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ARE YOU BECOMING A DIABETES “NUDNIK?”
By Janis Roszler, RD, CDE, LD/N
Do you discuss your diabetes with everyone you see? Do you constantly
offer health advice to friends and family? Do they hate when you do that?
You might be on your way to becoming a “nudnik,” the Yiddish term for someone
who is impossibly annoying.
Dorothy ignored her type 2 diabetes for years, but when her vision started to
get fuzzy, she began to run to the bathroom constantly, and her energy level
dropped, she decided that it was time to take her diabetes seriously. She
met with her doctor and read every article that she could find on the topic.
She attended diabetes classes, shared tips on online diabetes message boards,
and became a loyal viewer of dLifeTV.
Learning led to doing. Dorothy checked her blood sugar several times each
day and watched her carbohydrate intake. She even clipped on her new royal
blue pedometer to count the steps she walked each day. She set walking
goals, eating goals, and even started to lose weight. Best of all, she
achieved an improved A1C, the measure of her glucose control for the previous
three months. She was in heaven. But she took her enthusiasm a bit
too far.
At her book club meeting, Dorothy suggested that a friend have a glucose
tolerance test when she complained about being tired. At a restaurant, she
grilled the waiter about the contents of numerous dishes on the menu and then
commented on everyone else’s food choices. She urged one friend to change
his fried fish order to broiled, reminded everyone to limit their alcohol, and
urged the group to forgo their gooey desserts and opt for fruit instead.
At home, she reported her daily pedometer totals and urged her family wear one
too. She talked constantly about bad carbs, good carbs, fats and
cholesterol. She was becoming a nudnik and her friends and family were not
pleased.
When you first learn that you have the power to improve your diabetes, it is
exciting. What other condition changes so dramatically with just a small
amount attention? If you alter your food choice by one slice of bread,
your blood sugar level will respond. A brisk 10 minute walk can lower your
blood glucose level for up to 48 hours. Yes, you will probably want to
announce your new found power to the entire world…but the world may not want to
listen.
If you’ve think you’ve crossed the line and have become a nudnik, step back a
bit. Speak to your friends with actions, not words. At a restaurant,
focus on your meal needs alone. If a friend complains that she is not
feeling well, mention that you have a possible suggestion and leave it at that.
Don’t worry. Those who want help will ask for it. They will see that
you are more energized and fit, and will probably want to know how you did it.
A picture is worth a thousand words and your improved look and attitude will
tell your story beautifully, all by themselves. |
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