Agnostic.com

8 18

[vm.tiktok.com]

For real

Pralina1 9 Aug 14
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

8 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

3

AGAIN

4

Those who need to listen to that man's advice will avoid it like the vaccine!

4

I saw this on FB the other day and l immediately thought of you.

5

Thats right Mother Fuckers!

5

Oh my, this guy is very effective with his delivery!! He speaks the truth!!! Love it!!😍

♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️

8

Those who are hospitalized because they simply refuse to be vaccinated need to start picking up the full tab. No more insurance paying the price of willfully ignorant clients. Until it affects their bottom line, there's no waking those folks up

Yeah . I agree

I agree but many of them would not ever be able to pay it and that would mean our insurance premiums would even go higher than they're going to be anyway because of covid and the idiots that won't get vaccinated.

@Lorajay of course .

@Lorajay and the shots are free, so it should make for an easy decision. Never bet more than you can afford to lose

4

Not available..so it says..friggin tiktok..lol
Er never mind...love it..lolololol he's hilariously on point!!

0

Looked like a guy in one of the images was wearing a CGM. I need one of those.

I don’t see that . Where do u see that ??
There are great ways to have no stick monitor but u ll need iPhone . I think u are Android guy , right ?
U f worrying me w this . Msg me , I wanna know what’s your routine w the BG control is . It shouldn’t be a problem two years later ?

@Pralina1 I could be wrong, but looked like one of the guys in the images below in the link you shared was wearing a CGM on his arm. The Dexcom G6 CGM is compatible now with Android, back in May I was on a ten day trial period (using the Dexcom G6) at my doctor's suggestion, to monitor my blood sugar trends, which went well by the way. Insurance so far has refused to cover one, but recently my endocrinologist sent them a letter stating medical necessity as the CGM was really useful, so that might change soon. In the meantime, I manually check my blood sugar six-eight times a day. Aside from a few unusual high readings probably due to stress, been doing okay, so all good for the most part. Thank you for asking, that is much appreciated, sure wish more family members would ask me every now and then how I'm doing with the diabetes. The friends I've made online actually have shown more concern on that than most of the friends I know in person.

@SpikeTalon DM is not a joke 🙁. U are young and I am glad u are on top of this . Smart 🙌
U have to worry about vision , extremities / circulation , every minor cut / wound . DM is a bitch and going low is scarier than high . I despise long acting insulin for that exact reason . What happen to u it happens all the f x , and mostly bcz long acting insulin . I am very conservative w those and while pts at hospital for other reasons , I advocate for a big fat “ no “ to these . Tired of trying to wake up people who are down to 25s while asleep . Not fun , and I am too lazy for all of this .
I can tell that u are on top and current w your monitoring and treatment . Your life has changed but u adopted . Any x that u can avoid stick is a good time . I hope insurance come through . Fuckers . DM monitoring is not luxery . Is life saving . Wtf . I hate this country .

@Pralina1 The lows (hypoglycemia) are truly worse than the highs, I agree. Back in December I suffered a serious low blood sugar, had visited my mother mostly in order to shovel out her car, snowed alot, and shortly afterwards I came inside and passed out on the couch where she found me a short time later. Needed Glucagon in order to bring me back around, lucky there considering I live by myself and the lows are a constant worry. I've been through some trying times in the past, various injuries and all and physical tests etc, and even while first diagnosed and in ketoacidosis which was slowly killing me I had never before lost consciousness suddenly, but that low came without warning and knocked me flat on my ass.

Made my mind up from the start that I was going to closely manage my condition, these days largely avoid eating foods that could seriously spike my blood sugar. Guess that's a good thing, as most likely I won't become overweight ever. Thank you again for concern, much appreciated. For what it's worth, you made my day a bit better, sometimes it's the small thoughts that count.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:615931
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.