Transcript
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Hey snacks, welcome to season two
of snacks eyes, the podcast that will
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drag you into your most fabulous life. I'm your host, lava Lushes,
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also known as the snack of the
twin cities, a drag queen that twirled
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her way into podcasting, and the
rest is a dream come true, and
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that's exactly what this podcast is about, making your dreams happen for you fabulously.
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This season we are continuing our journey
in finding out what makes a happy
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and fulfilled life, going places we've
never been before. Don't forget that,
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when it comes to your potential,
the sky is the limit and it's never
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a bad time to be who you
are. Get you a snack, because
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your fabulous life starts now. Hey
snacks. The reason I started this podcast
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was because I wanted to share some
of the things I've learned in my colorful
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life with you all and invite other
people to do the same. However,
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there are times in my own life
where I need to learn and grow from
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listening to others, and I am
at a time in my life right now
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where that is one of those times. In fact, I can actually say
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my life is completely changed. A
little over a month ago, I was
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diagnosed with type two diabetes. I
notice I had a lot of the symptoms
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that pointed to diabetes, so I
called my doctor and they had me do
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some blood work. Not only did
I have dangerously high blood sugar, my
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numbers indicated that I could die from
a heart attack or stroke within a matter
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of months. I hadn't been to
the doctor in ten years, and I
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don't want you all to think that
I went into this thinking I was going
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to get a clean bill of health, but I can also say that I
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never realized my health had gotten so
bad. The fact is, when it
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comes to my goals and dreams,
I definitely am one of those people who
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wants to do and have it all. I live in on the golifestyle and
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if I'm home, I'm always working
on a project. So, while I
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was never a person that enjoyed a
lot of sweets, and a lot of
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people associate diabetes with people who eat
sugary foods, my diet revolved around what
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was easy, convenient and not necessarily
healthy. Being a dry queen has been
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the center of my life since I
was eighteen years old, and I was
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always so focused on getting to the
next show we're working on the next costume,
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that my health wasn't at the forefront. I can say to you now
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that is the biggest mistake I've ever
made in this life. I don't regret
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chasing my goals and dreams, and
you should never regret chasing your goals and
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dreams, but what I do regret
is not making my health a priority,
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and, looking back on it,
there's no real reason why I couldn't have
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done both. Like many young people, I thought I was really far away
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from death. I had told myself
that I had a lot more time left
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in this life and the choices I
made wouldn't be so bad because I was
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young enough and had time to recover. Hearing that I could possibly die soon,
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especially someone like me who has a
lot of dreams left to chase,
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was devastating, and that's putting it
lightly. When the doctor told me my
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results, my first question was if
I changed my lifestyle, will that reverse
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it? He said yes, that
is very likely if you are aggressive with
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your changes. That was what I
needed to hear to know I still had
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some hope, and that is when
my outlook and my mindset about my health
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completely changed. Since my diagnosis with
the help of a nutritionist, I have
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found a diet that works for both
my health and my lifestyle. Between my
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new eating habits and with the help
of medication, the changes in my life
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have been drastic. I've lost thirty
pounds and my numbers are already half of
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what they were when I was diagnosed. Diabetes is a chronic illness and while
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it is possible to reverse it,
to achieve that, these lifestyle changes and
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healthy choices are things I will have
to make every day for the rest of
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my life. And you know what, I am happy about that. I
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can tell you that right now,
in this moment, I feel so much
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better. I'm happier, I have
more energy and I feel the healthiest I've
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ever been in life. However,
even just took up weeks ago, I
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don't think I could say that.
The truth is, when anyone is diagnosed
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with the serious illness, it changes
their life and there is a toll on
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your physical health, but also your
mental health. In a month, I
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feel like I've learned so much about
living with diabetes, but I also know
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I have lots more to learn.
So today I've invited a guest who also
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has diabetes to share some of their
wisdom. But before we talk to them,
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I want to share a few things
I've learned about life while being newly
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diagnosed. First and foremost, nothing
matters more than your health. Now,
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yes, you have heard this before, but I'm saying it again for those
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who may have heard it but perhaps
aren't listening. Together, we are on
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a journey to a happy and fulfilled
life, and without your health you can't
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achieve that. Your health has an
effect on your career, finances, relationships
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and personal development. If you ignore
your health or don't take it seriously,
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your life will be more difficult.
As we have talked about in prior episodes,
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there can be so many bumps in
the road on your way to success,
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so it's important that you don't lit
the choices you make, especially concerning
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your health, be one of the
things standing in your way. According to
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the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, one out of eleven people have diabetes,
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and out of the people who have
it, one in ten don't even
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know they have the disease. Knowing
where you stand with your health is crucial
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to success in life. If you
haven't already, make a commitment to invest
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and your wellbeing. Second I've learned
that you always have to give yourself a
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fighting chance. In Life, you
will experience what it feels like to receive
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news that is overwhelming. This comes
with an emotional trauma that can be very
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difficult to deal with. My diagnosis
certainly felt that way. I felt this
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overwhelming guilt and hopelessness for weeks after. I remember the first couple days after
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I was diagnosed. I didn't eat
anything because I convinced myself that that was
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how I had gotten diabetes. And
while yes, diet is part of it,
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that doesn't mean that it's all of
it. Difficulty dealing with difficult news
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can happen in many areas of your
life. No one is immune to bad
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news or disappointment. So if you
find yourself in this situation in life,
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remember it is how you process and
deal with the situation that can result in
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the best possible outcome. For me, I was able to take my diabetes
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from a death sentence to wake up
call and just a month I allowed myself
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time to feel my emotions, but
also did not let those emotions defeat me.
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A good friend of mine has always
said the devil you know is better
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than the devil you don't. So
part of my healing process is learning as
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much as I can about my illness. Well, I definitely have found some
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heartbreaking stories about diabetes, I can
say I found more positive ones in which
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people are able to manage their illness
and live the life they want for themselves.
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While I am still learning how to
manage my diabetes, I am motivated
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by the success stories and that keeps
me in the mindset that I can and
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will overcome this. Lastly, I
want to talk about the societal stigma surrounding
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chronic illnesses, particularly diabetes. I've
learned that people will quickly judge you for
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having diabetes. Telling family and friends
about my diagnosis was one of the hardest
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things I've ever had to do.
People who have diabetes are blamed by others
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for causing their condition and are subject
to negative stereotyping and sometimes discriminated against.
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In a comment on the stigma about
diabetes, author and Diabetes Educator Janis Rossler
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says many people with type to diabetes
are accused of causing their disease. That
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is not only unfair, it is
incorrect. Diabetes is a complex disease.
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Not everyone who is overweight develops it. And there are many who have type
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to that are thin. Stigmas can
prevent people from getting diagnosed and seeking proper
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treatment. Some people may even avoid
insulin in Jackson's or testing their blood sugar
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and public, which can have very
serious consequences to their health. People routinely
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face challenges in their social lives workplace
and have an increased risk of depression.
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Many people blame themselves for developing this
disease. Such negative emotions can affect the
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way people view their disease and their
approach to their diabetes management. People are
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slowly becoming more aware of diabetes and
its implications, but we still have a
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long way to go. I'd like
you to remember that while in some situations
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it can be reversed, there is
no definite cure for diabetes, and education
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is needed on both the part of
those affected and those around them. Through
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education and developing support and coping mechanisms
for people with diabetes, they can overcome
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it and hopefully that understanding will also
lead to more compassion. In my research
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on diabetes, I came across an
article about my guests and I instantly connected
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with her story. As a chef, my guest has made a career out
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of helping people unlock their potential through
their diet, but after a neardeath experience,
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she decided it was time to take
control of her own personal health.
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Welcome to stack size, stacy McDonald. Hi, stacy, welcome to snack
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size. Thank you. Glad to
be here. Thank you so much for
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joining me and I just want to
say I was so inspired by your story
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about your journey with diabetes. So
I know that you are a chef.
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Is that correct? That is correct. definished for ten years. Awesome.
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Tell us a bit about your experience
in that industry. The culinary industry has
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been a lifesaver for me. It
is where I actually took my first sleep
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of faith for anything big and the
world completely just opened up to me.
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I've had the great fortune of building
a business that I'm really proud of that
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affords me the opportunity to have a
very flexible schedule and just kind of do
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what I want to do and to
help people, one family at a time,
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to eat well and to live well
as a result. You are a
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mother too, is that right?
I am. I have a daughter.
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She is sixteen now and she is
a special needs child. Love of my
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life. Actually her name is Lilah
and my sister calls her Lalah. So
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when I saw that I saw yeah, her. So you have a very
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moving story about how you found out
that you had type to diabetes. Can
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you share that with my listeners?
Well, I had been really sick for
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a long time and I because of
my schedule and other things, I put
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by health at the bottom of my
priority list and hadn't gone to the doctor
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when I first started experiencing the symptom. So it was probably about two years
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and every year that I waited the
symptoms got profoundly worse. So at the
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height of it I was like fainting
in public and having experiencing low iron a
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NEMIA. I even had to go
to the emergency room and have a blood
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transfusion because my blood glucos was so
low, my hamiglobing was so low.
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So when I finally decided to drag
myself into the doctor, they did the
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lab work and usually lab work takes, you know, a while to come
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back, but they called me the
bit that very day and said come into
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our office tomorrow, we need to
talk to you. And when I got
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there I was met by a team
of doctors and I said, Oh,
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this does not look good and I
thought, you know, I'm almost,
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you know, fifty years old.
I thought, okay, it's got to
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be hormones. Maybe it's something else, you know. Never did I ever
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imagine them to say, you know, you have, you have type to
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diabetes, and I'm thinking, no, I don't, and they said yes,
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you do. Your labs came back
and your numbers are all over the
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place and we need to do something
for you now, like right now,
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or you're going to be in the
hospital. Oh my God, us.
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Exactly. So my Hayma globing level
on that day. They tested me that
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morning and that morning, at zero
am, my blood shure was five hundred
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and fifty nine. Oh my gosh, exactly. So they said, you're
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not leaving here. We're going to
inject you with insulin. You can't say
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no. It's either insolent or you're
going to be admitted to the hospital.
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And as they're doing all of this, they're telling me, you know,
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they give me the whole diabetes speech. You know how starts and you know
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how you got it and what you
need to do and how to do the
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insulin, and I was just frightened
you know, it's like being hit by
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a car. It was, it
is it to be. It was just
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overwhelming to be sitting here through all
of this and but I just kind of
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took it all in. I didn't
have a choice. When you were first
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diagnosed, what was it that you
were most afraid of? Well, dying,
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because the doctor basically said you have
to get this under control very quickly.
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I need you to understand how serious
this is. But with numbers this
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high, you are in jeopardy of
of having a stroke and going into a
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comma and your family is going to
be coming to the hospital to see you,
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to say goodbye, somewhere around Thanksgiving
or Christmas. And I looked in
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at him and I said of two
thousand and nineteen. He said yes,
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very direct very blunt, very straightforward, very serious. So in the article
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with healthcom you said type to diabetes
is not a death sentence. It was
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brought into your life to provide an
awareness at your health is off track,
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but it's also an opportunity to reinvent
yourself. How have you readventage yourself and
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how would you encourage others to do
the same after diagnosis? You know,
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I had to become realistic about where
I was and where I want it to
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be. It in fact, is
not a death sentence. I've met so
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many people who are living well and
managing this disease, and so I thought
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my priority, since I was always
at the Botom of the list, you
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know, putting my career first and
my family first and everybody else first,
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I needed to be at the top
of the list. All the great things
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that we want to do in the
world, we can't accomplish them or do
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anything really well if we're in bad
health. So I had to put myself
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first and I had to find support
where I could find it and also information.
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Be Managing it, you have to
have the information. You have to
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know everything that you possibly can know
about it in order to create a plan
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to help you get your blood sugar
and control under control and then to be
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able to maintain that. Do you
think that taking control of your health has
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helped you in other areas of your
life? Absolutely, because, again,
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health is our wealth. We if
we don't have good health, we don't
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really have anything else. You know, I'm I'm going to be optimally healthy.
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That's my goal. I'm going to
achieve that and maintain that and then
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I'm going to do that in other
areas of my life, like in my
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buusiness. It needs to be whole
and sound and just leading life in the
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best possible position that you can.
I definitely can relate to that. I
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feel that, even though I've had
a lot of success in my endeavors,
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but I feel that there was also
some always some type of instability, and
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I never really thought about how back
could relate to my health. And now
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that I have gotten control of this, I'm seeing more of the stability in
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other areas, even just in the
fact that I feel better. Right for
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me, it was just like,
you know, I said to myself,
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you know, your personality was not
here while you were unwell. I was
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a flat like. My personality was
just I was just basically existing, just
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moving through life like a robot.
Well, I spent a lot of time
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isolating myself because I was so exhausted. All I wanted to do is do
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what I had to do, get
back in the bed, get up,
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do what I have to do,
get back in the bed, you know,
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and it's just it's such a joy
to be here again fully. Yes,
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when we talk about chronic illnesses in
general, it seems that diabetes has
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such a heavy stigma. Have you
experienced that on your journey and how have
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you dealt with that? Well,
the first place I experienced it was,
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unfortunately, in my physicians office.
He was just like, you know,
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this is going you're going to have
this for the rest of your life,
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you're going to take the medicine for
the rest of your life. You did
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this to yourself. You know,
he's like, you're overweight and I don't.
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You know, he's like, just
just take the medication and you'll be
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okay. You know, just eat, you know, whatever the list was,
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which was like a hundred fifty grams
of carbs every day, eat this,
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do that, you know, manager
stress and you'll be okay, and
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I'm thinking, no, this is
just doesn't sound right. It was because
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he didn't really have any faith in
the fact that I could actually transform my
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health. And so I started to
realize that a lot of people encounter that
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when they go to the doctor.
They're going in there and you're the you're
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the physician, you're the person with
the knowledge to help me to turn this
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around, and yet you're judging me
and you're condemning me and your Jamie me
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for something that may or may not
have been under my control, and that's
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why a lot of people just kind
of suffer in silence for that. Those
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initial appointments, I changed. I
went to a new doctor. I needed
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somebody who's going to collaborate with me, who would, you know, believe
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me when I tell you I'm going
to change this. So there's a couple
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things I want to dive deeper into
that you touched on. First, you
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mentioned that you found a group of
women who are in the same position on
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you to lean on for support,
and I know that I am a huge
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believer that you have to surround yourself
with support. Can you talk about the
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people who supports you and how they
played a role in your success? I
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first will first I have to mention
my family. This was not an easy
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thing for them to hear, first
of all, and for it to be
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so dire, but they rallied around
me and just gave me the emotional support
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that I need, because I'm sure
you know that diabetes is a very it's
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in a very effect you really,
you know, as well as physically,
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and I don't think that people understand
that. And then I was online on
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facebook one day and I met a
woman who started a diabetes support group called
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Sugar Mama Strong, and she's such
a loving, bright woman who made it
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her mission to help other women with
diabetes to to win. She had been
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diagnosed since at twenty one years old
now, so she's been dealing with the
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disease for a very long time and
so she had knowledge and information that I
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didn't have. But she all so
too reinforced that this disease is not a
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death sentence. All you have to
do is create a plan for your life
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to go in the direction that you
want to go and you're going to be
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okay. And I'm surrounded by women
who are doing really well. They're,
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you know, exercising and eating will
and managing their stress and we're just kind
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of rally around each other every day, you know, we're there to say
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hey, if you fall, it's
okay. This is not about perfection,
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this is about progress and to have
that because, I mean, you know,
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my family, as much love as
they can give me, they don't
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understand what I'm going through, you
know, and the people in the world,
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they don't really care that you have
diabetes. They're just like, okay,
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stop eating sugar, you know you'll
be okay, but these women understand
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when I say, Hey, I
did everything right and I still woke up
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this morning and my blood sugar was, you know, really high. They
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understand when I say, you know, I can't deal with this, I'm
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going to eat a cheeseburger. You
know, it's just like they understand and
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we are there to support each other
and it's just such an amazing support system
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to have. You also credit the
Keto Diet to a lot of the success
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you've had in managing your diabetes.
Can you talk about that part of your
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journey and why you feel that Kido
works for you? The day that I
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was diagnosed, I walked out of
the doctor's office and picked up my phone
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and clicked on Google and I typed
in, you know, how to be
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diabetes. Immediately the start it was
about all about Keto and I'm thinking,
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okay, yeah, Keto. And
as I went through all the information,
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it's a very low carb for specifically
for type to diabetes. Was Really Low
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Carb, like twenty grahams a day, and I I'm thinking, oh,
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because my my diet was very,
very, very heavy carp and very,
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very heavy sugar. So I didn't
have the luxury of saying, you know,
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I can't do this. I didn't
have that luxury. The doctor said
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November or December, you know you're
going to be compromised. And so I
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looked at all the research, looked
at all the youtube videos, found all
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the information that made sense to me
and just sat down and created a plan.
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And it had to be something that
I could stick to. And I
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mean, Keto is not that bad, I thought. I mean the first
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thing I saw was, oh,
you can eat cheese burgers. I can
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eat burgers and cheese. Okay,
fine, I can eat bacon, perfect
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eggs and my coffee. I said, great, I can do this.
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If you now could tell yourself when
you were diagnose, any advice, what
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would it be? I would tell
myself that everything's going to be okay.
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It's all going to be okay.
This is not something to be embarrassed about.
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is nothing to be ashamed about.
We fall and we get up.
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That's the whole point. Just just
get up and keep going, take it
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one day at a time. Progress
over perfection. Put yourself first. Keep
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yourself first, and everything's going to
work out. I think it is extremely,
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very view to share your story,
which is the same reason I'm sharing
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mine, and even the act of
sharing your story helps people feel less alone.
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I feel like there's something very isolating
about this illness, and not that
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that doesn't happen with other illnesses,
but no one really wants to talk about
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the fact that they have diabetes.
So I appreciate that you were able to
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put yourself out there truly, as
helped me share my story. So thank
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you so much. You're welcome.
I'm so glad to be helpful. I
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definitely look forward to following your journey. If my listeners want to do the
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same, where can they find you? I am on Instagram at Stacy Cook's
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00:21:45.490 --> 00:21:52.359
creative Stacy Staci. I am also
on facebook with the same handle. That's
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restpend most of my time. Wonderful
will. Thank you so much, stacy,
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for coming to snack size and until
next time. So you later.
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00:21:59.599 --> 00:22:03.670
Snacks. Hey Snack I hope you
enjoyed this episode. Snack size podcast is
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00:22:03.710 --> 00:22:10.230
sponsored by twin cities gay scene,
the online magazine for events and culture happening
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