Grandpa Eddie holding Parker for the first time.
I have been doing really good the last month or more. I feel happy and hopeful and life is great. The last couple of days or so I have felt burnt out! Not for any reason in particular just tired of the routine. Wake up, check blood sugars, get breakfast, give insulin. 2 hours later, check blood sugars, deal with morning spike and grouchiness because of high blood sugars. 2 hours later, check again, make lunch, give insulin again. on and on until bedtime... Even in the night, I am waking up, checking in the dark, treating and praying I can fall back asleep!! It gets old! Its like a bad diet, but to no end!! At least a bad diet helps to loose a few pounds, then you can quit and eat some donuts to celebrate! :) There is no quitting diabetes. No cheat days, not freebies. its a 24/7 365 days of the week job! Sometimes I just want to let him eat what he wants when he wants because that would be soooo much easier than the daily fight I have over what he eats and when. I get tired of counting carbs, measuring food, remembering to check sugar levels, calculating insulin and so on... In the middle of my mental tantrum this morning I had an awakening... I have lived this life for 8 1/2 months now. My dad however, has been dealing with this for 40 years!!! How does he do it? I have no idea. My entire life growing up, diabetes wasn't really a big deal. We all knew not to eat his peanut M&M's in his glove box. We knew to get him juice is he was low. We knew he took shots, and later had a pump, but I personally never thought about the toll it took on him personally.
I look at these pictures above and I wonder what their spirits were saying to each other.Did they know the bond they would share some day?I look at my dad and I cry because he has battled this disease for so long and he never complains. He quietly takes out his pump and takes care of business without drawing any attention to himself. There is no way I could have made it though the last 8 months as well as I have without him there anytime of day to help and give advice. I hate that I know just a little of what he battles, but I am so eternally grateful to have my dad in my life. Nothing would bring me more joy than someday to have a cure and the two of them together can rejoice! I know the last 8 months have been hard on my dad too. I know he feels in some way responsible for Parker having diabetes. I know it has nothing to do with him, its just the luck of the draw. The two of them will forever have a bond. I know there will be times in the future where Parker will struggle with things only grandpa will understand. I know when those times come, that Grandpa will be there then too. I hope my dad knows how much I love him. How grateful I am for all he does for me. The phone calls to see how Parker's numbers have been, the advice on treating high and low blood sugars. The constant counsel to not expect perfection and accept the roller coaster of reality that type 1 diabetes is. He cries with me when I cry and he celebrates when we have a good day. He listens when I need to vent and know only he will understand. Thank you dad for being my diabetic hero!
