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Coping With Diabetes
Coping with diabetes typically involves a combination of
physical treatments and psychological adjustments.
Over time, diabetes can affect the kidney, eyes and other vital
organs and systems. The kidneys may filter less efficiently.
Eyesight may become less sharp. But all those physical
circumstances can be managed through careful diet, exercise,
and (if needed) drugs.
But coping with the disease and its effects involves another
dimension, one less easy to quantify and treat, and one which
has both physical and mental consequences.
Stress from being concerned about those effects can be both
cause and consequence. Stress weakens the immune system, which
in turn reduces the body's ability to ward off infection, colds
and so forth. Those are just some of the possible complications
of diabetes. But those in turn may lead to additional stress as
the ability to function is reduced. A vicious cycle is
established.
Breaking that cycle requires a broad spectrum of diabetes
management techniques. Keeping the body as healthy as possible
will minimize the effects. Keeping the right attitude will help
reduce the odds of the effects occurring in the first
place.
That's not easy. Accepting that management of diabetes and its
effects is a long term, often a lifetime, proposition is the
first step.
Careful monitoring of blood glucose levels is a basic and
essential factor. Controlling that level - by diet, exercise,
and (if necessary) medications - is vital. That helps reduce
the physical strain on body systems. That helps reduce the
worry. Monitoring and management will need to become a daily
routine, as common as brushing your teeth.
Knowledge can help motivate the patient to engage in that
practice. Being fully aware of the possible complications, and
the near certainty of having them if inaction is the choice
made, can provide an incentive to take action. Knowing what
your body will do can help you control both the potentially
harmful physical effects and your attitude about them.
But knowledge alone doesn't lead to the right course of action.
A commitment of the will is essential. It takes courage to
control diabetes and lead a normal life. That kind of courage
is larger in some ways than the type required for emergencies.
Long term commitments to meeting daily challenges requires the
kind of patience and fortitude that is tougher to call up all
the time than for a one-time event.
But that kind of commitment doesn't happen simply by wishing
for it. Few can simply will themselves onto the right path. It
starts by facing small challenges and overcoming them. A minor
dietary change. The adoption of a single brief exercise routine
three times a week. Then the actions can become wider - more
dietary changes - and longer term, more exercise routines
carried out every day.
As you conquer those small hills a little bit at a time, you
gain the confidence that you can tackle larger ones and over a
lifetime. In time, managing diabetes for most people becomes a
routine little more difficult than doing an average school or
work assignment. It becomes a few more things on the list of
daily challenges to meet and solve in order to get those daily
rewards.
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