Interesting hearing about people who have lowered it to normal levels. What we don't know yet is, are they "cured" or are they actually well controlled? So if they stick to a Mediterranean diet they are fine, but could they go back to eating lots of carbs? I suspect not
- that's why I don't push it these days and try to stick to 50g of carbs or less per meal.
However, if you can have a lovely healthy diet and the odd treat, how can that not be for the best anyway?! Let's face it, pasta, rice, crisps, chips, cake - they may taste nice, but they don't actually give you anything you need nutritionally.
Jobergamot - I'm not a doctor but this is what I've read and what a friend who works on the Oxford uni team that's researching type 1 say. I'm not saying that the odd spike would make you go blind, but if you were regularly over 7.8, you would be at real risk of damaging nerves and blood vessels in eyes and extremities.
The problem is that the bastard thing is so insidious. You'd have to be up over about 11.0 before you started excreting glucose in your urine (i.e. Peeing all day and esp night!); you could cruise along and be way too high and have no idea. That's why testing is so important.
Most doctors will only do a fasting test (which you want under 5.5 and under 5.0 in an ideal world. Lots of studies say you're at a much high risk of developing T2 in the next 10 years if your fasting is regularly over 5.0), because it's cheap. But actually fasting is the last thing to go. If you test yourself for a week after eating, you can see for yourself what the food is doing to your body, and adjust accordingly.
I was the biggest carb addict out there and looking back I've made some real changes that I hardly even notice these days. Eg:
Curry - I now have something like salmon or paneer tikka with no rice and no naan, but I will have one bhaji
Italian - I have something like aubergine parmigiana rather than pasta
Pub - I don't eat the batter on the fish but I have some of the chips
Pizza - I make a fabulous low carb one, see either the fat head recipe or the BBC good food cauliflower crust recipe
Chocolate - I have a couple of squares, not a couple of packets
I never have sandwiches or bread rolls any more. It's shit at first but you adapt really quickly. And everyone tells you how good you look - that helps!
Lots of luck OP and anyone else in same boat ask Santa/amazon for a Bayer contour meter and strips, and take control! If anyone wants to PM me for non medical advice about how to do it, please do!