I love all the comments and personal experience here - I have CFRD and HATE it. If God came to me and told me He would miraculously (sp?) heal one disease - I'd pick the diabetes over the CF, hands down.
Anyway - the only comment I have about feeling the highs and lows>
I was told that our body becomes accustomed to whatever our "normal" is.
For example, in the beginning when mine were over 400, and then drop to 300, I thought I was crashing and would eat, without testing. Same goes the other way. If you normally run low, it will feel like THAT is normal..therefore dropping 20 points doesn't feel like much (like if you were 140 and went to 120 - you might not feel a "crash") However if it's 60 to begin with and you drop 20...well, I hope you understand the thinking here.
Thankfully I learned this early on, about 20 years ago, and I'm surprised how little the doctors tell you these days.
well, hope that is beneficial. Testing IS the key.
Best wishes to all
Anyway - the only comment I have about feeling the highs and lows>
I was told that our body becomes accustomed to whatever our "normal" is.
For example, in the beginning when mine were over 400, and then drop to 300, I thought I was crashing and would eat, without testing. Same goes the other way. If you normally run low, it will feel like THAT is normal..therefore dropping 20 points doesn't feel like much (like if you were 140 and went to 120 - you might not feel a "crash") However if it's 60 to begin with and you drop 20...well, I hope you understand the thinking here.
Thankfully I learned this early on, about 20 years ago, and I'm surprised how little the doctors tell you these days.
well, hope that is beneficial. Testing IS the key.
Best wishes to all