daugen
Epic Contributor
I find that breakfast is the hardest meal to avoid carbs and sugars. We seem to want a jump start in the morning and I suppose caffeine and sugar does that. And if you don't keep drinking the coffee, and perhaps the sugar too, you crash later and of course feel even more tired. A somewhat addictive cycle that I now believe the food industry has promoted. Like cigarettes...
Eggs are my new friend I guess. Now eat them three or four times a week, not just on Sunday morning. I would love to find a whole grain fiber cereal that actually kept me from being hungry for four hours. Normal cereal toppings are loaded with sugar...bananas, raisins, fruit
The only way I don't get hungry for four or five hours is by eating meat or cheese. Yogurt's only good for an hour or two, though I suppose I could doctor up a custom breakfast drink that would be good for me. My sister has been doing this for decades. I seem to have a need to chew...
I keep coming back to square one and I want to collect the $200 by eating my way out of what I ate my way in to. For two months several years ago I tracked my sugar readings on a medical health program, looking for trends or a learning moment. I wasn't far out of range, so my primary doc just gave me the "watch it" advice, and I did, sort of. But nowhere near enough.
There are several obviously learned folk in this thread. Could someone recap the various sugar/diabetes tests available and what they tell us? I get a comprehensive blood test once a year and have been getting several more often. The primary doc I'm sure will now ratchet me back to annual AIC testing.
The insurance companies don't want to pay for excessive testing but if AIC goes back three months, would it be smart to have it done more often? I wonder what Medicare/supplement pays for. Likely once a year at most. Of course I could pay for the test myself but then you put a bullseye on your back for a list price ripoff.
Eggs are my new friend I guess. Now eat them three or four times a week, not just on Sunday morning. I would love to find a whole grain fiber cereal that actually kept me from being hungry for four hours. Normal cereal toppings are loaded with sugar...bananas, raisins, fruit
The only way I don't get hungry for four or five hours is by eating meat or cheese. Yogurt's only good for an hour or two, though I suppose I could doctor up a custom breakfast drink that would be good for me. My sister has been doing this for decades. I seem to have a need to chew...
I keep coming back to square one and I want to collect the $200 by eating my way out of what I ate my way in to. For two months several years ago I tracked my sugar readings on a medical health program, looking for trends or a learning moment. I wasn't far out of range, so my primary doc just gave me the "watch it" advice, and I did, sort of. But nowhere near enough.
There are several obviously learned folk in this thread. Could someone recap the various sugar/diabetes tests available and what they tell us? I get a comprehensive blood test once a year and have been getting several more often. The primary doc I'm sure will now ratchet me back to annual AIC testing.
The insurance companies don't want to pay for excessive testing but if AIC goes back three months, would it be smart to have it done more often? I wonder what Medicare/supplement pays for. Likely once a year at most. Of course I could pay for the test myself but then you put a bullseye on your back for a list price ripoff.