Two Months Before, Three Years After

This photo was taken on October 23, 2008, about two months before I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and congestive heart failure.

This photo was taken on October 28, 2011, a full three years later, and just two months short of the third anniversary of my diagnosis.

At the time I took that first picture, I was damn near dead and didn’t even know it.  Three years later, I’m full of life and living that life to the fullest.

What a difference three years has made!  I’m blessed and quite thankful to have had them.

Posted in Diabetes, Health, Heart, Lessons Learned, Life, Photos | 9 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: The Sweet Oinker Returns

Posted in Photos, Wordless Wednesday | 4 Comments

You Don’t Look Sick

One of the many things that I’ve observed in the nearly 3 years since I was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes and congestive heart failure is that people just can’t seem to believe that there’s anything wrong with me because they can’t see it.  I mention all of the various health issues I face and the responses I hear more often than not are “Wow, you don’t look sick!” or “Well, you look great!”.  And I always hear “You’re too young to have that”, but that’s a rant for another time.

The simple truth is that I don’t look sick.  And unless you know me, and my story, you’d have no reason to suspect that I’m living with multiple chronic health issues.  People living with diabetes, heart disease, and any one of a number of chronic health issues look just like everyone else.  We don’t have a look.  And we are just like everyone else; we are human beings, with ten fingers and ten toes, we go to work and to school, we play sports, etc…  And just like everyone else, we have feelings.  And sometimes, those well intended comments of “You look great” or “You don’t look sick” really hurt our feelings.  They certainly do mine.

When I hear you say those words, that “thank you” that may hesitantly escape my mouth is not necessarily the true response that is brewing in my heart.  Behind the wall that goes up to shield myself from your comments, my mind and heart are screaming.  I wish that, just for a moment, you could feel the pain that I feel in living with these diseases.  You say I look great, and I think,  yeah, for the shape I’m in.  I wish you could see what I see when I look at myself in the mirror, when I see the changes that have taken place since my diagnosis.  While you may not see anything wrong with me, I see a painful reminder of what I face each day.

Many days, I just don’t have it in me to respond to those comments as I would like.  And more often than not, I realize that it would do me no good to try to educate you anyway.  So, I agree with you and thank you for the kind words, and let you go off feeling good about yourself, all the while knowing that the joke is really on you.

Yes, I may not look sick, and I may look great, but just like the appearance that you know all there is to know about diabetes and congestive heart failure, because you heard via some third hand stories that a family member you never met once lived with them, those looks are most definitely deceiving.


If you’ve made it this far, thank you for sticking with me through my little rant.  Please know that this is not directed at anyone in particular.  I just needed to get those thoughts out of my head and I feel much better having done so.

Posted in Diabetes, Health, Heart, Lessons Learned, Life, Rants | 6 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: The Sweet Oinker

Bacon Cupcake!

Posted in Photos, Wordless Wednesday | 3 Comments

JDRF Walk to Cure Diabetes

This year, I will be participating in my first JDRF Walk to Cure Diabetes, and I will be doing so in Louisville, KY, on October 22, along side my good friend Meredith, who has lived with Type 1 Diabetes for the last 11 years.  I walk in support of Meredith and numerous other friends who live with this disease.

Type 1, or juvenile diabetes, is a devastating disease that affects millions of people, a large and growing percentage of them children.  And as Meredith and hundreds of our friends in the Diabetes Online Community can attest, it is not an easy disease with which to live.

Finger sticks and multiple daily injections of insulin are only part of the hardships that people living with this disease face each and every day.  Type 1 is both financially and emotionally taxing as well.  Speak with Meredith or anyone living with this disease, and it becomes painfully clear why finding a cure is of the utmost importance.

The JDRF funds more type 1 diabetes research than any other charity worldwide and it’s making progress along many promising paths toward better treatments and a cure.

Please join Meredith & me in our walk and fund raising efforts to help find a cure.  Each person who walks or makes a contribution makes a difference, and every penny earned will go a long way in our search for the cure.

We can show the world what can be done when people with all types of diabetes unite for a common cause.

Together, WE can make a Difference!

Mike Durbin, PWD Type 2
http://www.mydiabeticheart.com

Posted in Announcements, Diabetes, Diabetes Walks, Shout outs | 4 Comments

9th Anniversary Weekend Photos

April & I celebrated our 9th year together over the weekend in a very laid back and easy going manner.  We went out for a nice meal Saturday afternoon and then spent the rest of the day driving around in the country.  We both turned our phones off so we could enjoy OUR special day without interruptions.  And I have to say, we really need to do that more often.

Alas, we shot a bunch of photos during our afternoon and I’ve put some of them together in the gallery below.  Have a look and tell me which ones you like.  Enjoy!

http://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=107931

Posted in Life, Photos | 2 Comments

10 Facts About Mike

Today is No D Day, and since the post idea I had last year was popular enough for several people to steal, I decided it was good enough to use again this year.  So, I give you 10 Facts About Mike:

1) I do not like candy corn.

2) I’ve pet live sharks, star fish, and horseshoe crabs.

3) My favorite comic strip is Get Fuzzy.

4) Despite evidence to the contrary, I’m really a very private person.

5) I have an adopted sister whom I’ve never met in person. 🙂

6) I always have two birdies by my side.

7) George Carlin was, and still is, my all-time favorite comedian.

8 ) I’ve walked a 6ft long iguana on a leash.

9) My computers are PCs, my phone’s a Droid, and my tablet is an iPad.

10) I met the woman I love on my very first day at college.  Tomorrow, we will celebrate 9 years together.  I love you, April! ❤

Posted in Life, No D Day, Shout outs | 6 Comments

A Lecture for the Doctor

When I went to see my doctor Monday morning for a routine checkup, I went with the expectation that I would be receiving a lecture about my blood glucose numbers being higher than she would like and about my A1c rising to 7.4.  I had intentionally called for the result last week just so I would know what to expect from the doctor when I saw her.  Paranoid much?  No, I just know my doctor.  And my expectations of receiving a lecture would have been met had I not prepared one of my own.  And it went something like this:

“I been battling with type 2 diabetes and congestive heart failure for nearly three years, all the while trying to balance my care with working a crazy night shift 50+ hours a week, the stresses of trying to figure out how the hell to pay all of my bills, pay the co-pays for doctor visits & more than 10 prescriptions, and still have money for food.   And by the way, the last year has been spent dealing with April’s mother being diagnosed with stage 4 uterine cancer and all of the hell that goes along with such a diagnosis.  YOU try living with all of that and see how well you do with maintaining good diabetes management all the time.  Then come talk to me!”

Yes, I had something of an emotional fit in the doctor’s office and it ended with my telling the doctor in no uncertainly terms that  “I’m doing the best that I can considering the hell that I’m going through right now, but I’m beyond tired of all of it.  I’m f**king Burnt Out!”

Would you believe that I felt much better after getting all that off my chest?  Sometimes, you just have to let the frustration out.

After my rant was over, and the doctor stopped looking at me in shock, she suggested we adjust increase the dosage on my Byetta to the full 10mcg dose, which should have been done a couple of months ago, and she also thought it necessary to increase the dosage on my blood pressure medication.  Gee, I wonder why.  And, of course, before I left the office, I got the usual ‘try and take care of yourself and we’ll see how things are in a few months” talk.

And that’s what I’ll do.  I’ll keep taking my medications, trying to eat well, and doing the best I can to care for myself. And everything else!

 

Posted in Diabetes, Doctor Visits, Heart, Lessons Learned, Life, Medications, Rants | 4 Comments

A Successful First Diabetes Walk

April & I traveled to Indianapolis on Sunday to participate in the American Diabetes Association’s 20th Annual Step Out: Walk to Stop Diabetes event.  It was the very first time that I’ve participated in a diabetes walk since my diagnosis nearly three years ago.  And I much say that it was an unqualified success in terms of both surpassing my fund raising goal and my completing the walk itself.  Thanks to the generous support of friends and family, I raised $200 for the event. Which was twice the amount I had set for a goal.  Yay!

April & I enjoyed the event and it was great to share my first diabetes walk with Cherise, her husband Scott and daughter Niya, her co-worker Michelle, and Todd.

I shot some photos during our time in Indy and put them together in a flickr slideshow to share with my readers.  Enjoy!

http://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=107931

Posted in D-Meetups, Diabetes, Diabetes Walks, Photos, Shout outs, Travel | Leave a comment

Photos & Video: The Chainsaw Carving Festival

Those of you who follow me on Twitter have probably seen my tweets about a chainsaw carving festival that April & I were planning to attend.  Well, the event came and April & I made the trip to it yesterday.  We had a great time despite the heavy rain that fell on us at one point.  Since some have asked me what in the world a chainsaw carving festival is, I thought I’d share some of the photos and a short video I shot while at the event and, hopefully, you’ll get the idea.  Enjoy!

http://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=107931

Posted in Life, Photos, Vlog | Leave a comment