Monday, December 9, 2024

Meme Monday: Health Memes

Because I aim to make people uncomfortable laughing about my health issues, I collected a bunch of memes related to them for this Meme Monday.

Yeah, I hear this a lot from the Diabetes Team. Apparently
a lot of people simply don't change their diets enough
to make a difference, or they say "I'm taking the pills, that's
good enough." From Imgflip.



This is another thing that non-diabetics will
get confused about. Type 1 is NOT Type 2.
From Reddit.



Yeah, I'm not that big on time travel these days.
From Imgflip.



I use the Freestyle Libre sensor to monitor my blood
sugar. It's not perfect, but it does the job. However,
about 1 in every 6 sensors dies or malfunctions before
the two weeks for that sensor is up. My insurance does
not cover that missing time, so I end up having to supplement
with the old "needle prick and push out blood onto a test
strip" backup. And that really really sucks.  And if
you're wondering based on recent news events, yes,
I have that company's insurance. From Imgflip.


I laughed out loud at this one. Good thing I didn't wake
my wife up; she gets grumpy if I wake her up in the
middle of the night. From Reddit and Memeatic.



Yeah, I hear this from time to time, typically from
someone wanting me to buy a dessert or something
very sweet. "Live a little!" "Uh, yeah, I'd like to,"
is my reply. From Imgflip.


4 comments:

  1. At least once a month at work there's a food day. I never participate and state I don't because I'm (type 2) diabetic. Even years later someone will try to push/nag me to eat something. People just don't want to take a no or can't imagine someone not wanting to participate. I long ago learned not to each lunch at my desk so that they can't find me on food days. ^_^

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, I completely get where you're coming from. I even get this and I work at home, for pete's sake!

      My immediate family has figured out that I'll figure something out from a menu when we go out to eat (unless it's someplace like Raising Canes, where it's only fried chicken fingers), but my extended family...

      Of the two primary conditions, a low-salt diet for controlling Hypertension is much harder to work with on the fly than a low-carb diet for Type-2 diabetes. People who don't have to maintain a low-salt diet have absolutely no idea just how much salt is in the average American's food, either. I was quite shocked by the quantity just out there.

      Delete
    2. I hear you on the low-salt diet. When I was in the hospital for my SVT procedure, I was on a heart-restricted diet. I didn't realize that when I went to order breakfast. I tried to order my normal amount of carbs, but couldn't as I kept being told it was too much salt for my restrictions. Quite frustrating as I didn't want to have low blood sugar, but to the order-taker Rules Were Rules.

      Later on I read about how restaurants and other food packages load up things with salt because we find those food so much tastier. It started to give me a glimmer of just how much unneeded salt we digest. :/

      Delete
  2. The first one really made me smile. It's absurdly hard to make even small changes in your habits. Changing my entire diet wholesale would be rough.

    I haven't had to buckle down and start eating like someone that doesn't want to die of a heart attack in their 70s yet, but I'm sure it's only a matter of time . . .

    ReplyDelete