating times but testing her periodically, just to kind of see how accurate the Dexcom was. And we, you know, took about a week for us to realize like, okay, you know, we it's it's right, it's accurate, and at least within, you know, a small margin of error. And so, yeah, it didn't take long for that trust. And for us to realize that because we trusted it. We weren't, you know, stocking the app and trying to see, you know, where is she? Where is she? Where is she? And we really just started to let it tell us and use it as use it as information instead of using it to like, you know, just totally dominate our life.

Scott Benner 38:33
It's not a report card. It's it's helping you understand, but I have two thoughts for what you just said. So the first one is the concept that people are going to get overwhelmed with the data. And just, you know, I think that's largely kind of a misnomer. Like, it's, it's, it seems like it's a reasonable thing that's to worry about, I guess, like, I know, as a person who thinks of myself as somebody who puts information into this space. Like, initially, I was worried about that as well as like, oh God because but I realized that I was worried about it because I had found this group of people online who were insane. Right, and they were helicoptering with it and, and I was like, oh god, this is gonna happen to everybody. But then that wasn't the truth. Not everybody felt that way. But moreover, the people who began like that eventually stopped being like that, too. Because they went through the process that you're talking about. It's just like anything else new people have been around a little longer, like that's not the right way. You know, and, and it ends up I would never be concerned about that. It's not true. Even people who obsessively look at the numbers. I think that eventually it just it lessons for you. It goes away. I can't tell you how infrequently I look at Arden's butcher I look at it more during this podcast. So we can talk about it. Like you know we were just talking about Arden's right Little things like she's 76 right now. I can't tell you how happy I am with that. Right like I get it. Like that's, it's she's gonna keep drifting up, and I'm telling you, she's gonna get the 85 or 90 in about an hour or 15 minutes, I'm gonna have to Pre-Bolus or for lunch anyway, it's perfect. Yeah, but but my, my other thought was, is now you've got this high, this threshold, and it's going to tell you when you go above it. And in the beginning, you don't know what you're doing with the insulin you think you do. But you're really you really don't and neither does anyone else right away, you know. And so now all you're seeing is God, we miss so greatly that I can't even put this high thing on, it's gonna be all the time. But in the end, that becomes a lesson about Okay, well, obviously, we're not doing it quite right. So what was the first thing you figured out? When you realized you were had no ability to stop it from going over? 200? Like, what, what what was the next step you took? You guys have been listening for a while, you must know when the ads are coming. Right? This is one for dancing for diabetes. So it's really quick. I've already told you what Elizabeth is doing there with dancing for diabetes, just helping kids living with type one through dance. Well, she's also putting on a show in November, as she does every year. If you're in the Orlando area, they would love for you to come out. good at dancing for diabetes.com to find out more. That's it, dancing, the number four diabetes.com. What was the next step you

Mandy 41:21
took? We were taught early on that. Or we were told to wait and doser after her meals, because you don't know she's going to finish everything. And you know, she could be at that age. And honestly, yeah, I can see that in the very beginning. But after a while, you start to realize that your child's going to like what their appetite probably is going to be and what's realistic for them to eat, especially when you are in this situation, you're more hyper focused on, on, I guess judging that. And so I think for us, we realized our first change was okay, now we have the Dexcom. And we can feel comfortable dosing her ahead of her meals, because that's something you would talk a lot about. But that is was the first step for us to seeing an improvement. With the drastic highs, I would say that we and so that took a little time for us to make that realization that that's what we could, that's what we could start doing. Because if we you know, and then of course, there's times where we miss it as far as the the length of time but almost, or the food she ate we that's when we started to really try to understand her digestive tendencies, you know, as far as what kinds of foods hit her faster and all that. But we didn't even have any way to begin assessing that until we started to give her her bolus ahead of her meal and timing it. And so that was that was probably the first change that we got to make

Scott Benner 42:54
what's funny, because what you just said, echoes what we said five seconds ago because before diabetes or with your other kids, have you ever thought Oh, gosh, we have a real problem here. These kids don't eat. Right? Right, right. You've never thought that but the minute you bring the insulin in, it seems like a reasonable concern like oh gosh, what if they don't finish their lunch, and then you realize, sometimes you put a full plate in front of somebody and they don't finish their lunch. And now you go, Oh, god, this is a real concern. You've just reinforced your concern with more specious information. And so it's, I mean, I get that kids don't always finish their food, but there's like I tell people all the time, especially with little kids, there's got to be some amount that you're comfortable, they're always going to eat and and so it just Pre-Bolus that part if you can, and then and then you know if they keep eating just put the rest of the insulin and right away Don't don't don't wait around to go Oh, I wonder if diabetes won't work today. It's gonna work. You know, the foods gonna make your blood sugar up, get the rest of the insulin and it's a such as simple. You need those simple concepts like, like when I talk about, you know, because I think you air everyone airs on the side of caution so much, and they do it in so many aspects of diabetes. That's how they end up with high blood sugars. Well, we can't Pre-Bolus err on the side of caution. What if they don't eat? I don't want to use all the and some because what if I count the carbs wrong? err on the side of caution. But you know, that always leads to a high, you know, sure, once a month, it might be a low but are you really gonna trade 29 days of highs for the one time they're low? Right? You know, and and how do you make those decisions and we start talking about learning how to manipulate the insulin. The one thing, gosh, that I said that I have to be honest, I did not think was that impactful that I hear back from so many people in so many walks of life, that when you're learning how to use more insulin, just also bolus for the amount of juice box because you could always give the juice box to counterbalance the insulin like like it's a safety net for you when you're testing

Mandy 44:54
right. How much more when you're really you know, yeah, and when you're doing injections, that's another thing for us. We felt like our hands were more tied when we were doing injections. Because if we did give it to her up front, and we didn't think and she ate more than what we were expecting, then we immense met us giving her another injection after she ate, and whereas with the pump, that changes all of that, it's a whole different ballgame. And so yeah, it really was the see having the two go hand in hand, like I really, I just really get that now that they play off of each other. So well, they create together, they create, in my opinion, the the best case scenario to attack this.

Scott Benner 45:36
So it's funny because you hear adults a lot, say, Well, I'm tired of a pump, and they want to go on a pump break. And people do that right and injections, I'm doing just as well with injections. And they say that, but they never really tell you what that means. You know what I mean? Like, it's just like saying hello to somebody and say How you doing, I'm doing great, Bo, if you could follow him around for three days, you might find out that, you know, their wife's cheating on them. And they can't afford to get their car fixed. And Baba, they but they told you they were doing great. And so we never know what that means. And in this space, there are very few people who are willing to say, these are my results, you know what I mean? But we're always willing to say this is what I do. Now, I don't in any way, not respect the concept of burnout or just being tired. Or you might just want to do it for a while, maybe you are going to switch back to injections for a while because you're burned out as an adult. And it might lead to slightly higher blood sugars. And that's not the end of the world. I completely believe that. But the problem isn't. The problem is that sometimes people hear that and just think, Oh, I have the same Can you just there's no, unless you're willing to and I've only talked to a couple of people in 150 episodes who are willing to just inject every time you need to. And there are some people who are willing to do that, they're gonna be fine. But if you're not, you can't, you can't manipulate things without a pump, if you're not willing to inject all the time. And so right. That's the real honesty of it, you know, somebody who's now down to like I'm injecting before my meal. And then I wait three hours again, there is just unless they are magical, there's no way they're there. You know what I mean? That they're, they're a unicorn, yeah. Actual unicorn, there's no way that they're doing the same thing without multiple injections. Right. And so I think people get confused with that. And they go, okay, or this is good enough for this is, you know, once people set the expectation that this is just how it goes. And then they just accept it, though. My blood sugar went to 250, it only sat there for 45 minutes, and it came back down. Of course, it did get to 180. Before I had to bolt, I didn't check myself again. And then they got low later. Well, what like, like, you know, like, when you had your pump, you were doing it a completely different way that wasn't resulting in a high and it wasn't resulting in a low like that.

Mandy 47:56
And moving to a for us seeing actually funny story about going on a pump break. But first, it's just funny. One of the things that we feel like has also been and maybe it's just our imagination, but I don't think so based on the story I'm about to tell you but going to, I didn't understand that the pump is utilized fast acting insulin on a constant drip to substitute for the lantis. We were using, I got in. I didn't totally understand that until I went to the class. And that seems to have been something that right away we noticed an improvement with and we only felt like because we knew we were still not doing a great job at the Bolus part. We were learning that that fast acting insulin dripping, you know, for the 24 hours that seemed to have a better effect on her than the lantis ever did.

Scott Benner 48:54
Yeah, like that. That's slow acting insulins an inexact science, it's amazing insulin, but it's an inexact science, it I don't know if anybody's ever talked to you about but you injected it crystallizes under your skin and like a rock, and then and then it basically melts away slowly.

Unknown Speaker 49:09
I wondered.

Scott Benner 49:12
And so there are times when your body absorbs it faster, it disintegrates quicker, you know, whatever it ends up being that's how you see like kind of lows with and then and then sort of at the end of the 24 hour period where people see highs because the companies that make this insulin can say all they want that it's real steady for 24 hours, but that's kind of BS. And so some people split their Atlanta so their level of error or their whatever the other one is, like they'll do half of it or you know, or figure out what the breakup is and do like every 12 hours. Wow. And try to try to keep it more consistent in their in their system. Interesting. Yeah, but nobody again, no one's gonna tell you that, you know, right.

Mandy 49:51
I'm actually getting notifications about Kayla right now.

Unknown Speaker 49:55
What are we looking at? I just

Mandy 49:56
don't know. I don't want to hang up on you by looking. Let's see. Are you still there? Oh, man, you're doing okay. All right, let's see, I just didn't know if I changing screens. So she's 77 diagonal down, but it's 1045. So she's actually about to get a visit from her dad to dose her for lunch. So he'll still, he'll take that into consideration. But it's lunchtime, but she has been at. Let's see, I always think it's a win for for 24 hours, we've not gone over 200 even like in a weird spike. Like for me, that's like, yes, that's been a good 24 hours. But yeah, for last 12 hours, or even six hours since breakfast or the early this morning. She's been under 120. And pretty steady. So that's, that's a good, I'll take that. That's it.

Scott Benner 50:46
And I don't, I don't want to boast my clairvoyant skills. But Arden's blood sugar is 95. So nice. Yeah. And so but that's a it's such a good point. By the way. two things. First of all, 77 diago, down right before lunch. huge win. Huge. Yeah, fantastic. And what I just did by telling you, I did this, I did this, I did this, and I expect her blood sugar to be 95 that two people should not be like, Oh, well, this guy is better at it than I am. What you should think is, I used to be terrible at this. But I've had enough experiences in these moments that I actually, I just know what to do. And it works out.

Mandy 51:23
Yeah. Well, and I think it's just a long time ago, I when I would hear you talk about a straight line, like, especially overnight, that's still a rare thing for us. But when it happens, or even if it happens for a couple hours in a row. Now that I actually see that happening, I wanted it to be true when I would hear you or one of your guests talk about it. But it's like, that gave me hope. But now it's a reality sometimes. And so it makes me feel like okay, I can't always make that happen. But it technically is achievable. Like there are times where I can I can hope and expect it to happen. You know, it's doable.

Scott Benner 52:01
All that you should take from the fact that it that you can accomplish that is that it's possible. Yeah. Because that possibility is enough for me, at least in my mind to stop me from going Oh, 200 nothing I can do about it. Right? That's all because there is something I can do. A person contacted me this morning, through Instagram, which by the way, people I do not like chatting through Instagram, but Okay, that's how you do it. And, and so, and she said, you know, what do I do about the dawn phenomenon? And she told me what she was doing, like, are you doing all the right stuff? And she's like, well, it's not working. I was like, well, more insulin. Like it's not really like, you can like stop searching for like, why like, Oh, it's the dawn phenomenon. No, your blood sugar is higher? Oh, no, it's Chinese food. No, there's a lot of carbs in that. Like, like, it's just all of this stuff is the same thing. If your blood sugar is high, you need more insulin. And if your blood sugar is low, you need it lessens when you had to time it better. It's not like some there's not some magical phenomenon. that's changing the nature of diabetes, there is something pushing your blood sugar up. But the The answer is still the same.

Unknown Speaker 53:07
Right? Right. Yeah,

Scott Benner 53:08
I need more insulin. And so it's it's not an even as I'm talking to this person, she listens. She'll know. It's gonna be hard and high. And like, she didn't do anything wrong. And I was being like, flippant when I was getting back from like, you just need more insulin. She laughed. She's like, I know, but like, what about this, and I'm like, you're not doing anything wrong. I said, the only thing I can't give you is like you're an adult. So there's no one helping you. So if you slept through an alarm, you know, that's, that's, that's the only X factor between me and her is that she's doing it herself. And I'm doing it for somebody. And then still, I sleep through alarms still aren't, are not a great 24 hours yesterday, except for the alarm. I didn't hear at 2am that, you know, let her be a little higher than I wanted her to be until we finally until my wife was like, are you hearing that? Like, what? Anything, which is terrible, because I am apparently as I'm waking up, rude and flippant when I answer people's questions. So my wife's always like, Why do you talk to me like that? I'm like, I don't know what I'm saying. Do you want to sleep?

Unknown Speaker 54:13
And? Yeah, yeah,

Scott Benner 54:16
that sounds right. Yeah, it's just um, you know, Kelly, and I had a pretty heated conversation yesterday, because we are still in this spot where the way I do this. It's not, it's not natural for her. Like she's more mathematical. And I was like, though, listen, people listen to the podcasts whose brains work more mathematically to but they get through it. And I said, I don't know how to explain it to you. Like, quickly. I only know how to talk about it like for an hour once a week till it starts making sense, like, you know, and I was like, maybe you should listen to the podcast. And then she looked at me like,

Unknown Speaker 54:50
I'd say that was not the right thing.

Scott Benner 54:52
She's like, You're an idiot. And I was like nine and then she's mad at me. But, but is it's still very difficult to There's there are concepts that we talk about here every week that I promise you, once you understand them, will lead to exactly what we're talking about.

Mandy 55:08
Right. And that's the nice thing. I mean, Paul, and I try to mean, we because we both are pretty equally involved in her care. I mean, on the school hours, even though I might get notifications, and he might text me something crazy going on, or he'll say, Have you seen her sugar, you know, or, you know, whatever, and in a good way or a bad way. And we communicate a lot. But he's, you know, he, we're kind of equal. But that doesn't mean that there's not times where he hears something a tip or information on something, he kind of follows or tracks and vice versa with me that we are somewhat still challenging each other. And I think the biggest thing is hearing you, I've heard you say so many times, like, you know, you can spend a lot of energy trying to figure out the why. But in the moment, like, it really doesn't matter, she either needs more insulin, or she needs more sugar, and you just kind of have to do that. And he and I have, that's a challenge for both of us is because both of us want. We like information, we want to think through things, we want to make the right decision, or keep ourselves from making the wrong decision next time. So we both tend to be over analytical. And so that's been a good challenge for both of us at moments one of us will look at the other be like right now, it really doesn't matter why. Right? The bottom line is this is we need to act and then maybe we'll figure it out. And I know that the devices have the ability to make a note of maybe what you did or something along the lines. But we haven't really gotten into that. Do you do that? Ever?

Unknown Speaker 56:37
I always look at that and think what a nice idea.

Scott Benner 56:42
Don't do it, because then I'm going to go back and look at it. But I got no time for that. I'm moving forward, always moving forward. I listen, here's how I drive on the highway. If there's space in front of me where there's no car, I put my car into it. That is my concept. I'm always going forward. I don't doubt that it would might be helpful for me to look back and say, Oh, look at this, but I just my brain just does not work that way. Like if I wish, if you were with me today when I was stopping, Arden's drift and adding stuff at the right time, and then when she didn't get back to me at right time, changing what I did, there's literally no conceivable rhyme or reason to what I'm doing other than I'm looking at that line and deciding what I think is right. And I think that, as difficult as that is, if you really want to live as kind of unencumbered as you can with diabetes, that needs to be how it eventually occurs to you. Because you can't, I mean, really think of what you're talking about here, like you really want to send kale out in the world where she's busy doing math and constantly, all day long for 24 hours for the rest of her life, like you need to get her into a place where she just sort of knows, you know, and that's gonna take time, it's gonna take an incredible amount of time. But I think it's, I think it's the most natural way. And, and beyond that, I hate to talk like this. But in 2020, these things are going to start making a lot more decisions for us. Right, so and so it is going to be even more important for you to understand the magic of it, because so much is going to happen between that algorithm and that pump, that you're not really going to know why it's doing what it's doing. But if you see what the line is doing, if you see how much insulin goes in at that moment and the timing of it, you'll that to me, is it I don't know. It's not magic. It's like art. Like it really sounds like Pixie that

Mandy 58:46
Yeah, I wanted it to be the other way though. I wanted it to be Oh, and a plus b equals C. And that was extremely. Like, frustrating for me for I spent way too much energy being frustrated over that trying to be nice. Yeah, like,

Scott Benner 59:02
yeah, see, when I tell people you can't expect a light switch fix for diabetes. That's what I'm saying. Like, there's no, it's not a pill. It's not like a you know, you hear people all the time like, I you know, I'm going to get my bezels right, I laugh at them like what a fool's errand, you're going to get your appraisals, right, what and then the kid's gonna grow three more pounds, or you're gonna lose 10 pounds or you're gonna get stressed out at work, or blah, blah, blah, or this is all about a million different things are going to happen in your bazel needs are going to change. Just set a bazel rate that's about right and bump it around once in a while with temporary Basil's Yeah. Because you're, it's, it's, it's this dream that you're going to put everything in this exact situation, you're going to learn how to count carbs. Exactly right. And then once you do that, this is all going to be easy, but that's never going to happen. Like not for now at least, you know,

Mandy 59:54
right. And you know what that reminds me of? A quote that I that really was kind of you know, mind altering for me going through this was, I really felt that way in the beginning, just very, like this is not easy just kind of focused on it being hard. And I started to realize until I until I heard this quote, I didn't realize this is what I was doing. But I heard a quote, that was something along the lines of hard doesn't always mean bad. Sometimes hard is just hard. And I had started to make diabetes bad in because it was hard. And so that just really shifted me to go, you know what, this isn't bad. It's just hard. And something's hard, sometimes hard. It's just hard. And so I need to stop looking for easy. And, you know, just start to realize what I do have control over and what I don't, but that, you know, it's hard. And

Scott Benner 1:00:50
was that quote about marriage when you read it?

Unknown Speaker 1:00:53
It can be applied to a lot of things, it's certainly

Unknown Speaker 1:00:55
good.

Scott Benner 1:00:56
It's a very thoughtful way to think about it, like just because it's not. Listen, this is this is I'm gonna I don't I sound like a broken record at some point. But nothing is guaranteed in life. There's another thing that helps you like we all have this expectation like that you grow up, your parents take care of things. And some people don't have that situation. So life gets harder for them earlier. So when something gets hard back, they expect it. I grew up, I'm adopted. I don't know if you know that. So I'm adopted. I'm adopted. I was adopted right as I was born by people who divorced when I was 13. On my 13th birthday, my dad left my mom, like literally Wow, dinner for my birthday, he took a shower, and he left. My life got very hard right then and there. And, and so I'm accustomed to things not going well. We grew up without money. We grew up without a dad, we grew up, my mom didn't drive a car. You know what I mean? Like, like, we were like, things were hard. So I expect life not to be easy. And when it isn't, and when it isn't easy. I'm not thwarted by it. I don't go Oh, this is it. I was promised that, you know, I rose garden, I got a bunch of weeds. I just Okay, I'll let me get these weeds out of here. So we can plant some flowers. And and, and I think that some people don't have that some people just grow up in great situations where things are taken care of. For them, they have this really wonderful pie in the sky expectation that life is just going to go like that. And then can you imagine if you have that expectation, and then not only does it suddenly not go like that, but it's this. It's diabetes. It's not just like, my dog peed on my carpet. I just bought it. Like, it's like, it's this, you know? And then you

Mandy 1:02:33
put the lifelong sentence of hard, right? And then you

Scott Benner 1:02:35
form an adversarial relationship with diabetes. Yeah. And and I'm telling you that when my daughter got diabetes, I was just like, yeah, that figures. This was always gonna happen, wasn't it? Like, like, you don't mean like, when I was, you know, 15 years old, and my mom was like, couldn't pay the bills. I didn't go Oh, God, we're gonna die. I'm like, Alright, everyone Sit down. Let's figure this out. I don't know what that is. Maybe I'm just lucky that my life went like this. And then dovetailed into diabetes, because I am, I always say in a very specifically, in specific way, when the zombies come, Mandy, you come get me because we're going to live through it. Because Because I literally, like, just zombies. They're not gonna leave me on my birthday. Are they? Like, you know, like, it's just, I think sometimes it is just your perspective. And that's why I don't talk about perspective so much on here, because I think it's a huge part of it's a huge power. Yeah. And how do you end up handling things because

Mandy 1:03:38
of it? attitude, it's really true, that attitude, attitude can be everything. It really can. And that goes with the fear, too. I mean, for me, I think our fear of making the transition from injections to you know, technology and devices was, wasn't so much about the concern of being overwhelmed by the information or, you know, which like you said, you hear a lot. It was just, we, we get comfortable and familiar are things that are familiar when life when things are hard, anything that at least feels stable, or consistent starts to it starts to make it seem like oh, it's easier this way. But that doesn't mean it's better this way. And that was like a huge shift to be like, well, there could be something better, but I have to not be afraid of learning something new and leaving our little current way of doing things. Because I don't think it's, I just I don't think it's where it's working well enough to keep her. I don't wanna say alive, but you know what I'm saying like it's working well enough to do that. But I don't think it's going to give her her best life or her best chance at this. And so that was the fear I had to go from. Well, I'll tell

Scott Benner 1:04:52
you it's so two things I think to say first of all, I just went on my little rant, but I want to say to people that I get if you maybe you grew up really you know horribly, and this was just the straw that broke the camel's back. Like, I'm not saying that if you're not dealing with it, well, you're somehow you're somehow just doing something wrong, everyone's different. But it's just an over, you know, it's an overarching idea. But just you know, sometimes you're, it's, it is about your perspective. And there are, listen, you could have grown up terribly and then gotten diabetes, and I can see that being overwhelming. But we also, you know, for Americans, at least, you know, there's this expectation, things are going to go well, you're going to grow up, buy a house, get a car, go to college, like you'll get a job, it'll be fine. Some pretty girl talk to you, you'll have babies, like everyone thinks that most of the rest of the planet doesn't think that, you know, like most of the rest of the planet struggles. I saw some video last night of some bombing in Syria, every buildings made out of cinder blocks. Like they all just live in cinderblock squares, you know, and people are dropping bombs on them. So if you gave one of those people diabetes, they probably just be like, Yeah, well, I guess it only like, it just it's it will make it much harder. But it's your it's your expectation of what life means that, that changes, how you accept that stuff when it happens. And so if you can manipulate that inside yourself, your expectation for things, I can't I'm not trying to say like, like, set the bar really low. And you'll never be disappointed. But I have to say that is probably one of my personal mantra. It's like, don't, don't expect too much. And you'll never be let down. And then anything, anything over that is just great. You know? Great. So,

Mandy 1:06:35
yeah, and I don't want to come off. Like I mean, it took me about two years, I would say till when I started to have that shift in my attitude. I mean, the first two years, I felt like this was very unfair. There are things for her she's had other medical challenges and things like that, that have been that consumed too much of her for several years. And so when this happened, I really felt like well, like, you've got to be kidding me. Like This can't be happening to I, I did have the feeling like, well, surely nothing else could come along. And that would be harder than what we've already been through. And then this happened. It's so it, it put me in a tailspin. As far as emotionally, I was a wreck for a while, at least internally. I was definitely probably more wreck than what I showed on the outside, but I just I felt like this was a bad hand that she got down and it wasn't fair. And all of a sudden it's your

Scott Benner 1:07:31
hand too. Yeah, yeah, please. Same thing crying in the shower. Like my wife would come home like, you know, after a late night at work with like food. I'm like, don't break from that house. Like I feel like it's just like, why would you bring food into here and like go just shaking the whole time. First two years really bad for me. More recently, I haven't really talked about it yet too much on the podcast. But Arden had to start taking Synthroid or thyroid and I cried about that. I was like, how could she another thing like how could another thing have happened? But then I went and found a bunch of people who have thyroid issues and diabetes, and they're doing good.

Mandy 1:08:06
So you know, Kayla has celiac on top of it, too. And I've heard a couple of your podcasts where celiac has entered the picture. And that's my pediatrician, I think was she was like, I know you can handle this if anyone can. But I'm still scared to tell you what I'm about to tell you enough. Like

Scott Benner 1:08:21
but I think they also found out recently are lactose intolerant, which we didn't

Unknown Speaker 1:08:25
Oh, good.

Mandy 1:08:26
Yeah, there you go. Yeah. Yay, that put Yeah, the celiac Honestly, I was like, okay, like, you know, at that, okay, we can do this, you know,

Scott Benner 1:08:36
we can do this such a girl like such a good attitude like last literally last night. She's like, I'm gonna have ice cream and I was like, okay, and she I said, you know, you take the lactaid and she's like, Yeah, she was already doing it. She takes it and she starts eating the ice cream and she goes well either this is gonna be okay or I'm gonna have diarrhea and she just said it like so matter of factly I was like, Well good for you. And sorry about all this but but yeah, like really just like, you know, a good soul I guess and and i think that's just something you have to tend to on your own you really do have to keep your that part of you alive or this all can really eat you up pretty quickly.

Mandy 1:09:15
Right? Yeah, since the humors good which if we have time I want to tell you the our involuntary break from the Omni pod.

Unknown Speaker 1:09:23
Well, man

Scott Benner 1:09:24
What happened? We're a little over an hour go ahead and tell them we'll go out on this walk god

Mandy 1:09:28
okay. So we you know, here we've adjusted to having the pump now to since beginning of August and we went on a winter break vacation to go out skiing and I had done you know, some research about you know, cold weather and insulin and you know, just anything that and skiing, you know, all this and I'm thinking but this is good. We've got our pump, we've got her Dexcom You know, we've got this we can do this and because of the holidays and the way her insurance works Long story short is that they did not get the paperwork processed for her next renewal of her pumps in time for us to get the shipment before we left for vacation. And, yeah, so

Unknown Speaker 1:10:12
with pens again, that's great.

Mandy 1:10:14
Yes. Yes. And so I thought to myself, okay, well, we'll do a little pump break, not what I had planned at all. But we can roll with this. And honestly, I thought I was if one of the two devices were going to go, it was the pump because I thought I just can't imagine though what we what it would have been like to not have her Dexcom working and us out there skiing and doing things that you know, her body's not used to doing. So if one of the two had to go the the pump, but she she handled it great. And at first, she was kind of like yay, injections again. I mean, you know, it was almost like a little nostalgic, you know, like, okay, we'll

Unknown Speaker 1:10:49
do Yeah, what

Mandy 1:10:50
do you have again, and it was funny how quickly, you know, it was good for us to realize that we hadn't forgotten all that. It's like riding a bike, you just go back to it. But you quickly realize that this is not our preferred method like purse sugars were very hard to manage. Because on top of it, we had anxiety and excitement and travel and weird sleep routines and skiing, you know, cold weather, all those factors that we're not used to having on a regular basis we had for a week. But we managed and then it was the icing on the cake, though, was with two days left. We knew her transmitter was going to probably expire while we were gone. So we packed her backup transmitter to change out. And sure enough, with two days left in the trip, you know, it happened and so we changed out the transmitter and our phone kept saying it couldn't pair with it and it couldn't find it and to re enter the number and we're going What is going on? Well sure enough, I mean, after multiple attempts and Dexcom being great, they have a great I love that they can call them any time and say we need help. And they really tried to walk us through it and finally it was like Yeah, you got a bad transmitter. I mean we don't know what to tell you and so for the last 48 hours we took that off and she was on a meter and on on on injections for a couple days until we got back to town and then all the new stuff arrived and we got her back up and running but it was not at all my plan you know and but we rolled with it. So

Scott Benner 1:12:20
I if you go back about 20 episodes right now you'll see one where we're at the Adele concert and Arden's PD have just fries

Unknown Speaker 1:12:30
no like

Scott Benner 1:12:30
now really bright this second

Unknown Speaker 1:12:33
Yeah, not at home

Scott Benner 1:12:33
or not you know about about work. You know, listen, we just the timeline will be all messed up. But is he had just had a terrible car accident. Her blood sugar got really low. If you've heard about that in the community. A 17 year old girl coming home from high school crashed her car. They think she may have been going up to 100 miles an hour that man thrown from the car really direly injured. And I remember just talking to her mom on the phone, and I remember thinking like and I said to her, oh my god, it's so random. Had she just been in science class, she would have just passed out.

Unknown Speaker 1:13:05
Like, you know, like,

Scott Benner 1:13:06
yeah, like, yeah, and that freakin PDM could have. I mean, I had it for years. It could have went bad at anytime it really, I left my home drove into a city was in a concert. That's the moment like, you know,

Unknown Speaker 1:13:19
that's how I felt. I'm like, really? Like, anything? Yeah, I

Scott Benner 1:13:22
get these transmitters all the time. They always work the one bed when I get.

Unknown Speaker 1:13:26
I'm skiing. Like Yeah, I hear you. I really do. Well,

Scott Benner 1:13:31
you were really delightful. Thank you so much for coming.

Mandy 1:13:33
Thanks for having me. I hope it's hope it's helpful to somebody like the rest of them for me.

Scott Benner 1:13:39
Thank you very much for listening to Episode 183 of the Juicebox Podcast. I cannot thank you enough for tuning in every week. Please tell a friend about the show if you think they would enjoy it.

Unknown Speaker 1:13:51
That's it.

Scott Benner 1:13:52
Well, I mean, that's it except for to say thank you to dancing for diabetes. Don't forget in November, they're having their big show. On the pod, the tubeless insulin pump that Arden's been using since she was four years old. And of course the dexcom g six continuous glucose monitor links for all of these wonderful things are available in your show notes right there in your podcast app, or of course at Juicebox podcast.com. I hope everyone had a wonderful summer. I hope you guys have a ton of luck sending the kids back to school. There's a whole bunch of 504 information on my blog if you need it at Arden. Stay calm. Otherwise, I am very excited to keep bringing you the show every week. I have a lot planned for the rest of the year. And I can't wait to get going. I need to send my own kid back to school so I can get some stuff accomplished.

Unknown Speaker 1:14:39
I'll see you next week.


Please support the sponsors

Donate

The Juicebox Podcast is a free show, but if you'd like to support the podcast directly, you can make a gift here. Recent donations were used to pay for podcast hosting fees. Thank you to all who have sent 5, 10 and 20 dollars!

#182 More Good with Melinda

Scott Benner

Melinda was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes 32 years ago.

Today we talk about Melinda's life and reveal Arden's latest A1c.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon Alexagoogle play/android - iheart radio -  or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

COMING SOON


Please support the sponsors

Donate

The Juicebox Podcast is a free show, but if you'd like to support the podcast directly, you can make a gift here. Recent donations were used to pay for podcast hosting fees. Thank you to all who have sent 5, 10 and 20 dollars!

#181 Charlie

Scott Benner

Alicia is Charlie's mom and she made me invite her on the Juicebox Podcast...   :)

Charlie was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes the day after his second birthday, this is his story.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon Alexagoogle play/android - iheart radio -  or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello, and welcome to Episode 181 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's episode, I don't know what I'm gonna call it yet, I'm editing it, but I still don't know what to call it. So, I mean, you know by now because you saw it in your podcast player, but at this moment, I don't know. Well, that was information you didn't need. Here's some information you do need. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is brought to you by dancing for diabetes, Omni pod and Dexcom. I'm going to do something here. I don't usually do a couple shout outs for social media people following the show. This one's the carb counting mess on Instagram who told me that they left the endos office with a six five a one c congratulations. And the endo asked how they did it. She told her about the podcast and now the podcast has been introduced by her endocrinologist to other people in the practice. And before she knew it, that person was coming back with better a one c results. So carb counting mess. You're not such a carb counting mess, first of all, and secondly, thanks for sharing the show with other people, especially your endocrinologist who seems willing to share it with other people again, that was really cool. And here This one's from Facebook. Hey, Amanda, in Massachusetts, how are you? Congratulations on your 6.181 se. But next time when your mom tries to take a victory lap Don't laugh at her in the endo office. Seriously, congratulations. really well done. Six. One is quite something you should be really proud of yourself. And let your mind be happy for a second. Don't roll your eyes that are okay. All right. Let's get to the show, shall we? This episode is with Alicia. Alicia is Charlie's mom. And Charlie was diagnosed The day after his second birthday. I really think you're gonna like this one. But please remember, as you're listening that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making changes to your medical plan. And you know what else you should remember dancing for diabetes calm that's dancing, the number for diabetes.com the people that dancing for diabetes aren't asking you for anything. They just want you to know more about them. Please visit dancing for diabetes.com. There's also links in your show notes. And while you're looking in those show notes, if you're interested in getting an Omnipod or Dexcom, there's links there to

Alicia Schultz 2:15
I am Alicia Schultz, a scientist at a university doing who does research for a living and as a husband and two sons, and one of them has type one diabetes.

Scott Benner 2:29
Are you able to say what type of research or do you do whatever lands on your desk,

Alicia Schultz 2:33
I work in a biochemistry lab. And our I work in a School of Pharmacy. Our lab does drug discovery. And my project is looking for alternative therapies to hormone replacement therapy try to alleviate the memory decline that occurs in postmenopausal women.

Scott Benner 2:57
That's just what you tell people to get funding you're really trying to fix the zombie problem. Is that correct? Is there a zombie problem? Is it gonna happen? Yes or no? Alicia? I need to know right now.

Alicia Schultz 3:08
I don't think it's gonna happen. I hope it's not and honestly, with based on having type one, there's parts of my brain that are like in the event of a zombie apocalypse. What will we do?

Unknown Speaker 3:18
What do we do? Yeah, I thought that thought

Alicia Schultz 3:21
like, I don't want to start a pig farm.

Unknown Speaker 3:23
Oh, make your own insulin. Yeah,

Scott Benner 3:29
we just got a plan everyone is that's what you're hearing right now is that most people don't have a real plan. They, I always tell people that if it happens, you come get me because I'm making. And so you're gonna want to be with me because I'm gonna make it to the end. We're gonna. But uh, I don't actually believe in any of that. I just think that, um, it's nice to get you rolling and comfortable. So we're talking so you have a son who was diagnosed pretty early, right? How old was he? Are we gonna say his name or no?

Alicia Schultz 3:57
We can say his name is official name is Charles. But we often early on. So but I have a tendency to switch between.

Scott Benner 4:08
Does it matter if is he is it your like, um, how you feel Charles or Charlie? Or is it just happens?

Unknown Speaker 4:15
I think so.

Unknown Speaker 4:15
You think so?

Alicia Schultz 4:17
I'm not sure? Yes. I think sometimes. I'm trying to speak more formally a column Charles. Okay. I don't know. But yeah, he was diagnosed. is a day after his

Scott Benner 4:31
lease you cut out I'm not sure what you said he was diagnosed

Alicia Schultz 4:35
literally the day after his second birthday. Wow.

Scott Benner 4:38
So there was still like cake on the counter under foil and stuff like that and stuff was all over the place. And you were coming down? Yeah. Well, is he your oldest or your second child?

Alicia Schultz 4:49
I'm sorry. Yes, my oldest, actually didn't get a birthday that year. Unfortunately. Because the party was that weekend, the weekend after his actual birthday occurred. And we canceled.

Scott Benner 5:02
Yeah, you would think just did you just do it with some jello at the hospital and a candle or just look at him go you don't we're gonna just do this next month, you're not even gonna know the difference.

Alicia Schultz 5:13
We, I, we, I think we planned on trying to have something at some point and it just didn't happen. Luckily, he had been at my parents house, and they had done like a little celebration with him, which I'm sure was great for undiagnosed diabetes. Um, you know,

Scott Benner 5:37
wow, just blood sugar wasn't it was a mean, you took him to hospital?

Alicia Schultz 5:42
You know, I don't but the we have like this portal thing. And the earliest, like one of the earliest test results in there actually wasn't even that high. I think it was only like between 350 and 400.

Unknown Speaker 5:57
How did you catch it?

Alicia Schultz 5:59
Well, it kind of started about his birthdays. early November. It was sometime mid October, I went camping with just him and my husband and nobody had going on. He had something else going on. Like a last minute trip.

Scott Benner 6:14
Yeah, I would have said I had something going on too if you're going camping but that's that's that's smart. Camping, oh, no, I might have something

Alicia Schultz 6:22
like camping or camping or children is like a whole other thing. So, but it was with other another family that has kids and literally their son is his younger. So very close in age. So he woke up in the middle of the first night. They're drenched in what I thought was sweat. Some urine, it obviously leaked through his diaper. And just like screaming for water, like what is going on. And that whole weekend, we went through a ton of divers, and and then it kind of fluctuated for a week or two where he would have days where you drink a ton of water and other teams wouldn't drink quite as much. But he's kind of like he's always been a good drinker. So it's not that abnormal. And in hindsight, unlike me, that was just type one developing. Yeah, it just kind of kind of came and went and I feel like something's wrong. And so I called the pediatrician. And I wrote it off a little bit is like, oh, maybe he had a growth spurt, and his bladder didn't catch up. And

Unknown Speaker 7:35
that is the least thing anyone's ever said.

Alicia Schultz 7:39
I'm like, as a scientist, my brain was like, a no, can that really happen? I don't know. I don't know that much about actual Oregon development, you know? And he wasn't really he hadn't, like lost. Like, he's also always been like, pretty good eater. And so it's not like he was, like, he's n times where he would eat a lot. And so it wasn't that. abnormal. Yeah. Who have him, you know, like, so some of the signs that like are typical, like, were things that we didn't see as being abnormal for our kid. And he wasn't like losing weight. Okay, it we were kind of like, not likely this. And we had his It was literally his, like, a year pediatrician normal checkup that was scheduled for the day after his birthday. We're like, Well, we've got this other one scheduled already. And you know, it's kind of like, Well, probably not, this is not likely to keep an eye on it. And if anything else happens, definitely call us back. And then he threw up. And I'm like, and it was like one time, and then he didn't throw up anymore. And then, like a few days later, after going up for breakfast, and cakes. He threw up again. And we're like, cool. And then and then we got sick. So we're like, oh,

Scott Benner 9:09
so then he was sick. Yeah, boy, it's so. So yeah, circumstances. He

Unknown Speaker 9:14
did have a stomach bug, right? Yeah,

Scott Benner 9:17
but circumstances kept pushing you away from like, the idea that he might have diabetes. It's interesting. Dancing for diabetes provides free dance class for kids and teens with Type One Diabetes. They also host several outreach events. And they have a program for kids teens and adults called touched by type ones dancing for diabetes.com.

Alicia Schultz 9:37
That's why he was with my parents for like the day but like on his actual birthday, as you

Unknown Speaker 9:41
guys were says,

Alicia Schultz 9:44
Yes, my husband and I were actually sick. And he came back to us. And I'm like, why are we better and he's not. And like, still throwing up. So we went to our pediatrician appointment. And they really fun to get a urine sample from a two year old. They literally stick a bag

Unknown Speaker 10:12
around this whole business. Uh huh.

Unknown Speaker 10:14
No kidding. Yeah. Yeah.

Alicia Schultz 10:16
Well, that would be Harold Hill, you don't grenade on command. So it took a while. And once we had, like, why you actually left the church. And I just bombed and waited ages, like every 20 minutes, checked his diaper to see if there was any urine in the bag. And the minute there was any I had given me like a urine sample cup, I put it in there. And my husband took it back to the pediatrician. And they were gone a while. And that's I was like, at home be like, Oh, yeah. Good. Yeah. And my husband came home and like, a lot of my son was home with a urine sample. And my son was sleeping on me. And he's like, honey, I need to go to the hospital right now. And I was just like, oh, man, no. We went to the, yeah, the emergency. They were waiting for us. And it's being in an emergency room with a toddler is pretty traumatic. Sure. Like, I felt so bad for, like, having an IV put in. Lab checking in the ER is like, hourly. So it was just not good. It was interesting, because I'm sorry,

Scott Benner 11:53
No, I was just gonna say that Arden was diagnosed a couple weeks after her second birthday. And but we figured it out more in the middle of the night. And so she was pretty, you know, wiped out and, and asleep when we took her and she slept through most of what happened in her, you know, initial, you know, being checked over. And the one thing that my wife and I look back on now, and we realized we wouldn't have done the same way is that when it was time to take her to the neck, you they took her from us. And they and we didn't go with her. And they they put us on, they put us in a like a holding room and told us to get some sleep and they'd come get us in a couple of hours. And we did that because it was like by then it was like 330 in the morning. Maybe my wife has said a million times and said, Why did we not go with her? In hindsight, I wish we would have went with Arden, you know, thinking about being able to see into the past and make better decisions or maybe even see into the future, have you considered using a dexcom continuous glucose monitor. Because with the dexcom CGM, you can kind of do just that. You can see what happened in the past with your blood sugar, which will help you make decisions in the future. And you can also, if I make change the future by making better decisions in the present, those better decisions might be bazel, rates boluses, they might be Pre-Bolus thing, they might be, you know, 20 minutes after a week going, oh, wow, I don't think I counted those carbs, right, I can use a little more. And where will you get that information from? Will you'll get it from the data that's coming back from your dexcom continuous glucose monitor. The G six sensor is amazing. Arden says it goes on completely pain free. And it doesn't require any finger stick calibration. Not only that, but there's a share feature. And let me just tell you a little bit about that when the person wearing the CGM, whether it's your child or your spouse or yourself, you can allow followers to see your blood sugar in real time. So maybe you're going to be watching your kids blood sugar while they're at school. Or maybe like some people who listen to the show, maybe their wives or nurses overnight, and they keep an eye on it for them when they're busy at work. There's a million different ways to use the share feature, you'll decide which one is best for you. But no matter what you do with it, I believe that you're going to find that your decisions and your outcomes are better. Please go to dexcom.com forward slash juice box for use the links in your show notes to find out more. You'll also be able to find links at Juicebox podcast.com dexcom.com Ford slash juice box to get started today. Why did we not go with her? No, they told us not to and we just did what they said you know, but and you're so like, crying and like you know knocked over and everything like you're not really thinking straight and maybe that's why maybe they're like, let's go keep the crying people away from the baby. But, but we just it was really you know, it was really it was just an overwhelming experience. I get really less so I don't know what happened to Arden in those first couple of hours like you do. I don't want to get too far off track but I have to ask you have sort of a northern accent. But you went camping in mid October. So yeah. Are you crazy?

Alicia Schultz 15:07
I'm from Wisconsin, Wisconsin, and we love, love our seasons, including fall, and it was gonna be a pretty nice weekend. And

Scott Benner 15:18
you were on your way to October Johnson this like summer still to you. So you know it Yeah. Right. Because I mean, it's it's

Alicia Schultz 15:28
transitional, like it can be good or it can be bad. And if the weather is nice, it's awesome. Because you've, they're beautiful. And oh,

Scott Benner 15:37
my brother moved to Wisconsin so long ago, I've never visited him. And he's always like, why don't you come? And he's like, what about the lakes? And I'm like, Are you kidding me?

Alicia Schultz 15:48
I was like, I have no free time to come in summer because we're all like, I felt like we need to go do something right now. All the time. Yeah. So many festivals. It's fabulous. Like you. Yeah, airplanes and

Scott Benner 16:02
beer. And like, all that stuff. I know. He tells me. But I keep telling him like, I have no time to travel. And the one time you want me to travel, you may go to Wisconsin, and then your selling point is a lake. I'm like, I don't know. So. So okay, so

Alicia Schultz 16:16
outside of Milwaukee, like he was like best kept secret. Don't tell anyone. It's pretty amazing.

Scott Benner 16:23
It's pretty amazing. A mock. My brother is nearby. I think he moved out to Oshkosh originally. And

Unknown Speaker 16:32
he's, that's where I grew up. Okay. And he's somewhere around town.

Scott Benner 16:35
He's somewhere still near there. So.

Alicia Schultz 16:38
Okay. I don't exactly know when you could airplane. Like he's got to be around Africa.

Scott Benner 16:42
Because they do that big festival. Wherever, where everyone comes in and like flies like little airplanes like this. Okay.

Alicia Schultz 16:49
Yeah. Yeah. It's huge. We get people from all over the world.

Scott Benner 16:53
Well, we've dug into the extent of my Wisconsin knowledge right there. So other than once told me, my brother, I should have my brother on this podcast to just tell this story sometime of a guy he worked with, who went on a drunken, like ride in a Winnebago with a friend and beer. And it ended up with them getting shot by a cop. It's it's maybe the best story I've ever heard in my entire life. And it's it. That's exactly what he said, when it was over. He was like, and then he finishes like, these people have stories like this constantly. It was when he was when he was first there. It's like, he called me he was like, you have to hear what I'm about to tell you like listen very closely. And I was like, Okay, and then he spotted tail. It was fascinating. I literally might get him on just to tell that story. I wonder if he could still tell it that well. But anyway, so Okay, so trolley. Choice diagnose, how long did you spend in the hospital afterwards?

Alicia Schultz 17:53
Um, well, we went to the ER on Thursday. And then they eventually checked us into the actual hospital. And we went home on Saturday. Like, a couple days. Yeah. And then these we didn't want to be a more the, we were like, what do we need to do to get out of here?

Unknown Speaker 18:17
There's beer to drink.

Scott Benner 18:21
But so Okay, so you come out. So this is only about a year ago, right? He's only about three now.

Unknown Speaker 18:27
Yeah, uh huh. Okay. And November,

Scott Benner 18:30
November, see you diagnosed and I mean, end of 2016 beginning of 2017. ish.

Alicia Schultz 18:38
Yes. And 2016.

Scott Benner 18:40
What was the What was it like leaving the hospital? Like, what did they give you? What were they telling you how you were going to manage this? Like, what tools did you have?

Alicia Schultz 18:51
We have learned how to focus on anger. Do a blood sugar check. He had a one touch Berio and insulin pins, okay? All the things that go along with an insulin pen. And a like, if his blood sugar's this, give him this in the in these ranges. Give him this. And that's kind of all they said, at the time. Oh, they also gave us syringes, which was really weird, because I'm like, we're leaving from the pharmacy. And we're like, why are we taking these boxes? Like, yeah, I don't even know what to do with this. But a little did we know it was because on Monday, we were our children's hospital is a really, really great diabetes clinic. And what we didn't know is that they have all this education, and that we were in the hospital getting survival day one. We didn't realize that and we had the status appointment scheduled for Monday morning at the at the clinic. And we had didn't know but that was survived. Date education. Yeah, that's what really syringes Yeah,

Scott Benner 20:05
it's funny they give you all that stuff. And and you're staring at it for a couple of days go on like, What? What are we? What is this for? And it's a very unlike they had a plan but they didn't really let you in on it very much they sent you home with if this happens to inside of it's possible you just didn't hear

Alicia Schultz 20:26
Yeah, well or didn't like I said, Oh, no actually can I, I personally emotionally a wreck, like I equated now to, like, postpartum emotions almost like just wild crazy emotions with random crying. And I was like, this is like having a newborn all over again. Like I feel out of control. And I don't know what's going on. And yeah, it was it was not good.

Scott Benner 21:00
But you feel like you're not gonna grow up like you feel like you feel like it's a newborn. You don't understand how to take care of it. And it's not gonna get any older and you're never gonna figure it out. Yeah, yeah. You just gonna be caught on that moment. Like that whole time of that. And that the unsure. I'm about to kill this kid feeling that that that spot?

Unknown Speaker 21:19
Yeah. It's a great place. Yeah. Yeah. So that's wonderful. How good was

Scott Benner 21:24
the was the instruction when you went back for the basically for the bigger boot camp on diabetes? Did you leave that feeling better or not? Particularly?

Alicia Schultz 21:34
Yeah, we left feeling better that they taught us how to pull up in from the pen cartridges with syringes. And we actually started doing is the pens to do half a unit, we actually started doing estimating quarter units, right. And so we had a new scale. And then they also gave us a fixed carbohydrate diet to help basically figure out numbers and ratios and stuff for a little bit before it could release us, I guess, into the world of carb counting. The hard part for that part was a six carb amount per meal, it was like 30 grams of carbs. And I think for some people, that might be easy. But my kid eats like, now it's like 70 grams on average a day. So to get him 30 in one meal. And this was like, you know, a year ago, he was probably averaging like 60 a day at that point.

Scott Benner 22:41
So this was too much food for you in a setting at that.

Alicia Schultz 22:44
Yeah, it was just like, forcing carbs to him, just to give him insulin. Like it was dumb. It's just like, stupid, like, when you

Unknown Speaker 22:57
keep eating well.

Scott Benner 23:00
Alicia, I'm sorry, you broke up a little bit. So I got confused. But what did they what it made me think of is that that's just the math that the doctor knew. Like, it's this much insulin for this many carbs. Like could they not have like divided that in half?

Alicia Schultz 23:15
Yeah, yeah. Exactly. Like but luckily by Thanksgiving, cuz his birthdays early November. Luckily, by Thanksgiving, like literally the day before Thanksgiving, we had done a couple different education, because they realized that we were on top of things and are willing to very quickly learn stuff. And so they gave gave us two education days at once. Okay, or Thanksgiving, which allowed us to start counting.

Scott Benner 23:50
Okay. Well, so how to So right now, are you still using pens?

Alicia Schultz 23:58
No, no, no, we? Well, basically don't use the pens for that one weekend. Okay. We very specifically switch to like, straight up syringes, right? pulling our own influence, rather than having the pin measure it. And we we did that? until we got a pump. How long have you had a pump? Oh, 11 months.

Unknown Speaker 24:27
Okay. Oh, wow.

Alicia Schultz 24:28
Oh, she was like early March. Yeah, you were all already on our second pump.

Scott Benner 24:34
Is it because you didn't like the first one or because what what how did you how did you get the first one was?

Unknown Speaker 24:40
Oh, they stopped making it.

Unknown Speaker 24:43
They were like, Hey, here's

Alicia Schultz 24:46
the all the deals are switching to something else.

Scott Benner 24:50
Right. And you knew you had to so you took advantage of one of them?

Alicia Schultz 24:54
Uh huh. Yeah.

Scott Benner 24:54
Which one did you go to?

Alicia Schultz 24:57
It was army pod because we really With him being little, um, we needed something that had her like a remote. Like, having to fiddle with his. It was no, he's an active kid. And so

Scott Benner 25:15
we needed to hold him down to give him insulin. So he would move around while you were trying to use the controller that was attached to him by the tube.

Alicia Schultz 25:22
Yeah, running after you have a tube, you can't run away from me. And you're like, running after him holding and hoping that all the A, you don't drop the expensive pump and break it. Or be that you just pull the infusion site out. And then you have to do that whole rigmarole again. So yeah, it's a pretty fun thing. So having a remote, kind of a deal breaker. And we we got a Dexcom before Christmas that year. So to me in the hospital, everything we hit medical Max, and I'm like, the, the children's people's like we can do for you. And I'm like, What do we need to do to get a dexcom CGM? And how did you find out about that so

Unknown Speaker 26:09
quickly? How did you find out about that so

Alicia Schultz 26:11
quickly? My husband, Josh is in the tech world. He's a software developer writes code all day. And there's a pretty prominent guy in the tech community that my husband follows for his, like the tech side of his life, he happens to also be a type one diabetic. And so my husband was kind of aware of his his stuff that he had put out about. And usually, like, we're in the hospital, and I'm emotional wreck. And he's like problem solving by going up all about stuff. And so when we left the hospital, we wanted a pump and a CGM. That's gonna feel like we said to get a pump in a CGM. And they were like, Whoa, whoa, whoa, you need to slow down.

Scott Benner 27:10
Like, no, my husband follows a guy for his coding, and he has diabetes. And he has this stuff. And let's get going. That's such a strange route understanding that stuff. That's very random, actually. Yeah. But cool. I mean, very cool. Because it fast forward. Did you write it? It took you right to

Unknown Speaker 27:27
a total it? Yeah.

Unknown Speaker 27:28
It sounds like that much.

Alicia Schultz 27:31
No, they didn't. And even with the pump stuff, they didn't, they didn't fight us with it. They were just like, okay, we have all this education that you need to get through. And they tried to get that as fast as

Unknown Speaker 27:41
I say. I say,

Alicia Schultz 27:43
like, last January a year ago, I think we were at the clinic, four different times just for education. Just to like, get all the classes. I mean, some of them were classes.

Scott Benner 27:59
Did you have to do like a nutrition class pump?

Alicia Schultz 28:03
Yeah, all that like a pump, try on them. They have all the pump reps in there. So you can like look at the pump, pump parts, and you can like, trial putting on it,

Scott Benner 28:14
that we did one of those, like a little fashion show for them. But it's like, it's like a miniature salesman. Yeah, yeah.

Alicia Schultz 28:20
situation. Yeah. Well, I mean to that decision to make, and might as well talk to somebody in the product, right?

Scott Benner 28:28
Yeah, absolutely. When you contacted me about being on the podcast, you said that I needed to have your very direct by the way. It was it was polite. Don't get me wrong, but you were like, you need to have more people yelling kids in the podcast. And I was like, Okay.

Unknown Speaker 28:44
I don't want to argue Yeah.

Scott Benner 28:46
So what I say here all the time, like it's very easy to be on the podcast, you just have to tell me you want to be alone, or there's somebody you want to hear. And it pretty much happens like that. But but but can you tell me why you felt that way? Because you're listening to the podcast? What was it not filling in for those some had to have been something that you weren't feeling served on? I guess. So this morning, I hope they don't mind me saying this. This morning, I was talking to the mother of a little girl who lives around Atlanta. And we were talking about how we manage type one diabetes. And she said, no one's ever said this to me before. And I thought it's just so disappointing. Like, you know, new people come into the community constantly, and they hear the same things over and over again, the kind of, you know, same kind of BS, and then it's up to them to figure their way through everything to come up with this idea of their own. But where do you get that information from if people aren't constantly telling you, Hey, you know, there's a better way. And if you're considering insulin pumping, in my opinion, and based on a decade of use, the better way is the Omni pod. It is tubeless it is carefree, you can swim with it and shower with it without disconnecting. The process of putting on an omni pod is like three steps. And takes like, I can do it like a minute at this point. So your pod changes are almost effortless, and it's tubeless. So you're not carrying any large controller device on your body, you know. And if you're an adult, that's hard enough, you're sticking in your bra or jamming it in your pants. But imagine if you're a kid, and you're carrying this thing around, that's heavy and large. On the other hand, the only pot is tiny, and it's controlled wirelessly by this little device, all you have to do is pick it up and say, Hey, give me a little more bazel, a little more insulin, you know, how many carbs my eating this many push a button. It's that easy. My omnipod.com forward slash juice box, the links in your show notes are at Juicebox podcast.com. At that link, you'll find out how simple it is to get a free no obligation demo pod sent right to your house. So you can check it out and see if what I said is true. My omnipod.com forward slash juice box had to have been something that you weren't feeling served on.

Alicia Schultz 30:56
Yeah, I'm just I felt like I felt like you're that you're dealing with type one is the thing that is the way you deal with it to some degree has to do with like a your years of experience with it. But there's also an element of understanding the where you are in life and developmentally. And some of the things that you can do with the way that you deal with certain diabetes, I feel is not that you can't do it, but that it needs to be a little bit more reserved, maybe with a little kid, it's a little and there's an element of some of this stuff that he doesn't understand. He didn't understand what's going on what was happening to him. And so you can't really get that by in waiting, or something like that. And so I just, I feel like I'm kind of flexing on that this morning. Because like, I sent that message at one point in time. And as we've grown and changed in my kid has grown a little bit since then. Because when they're little they grow so fast.

Scott Benner 32:17
So if you would have thought to reach out to me today for the first time, would you have had the same feeling?

Alicia Schultz 32:26
Um, yeah, just a little bit. Okay. Maybe I wouldn't have felt as strongly about it. But maybe it's what I'm hearing that I reached out at that time, just because, like, and you have had some people. Right, and so well, here,

Scott Benner 32:40
here's what I'm hearing. It's you It's not me. No, I'm just kidding. So

Alicia Schultz 32:47
everybody's gonna take their, you put it out there, but people take can take from it, what they what they need. So I think there's thing

Scott Benner 32:53
Yeah, I think there's two different thoughts here. Like, in my mind, when I'm listening to you. The first one is that everything's more difficult with a younger person for for a couple of obvious reasons, right? Like, you can't always count on them to eat what you expect them to eat. It's difficult to reason with them, you know, putting a bunch of insulin in somebody's you know, putting two waffles in front of them. Pre-Bolus ng for it. And 10 minutes later, having a two year old look at you and go I'm adding these waffles would make you feel like yeah, jumping out a window. And and, and so I get that, like, that's definitely one aspect of it. And the other aspect, I think is, but but I think the rest of it is this is that So from my perspective, I know your life with a two year old but you know, or somebody's life with a two year old with diabetes, because I've had it before. And my thought is my contention is, is that if you're not careful, you could get stuck in that fear and anxiety. And so, I see myself as someone who's 50 100 yards ahead of you on a long dark path. And even though I'm pretty far ahead of you, and you don't have a flashlight, I keep waving my flashlight at you yelling Hurry up, catch up, let's go get up here. And and trying to drag you from where you are to where I am. Because if I don't, I feel like you're going to get stuck back there because that's what happened to me. And so while there's probably not, there's probably not an apples to apples way for me to say this is how we deal with Arden and I can apply it to you as a two year old. Although I think a lot of it applies. I think that my bigger goal is to just sort of be the person off the head that you go I wish I was doing it like that. Like how do I get to that that looks possible. That guy I've listened to his podcast he seems like an idiot so if he can do it, I probably could do it too. And and like to give you that feeling that it's possible there is a place you can go you can get to it. And if you're if you and I'm here like Come come meet me at it's not just some random place in the up ahead that you can't imagine. So I don't know if that makes sense.

Unknown Speaker 35:00
Sound good? Yeah.

Alicia Schultz 35:02
I think that's why some of I've been reflecting on sending you that message and into now. And I wonder if some of it isn't like I've contemplated whether some of it is like, like, the fear that you talk about it the fear of doing it. But and so that's why I was like, I don't know that I would put it forward, probably, as I had to from that initial message. So I have a very direct,

Scott Benner 35:37
use the word need, I was like, Okay, I'm sorry, I'll do it. But you're also delightful. So I, it's not like you were yet like, I want to be clear, I didn't feel like you were attacking me. But you were very much I could feel in you where you were with your diabetes, by the by the tone of your note, like, basically, what you said to me was, you have to let me come on the podcast and explain to me the stuff I don't understand between what I know and what I want to know. And if I, if I told you in that email that the rest of its just time and experience, that's not a very satisfying answer at that time. But it's true, right? You're starting

Alicia Schultz 36:16
to feel that you have. Yeah, there's an element to have, like, I process things verbally a lot. And so sometimes just having somebody else to literally talk to sure, a Can I can be helpful for myself. Okay. And so there's a selfish reason of like, okay, maybe if I have this conversation, that it will benefit me in some way?

Unknown Speaker 36:42
Well, we have 25 minutes. Let's have the conversation.

Alicia Schultz 36:46
Yes, let's go to like a lot of people find the podcast and find the Facebook groups and stuff pretty early on. And they're, they're in a they're in a time that I feel pretty freshly remember, and I think it is also useful for people to hear the stories of other people going through that. Like, and not having it be so far behind them. Right. But you know, there's, there's because there's the, the emotional aspect of diabetes and know a lot of you like, you can't be emotionally tied to it, but it is definitely early on. It's Oh, yeah. Very hard to remove yourself from it.

Unknown Speaker 37:39
Absolutely.

Unknown Speaker 37:40
Oh, you're 100% of that. I think part of it.

Scott Benner 37:42
No, I think so I think what you're what you're bumping up against and what I what I it's this thing that strikes me all the time. So this podcast is now I just got like a Facebook message. The other day is like, this is the anniversary. So it's like three years old. We're, you know, you and I are recording little one day end up being like 100 and 80th episode of it. And it's already got like, 150 out. And so my one like issue is, is this like, I think that what I do, I do pretty good. But my brain doesn't work in a real like, like, like a clean order. If it did, I probably would have done the first episode about this is what happens when you get diagnosed. And then this is I would have done something in some sort of, like reasonable order, which as a researcher probably makes a lot of sense to you. But the funny thing, yeah, but the funny thing is the stuff I figured out about diabetes is because my brain doesn't work like that at all. And so yeah, it right. And so what I think I've come down to is, if you really, if you really want to get something out of this podcast, you just have to listen to the episodes. And very slowly pieces will come together. And stuff will start to make sense. If you're looking for someone to put it in order for you. I'm not the guy. I can't do that. But the problem is your hospital tried to do that didn't really help you. Yeah, right. And so it's my expectation that these conversations are the path to it. Now, I will say this, I do have a plan to sit down with Jenny Smith again, the CD who comes on once in a while. And I want to do like a basically. So you were just diagnosed with diabetes episode, something like a primer to get you going. I do think the podcast needs that.

Alicia Schultz 39:28
Yeah, yeah, that would probably be helpful. Because the other thing that was very kind of difficult in the beginning is I I did start looking at some podcasts. And like, I don't listen to music. I only listen to podcasts now. And I found your podcast very early on. And I was hearing all this stuff and I'm like, this is possible. We need to just do it. And I was like, hold on. Like let's slow down. out there.

Unknown Speaker 40:02
But see ya.

Unknown Speaker 40:02
Let's see, I'll tell you how great that makes me

Unknown Speaker 40:04
feel the primer

Scott Benner 40:06
would help. But he's so having a primary would help you think?

Alicia Schultz 40:11
Yes, I think it would okay.

Scott Benner 40:12
I actually do, too. I just I tried to imagine me for an hour staying focused on one idea. But that's but But see, the funny thing is though, is the way you felt after you listen to it, that was my goal. Like, I want you to feel like I can do this. This is possible. There's a thing out here that happens just because I don't know about it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Because I think that is if I can be critical for a second of people who share online together when something doesn't work for them. And this isn't even me, you know, I should make it a bigger thing. Our minds tell us it. I figured this out, it doesn't work. And so when when your brain can't figure something out, your expectation is it's because it doesn't exist. Right? Like very few of us. Yeah, I'll tell you there's one thing I there's one thing I realized about myself, I wrote a parenting book along like a few years ago. And while I was reading, writing it, I recognized about myself, that one of my favorite things to do is to get to the very edge of what I understand and just sit there in that horrible feeling like there's more and I don't know what it is, and try to imagine what it is. That's weird. And I don't think a ton of people do that. I think a lot of people get to the edge of what they can understand. And they imagined that this is the edge, this is the end of what there is to understand. And so I don't know, that's a very strange way of saying that. That I think that that's what happens to people, I think that they have an experience with diabetes, it goes a certain way it happens again, and they think oh, and then they say those words that make me mental. Oh, that's just diabetes. And that's not just diabetes, you can eat pancakes without your blood sugar going to 350. If it's going to 350 you just don't know how to do it yet. But if you get stuck thinking that it's not possible, then I feel like I lost you. And so while you're busy messing around, and it's not going well, what I want to do is give you the feeling that no, there there's an answer here. I just don't know what it is yet. And maybe this person can tell it to me, which makes it feel more hopeful and less impossible. I guess that's my goal.

Alicia Schultz 42:22
Yeah, yeah. Pancakes is a great example. Because we have a tendency to like going out for brunch. And kicks her off as part of that, and probably tried to figure out like, the same place gets, we probably tried to figure it out, like 20 times, at least. And it we still don't have it right. But if we didn't get it right, for a long time, I think out of because it was it was like a, b, we know roughly, it's probably this many carbs. But we still, we're bolusing for it. Like we would still only propose for like 20 of the carbs or so. And like you're setting yourself up for failure in hindsight, right. But at the time, it was like, given him this much. And up front, this is scary. What's going to happen? I don't know when we're out in public and like what yeah, it's just that fear. And until we started just being like, Don't let's try it. Right, right. Let's, you know, what are we comfortable with trying? And let's try that. And

Scott Benner 43:32
foolish I am telling people all the time that will sit is first let me go back first, you said something really interesting. You said so you know, it's probably X amount of insulin, but you use less. The funny thing is that after you consciously use less insulin, when the blood sugar goes up, you never go back to why I didn't use enough insulin, it's always something else. But must have been diabetes. pancakes are hard to do. People do that stuff all the time. You actually they take you know what I mean? They take away the reason and then don't go back to saying Well, that was the reason that's fascinating to me. The second part is

Unknown Speaker 44:06
it's

Scott Benner 44:08
it's exactly what you're saying. It's like, it's just that fear like that, I'm going to do the wrong thing. And it's going to go be it's gonna go horribly wrong. But the truth of the matter is, is that in almost every situation, when your blood sugar is high, if you stop and think about it, you later give more insulin. It just belonged up front. That's all like it, just you you know what I mean? And after you see that a couple of times, it's how you get to this very convoluted sentence that I speak a lot on the podcast, which is you have to believe that what you know is going to happen is going to happen. You just have to if you don't believe that you're screwed, you get hacked, you have to believe it, you have to go I know that if I don't put this insulin in right now he's going to get high. And later I'm going to have two more units to bring it back down. So Damn it, let's just do the two units right now. If you don't, if you can't do that, you'll be lost. forever.

Alicia Schultz 45:01
The only I think the thing that makes it harder for, like parents of little kids to do that, is that with little kids, especially honeymooning kids, like, you could do the same thing. And it can go haywire. Oh, sure, for whatever reason watching, you know, and so there's an element of like that, that is reinforcing your learning. Like, you don't have that reinforcing. Because it, it can go totally opposite. Once the next time. And we've, this is one thing we've kind of seen recently with Charlie, I almost feel I don't know if he's, I think he's still hunting, moaning because he still, I think has comparatives his numbers to some other people, maybe I don't know. Um, but we have times where all of a sudden, out of like, everything will just not work, or everything will just suddenly, way over work. Yeah. And you're just like, why is that? So that's,

Scott Benner 45:58
that's so I hate to say that that happens. But that happens. And so then that's how you have to be fluid and know how to address it afterwards. When I was 10 years old, I was playing Atari. When Elizabeth forest was 10 years old, she was being diagnosed with Type One Diabetes, and beginning to hatch a plan to create an organization called dancing for diabetes. And today that exists. So while I could never figure out how to get through the opening gate in zaxxon, Elizabeth figured out how to help children with Type One Diabetes through dance, find out more about it, scroll down, see some of the pictures at dancing for diabetes, calm, dancing, the number for diabetes.com you have to be fluid and know how to address it afterwards. Arden had a stretch just yesterday, where she was just on the low side the whole time. And so she had to go work out last night. She does like it's, I don't know, it's exercise. I don't know what you call it. Because I don't do it. But it's where people move their bodies really quickly for for not a sporting reason to be in better shape. Let's call it that. And, and so she, I don't I don't like to think about it. It makes me upset to think about sweating. And so she so she does this thing. And and so I'm like, okay, she's been on the low side all day, which means that everything I've Bolus I've had to give her lessons on for and she's still hanging it like 85, you know, so I'm like, there's a meal she ate that I was that in any other regular situation would take eight units. I only gave her four and a half. And she was still like 75 for a while after it was over. And so I'm like I said, I wasn't home. And I said to my wife, I'm like, Look, this trainings coming up. Let's do a Temp Basal decrease of this much blah, blah, blah, right? It's gonna work. And it was working great, except that it was also the end of her pump. And none of us were paying attention to that. So last night at like, I don't know, if it was like 10 o'clock, my wife goes, Oh, God, we have to change our pump. And I was, Oh, all right. And then that's when we started paying attention to the fact that this beautiful like 75 blood sugar that had been existing for the past seven hours, all of a sudden was turning up, because all of a sudden, her pump was kind of done, it was cooked and it wasn't delivering as well. Plus, I scaled back the basal rate. So I did everything right. And then I got this spike. And I was like, Oh, so he put the new pump on. And I bolused for the spike, considering the new pump. And I did exactly what I knew what what in the most times was going to take it insulin wise except I forgot to take into account that she had been so like whoa for the last eight hours. And super sensitive right. And so, so what I so I forgot about that because I got aggressive with the spike the way I should have been, except I should have been less aggressive with the spike. And, and that's a lot to think about. And I had had a long day I was out for like five hours doing a ton of driving I came home tired, it just didn't occur to me right away. I did the bolus, and it came back to get me because at one o'clock in the morning or two o'clock in the morning, she was like 55 and she was in that she was in that 55 that it didn't matter what you did wasn't gonna stop being 55 and so, got her juice, shut off for bazel did all that stuff. And I was up until I know exactly what time I close my eyes for 17 in the morning. And that's when I got her to 75 diagonal up and I was like oh this is gonna I know this is okay now and so I didn't know which I didn't over trade it. And I was comfortable leaving it like 64 for like an hour while it was working itself out. But I did stay awake and pay attention to it. But it all goes back to I did the right thing. I didn't consider all of the variables. But I'm but I'm still not upset with that. Because I would have rather been 64 for an hour 55 then to 64 then taking a while to go back up then for me To under treat that spike and for her blood sugar could have been 250 all night. I just I steadfastly stay by. I stick behind my words that I would rather stop a lower falling blood sugar than fight with Ohio. Yes, you know what I mean? And Susan

Alicia Schultz 50:14
and I early on had fights. Because he wasn't listening to podcasts like I was.

Scott Benner 50:23
It's not his fault sources.

Alicia Schultz 50:25
Yes. It's interesting, too. So, um, well, I've a couple things. First, you talk about the the pump being like on his left leg, it doesn't deliver as accurately or something.

Scott Benner 50:40
It's the infusion. So it could happen with any pump like sometimes bank, it's oversaturated. Right. Right. It's like, yeah,

Alicia Schultz 50:47
and then what do you find? Do you feel like there's like almost a insulin absorption over time? Sorry, this is very scientific way of explaining it. Is this the way I think, like, the first day of the site, you find like it over works. And then like, the second day, you kind of have like a midpoint. And then the third day, usually it's starting to decrease and like, it's absorption.

Scott Benner 51:12
I don't Yeah, I think the first day is an overworking I think of it as in a perfect world. This is how it would work all the time. And so right, and then it devolves as as it goes along, because the site gets, it gets saturated with insulin, or maybe you're using the same sites too frequently, or whatever it ends up being. And it doesn't always happen, by the way, some pump sites like cruise the whole time. And

Unknown Speaker 51:36
but but when like, why do I need to change?

Scott Benner 51:38
Right? Yeah, like, there are, you know, there's times like, I'm leaving this one on forever. And but but there's, but there's also spots where as, as you're getting to the end of that third day, and you're starting to get diminishing returns in the insulin, you have to assume, I always think, Well, you know, of course, that's happening. Because, because trust me as low as harden was last night, she continues that trend today, she's at three right now. And so it wasn't my like slight Temp Basal decrease that caused the spike it was that combined with the the life of the pump ending, basically, yeah, so because it, you know, it just is, but there are times when, you know, there are times when she's not on the low side, and this is actually art. And just I know this is as good a place as I need to say, Arden just started getting her period. And this is her first time with it. And to be honest, so far, what I'm noticing is that her blood sugar is super simple to take care of. It's very stable and low with less insulin so far during during the cycle, so

Alicia Schultz 52:45
give it a couple of weeks. I'm sure it'll be horrible in two weeks.

Scott Benner 52:48
Yeah. rustling, I mean, I'll find out but but I still think the goal is to just

Alicia Schultz 52:52
to get some parts of like hormone over a cycle. I'm just gonna be very excited. No, you're not gonna do that.

Scott Benner 53:01
Well, I mean, you're, you're in a lab somewhere making better hormones or something like that. So just send them over. But, but you know, like, but my goal is I'll just stay fluid and I'll figure it out. And and I think that the expectation that your diabetes is always going to be perfect is ridiculous. Like I saw somebody the other day talking about, they're trying to get their basal rate just right. I'm like, that's a fool's errand. Like, it just really is. And I know a woman I spoke to recently who bought into the idea of like, Look, just set a basic basal rate and then use Temp Basal, because think your body changes all the time. Why would your basal rates not change? pretty frequently, she got yelled at by or endo. And then she pushed back and she continued to do it, the endo gave up and she's having good success with it. You can't but I see other people who are like, as soon as I get all I have to do is get these bezels right, and then everything's gonna be okay. You're, you're fooling yourself. If you think that's gonna happen, you're gonna get those bezels right, and then something else is going to change. They're going to be wrong again, you spent your whole life trying to do this, because why? because someone told you there's basal rates the pump, you have to get them right. Just get them about right. You know, it's, I don't know. It's sometimes I think people focus on the wrong stuff.

Alicia Schultz 54:13
Yeah, he just simplified his early bazel programs. I think. Maybe because my husband is working with reading sugar surfing right now. Okay, um, and do they tell you to do that

Scott Benner 54:23
sugar? I've never read sugar seven. Do they tell you to do that and sugar surfing?

Alicia Schultz 54:27
I think he just said he said to set like one bazel written just looked at.

Scott Benner 54:32
Like, it totally makes sense to me. And then just the joy attempts.

Alicia Schultz 54:35
So now we have like, two different different rates. And it seems to be it seems to have helped a lot of not all of the things that we're we're noticing we're being a current chronic problem.

Scott Benner 54:51
Yeah, I do have an overnight rate that's lower than the day rate but not by a lot. It's just what I figured out works. Yeah. But you know, for the most part and just adjust if we have to adjust. I

Alicia Schultz 55:04
think it was an epic my husband just told me read something that like the pancreas research accuracy of this, but the pancreas on average puts out for like a normal person puts out bliss type insulin like 11 times a day one, okay? Like it just will dump don't insulin, you know, like, like Bolus for feels like 11 times a day for an average person,

Scott Benner 55:27
like take care of body functions, maybe with extra? Yeah,

Unknown Speaker 55:30
yeah, well, that's just like,

Scott Benner 55:33
that's why I'll tell you that, what I'll do is if it's a carb heavy meal, I'll just randomly double her bazel at the be, you know, near the beginning of a carb heavy meal, because it just makes sense. I think I call it carpet bombing with insulin one time. And somebody a lot of people really like that I've seen it online now talked about that way, just the idea of like you're trying to, there's this area of time with these heavier carbs. And it just makes sense to up the bazel rate over that space.

Alicia Schultz 56:02
We see that a lot too, because with protein and fat as well. And it's kind of impressive, I forget who the guy was a guy that just got released with the four year old. And he talked about how he thought he saw it like, hours later, or something. And we see that too. Like, there's something with kids and the way that especially if it's like a big meal, and he's eating protein and fat, like we can see will just be sometimes just especially if it's dinner, which is all night long, he just gets an increase Faisal, just because the fat, there's, yeah, it's just it lasts longer than I would expect. And

Scott Benner 56:46
actually, it's just something about the digestion, that the fat keeps the carbs sort of in your stomach in your system longer, I guess. And yeah,

Alicia Schultz 56:54
I wonder if it's acid with like digestion and sleeping, that digestion is like slowing down because other stuff is happening. Or if it's a combination of little kids, they're also doing so much growing when they sleep. Even, you know, like, even outside of a growth spurt, like the things that are happening when you sleep they sleep for so long that maybe that biochemically whatever is happening requires or basal insulin so interesting. The

Scott Benner 57:19
minute Arden goes to sleep or blood sugar starts to go down because she relaxes and then she doesn't need like, you know if she's doing her homework, and she's kind of amped up for homework or something like that. The minute that and I don't want to call it anxiety. But the minute that extra stuff you're thinking about goes away, her blood sugar tends to go down. Just like it goes down at the end of the school day.

Alicia Schultz 57:41
Yeah, mealtime insulin will wear off. And then he'll slowly tick up. And then like, even now we change his bezels. So that now an alarm isn't going off, they're not going as high. He's not going out of range, you'll still wake up in the morning, and I look and he's had, you know, a very nice, lift up, and then a drift back down.

Scott Benner 58:07
And it doesn't get before it comes back. Where does it go back to?

Alicia Schultz 58:11
Um, well, we target 140 we don't want it to go. Our range is like 100 to 180, although we don't like retreat a low unless he's like, below 80. But we might we might give him like a little like, and it's bedtime kind of thing. It kind of depends on the time of what's been going on. And what we think is gonna happen. Of course, sleeping is one thing versus is napping and I'm awake. And he's expected to be woken up because we also very much value sleep in our house. Like it's very important, or else. And so that's part of it.

Scott Benner 58:57
You're trying to accomplish that. No, I know, I got I got so tired the other day. I was just like, it was like three o'clock in the afternoon. And I said I'm gonna go lay down so I don't die. And yeah, because I just, I got cloudy. And I was like, I don't even know what's going on. Anyway, I just got done being sick. So I'm still kind of like battling back from that. And I was just like, I can't I can't I have to, I can't, like, lay down. So we're kind of at the end. Is there anything else you wanted to bring up or talk about?

Alicia Schultz 59:28
Um, that's one of the other things is, uh, that we, my husband and I have, like, very, very cutely fathers are awesome. I mean, he's not a toddler now, but when he was two and trying to get him to understand early to understand diabetes. He we, we, we, you know, you give some kind of kids terms. Yeah, one time he referred to getting his insulin shot as insulating And so we've started a website called insulating that calm. So it's insulin, and then an extra n.

Scott Benner 1:00:10
What are you blogging there? What are you doing with it? What are you doing with the space?

Alicia Schultz 1:00:14
Yeah, we're blogging there. Right now. Basically, the main thing that's on there is Charlie's diagnosis story. But we're hoping to, we have a lot of other content ideas, but we'll probably do some blogging. Part of the reason I microphone that I'm speaking on was a gift was that we are doing our own podcasting in the future as well. Okay. Um, but yeah, so that's kind of our goal, because we do feel that there's a lot of room within the type one space to have more and more voices and or just ideas out there of how to tackle a lot of this stuff before So

Unknown Speaker 1:01:01
no, absolutely.

Alicia Schultz 1:01:02
I guess. The only other thing I want to say is that I do have another child and that I was pregnant with him when Charlie was diagnosed, like very early. So I essentially have children and you know, diabetes early it's just kind of that's that's a whole lot that we could probably talk

Scott Benner 1:01:23
and that other kids

Alicia Schultz 1:01:25
about, about the Yeah, having a second child and worrying and about are they going to get it but I you've had a lot of people talking about that and trial that and stuff. So it is a

Scott Benner 1:01:35
it's definitely something that gets I still my son is going to be 18 in a couple weeks. He's done trial that he does not have any markers for type one diabetes. And still if he gets sick, I stared. I'm like, Oh, my God, is he going to get diabetes? So have you?

Alicia Schultz 1:01:49
Have you picked this finger?

Scott Benner 1:01:52
Check when he was younger and asleep on sia, because he was coming home from school and using the bathroom a lot. Ah, and so yeah, when he was asleep, we did it. He doesn't know he did it? I don't think so. And that was it was a long time ago, actually. But yeah, but um, yeah, I have other than that. I mean, I don't think about it often. But when he gets sick, sometimes it creeps into my head. That's for sure.

Alicia Schultz 1:02:20
Yeah, there was so much with Charlie. But I see it's hindsight. That now if anything remotely similar to that happens with Sam, I'm like a type one developing. But I haven't I haven't checked you know, he's only like, seven months old. Right?

Scott Benner 1:02:36
Well, what's open never happened? Yeah, but I really appreciate you coming on and and while and telling me you were coming on but and so. But, but uh, but it was really it was really great to take the time and do it. I know. I had to push you off because I was sick. We were supposed to do this like a week or so ago. But I I got so sick the night before. We were supposed to do this. That the day that we were supposed to do this. I did not like get out of bed. I just and i that is not me. And I was in bed all day. And the next day. I was racking so I appreciate you being flexible. And

Alicia Schultz 1:03:08
I guess we had it wrong. Did you guys this year. Yeah. Yeah, that was crazy, too. Like Charlie got his first next second stomach book ever in his life. And how fast ketones developed was crazy. Even without blood sugar being crazy. But then afterwards the recovery he was so insulin sensitive. We had meals we didn't even he didn't need insulin far. Yes. He also didn't have a lot of appetites who wasn't eating. So they're just basically there wasn't enough. Even you know, we would just not dose and if he happened to go up later we though, but because we were just we actually started actually using because of that happening. Okay. He did something. work faster. Yeah.

Scott Benner 1:04:02
Okay. Well, really appreciate you coming on. Thank you. Hey, guys, if you want to check out Alicia's blog gets an insulating.com i n s Ul INN i n g. I think that's how I learned how to spell Mississippi Am I SSIS si PPI i en su li n n i n g. Okay, it's not quite the same. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you to Omni pod and Dexcom and dancing for diabetes. Without them the podcast doesn't exist. So please hit the links. If you end up getting a demo pod from Omni pod or checking out the amazing g six CGM where if you get involved with dancing for diabetes, let them know you came from the podcast place. Also, I just saw all the great new reviews and ratings of the podcast on iTunes and I really appreciate it. Lastly, before I go and bazel snoring in the background, so please put up with me if you hear that. Since we did some shout outs at the beginning of the show. I want to do a couple more because there are people listening All over the world and I didn't know if you knew that. So a bulk of the downloads, of course do come from the United States, I think followed up by Canada is pretty much the second largest group of downloads. But then would you imagine Where's next? Australia. There are also listeners in Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, South Africa, Algeria, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Ethiopia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Turkey, Romania, Ukraine, the UK, Poland, Germany, France. Actually, the UK has got more than Australia. Come on Australia. Catch up. You know, there are people listening in China, and Japan, and Russia and South Korea. So if you're one of those people in the Philippines downloading podcast, you are totally not alone. You are so not alone. Because there's even someone listening in Iceland. I can't thank you guys enough for finding the show. And for sharing it. I am fairly certain it would not exist in Iceland, if it wasn't for you guys. So please, if you find the show, rewarding, share it with somebody else. Have a great day. I'll see you next week.


Please support the sponsors

Donate

The Juicebox Podcast is a free show, but if you'd like to support the podcast directly, you can make a gift here. Recent donations were used to pay for podcast hosting fees. Thank you to all who have sent 5, 10 and 20 dollars!