#1553 Jordan Juice
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A series of conversations with Jordan Wagner, CDCES. In this episode, diabetes management in the hospital.
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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Scott Benner 0:00
Here we are back together again, friends for another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.
Today's guest is Jordan Wagner, a nurse, a diabetes educator and a person living with type one diabetes, and today we're going to talk about preparing yourself for being in the hospital with type one diabetes. The podcast contains so many different series and collections of information that it can be difficult to find them in your traditional podcast app. Sometimes. That's why they're also collected at Juicebox podcast.com, go up to the top. There's a menu right there. Click on series, defining diabetes. Bold beginnings, the Pro Tip series, small sips, Omnipod, five ask Scott and Jenny, mental wellness, fat and protein, defining thyroid. After Dark, diabetes. Variables, Grand Rounds, cold, wind, pregnancy, type two, diabetes, GLP, meds, the math behind diabetes, diabetes myths and so much more, you have to go check it out. It's all there and waiting for you, and it's absolutely free. Juicebox podcast.com, please don't forget that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan or becoming bold with insulin.
This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Omnipod five, and at my link, omnipod.com/juicebox you can get yourself a free, what I just say, a free Omnipod five starter kit, free. Get out of here. Go click on that link, omnipod.com/juicebox, check it out. Terms and Conditions apply. Eligibility may vary. Full terms and conditions can be found at omnipod.com/juicebox, links in the show notes, links at Juicebox podcast.com today's podcast is sponsored by us Med, us, med.com/juicebox you can get your diabetes supplies from the same place that we do. And I'm talking about Dexcom, libre, Omnipod, tandem and so much more. Us, med.com/juicebox or call 888-721-1514,
Jordan Wagner 2:26
I'm Jordan, and I'm 31 years old. Had type one diabetes roughly 26 years now, growing up with diabetes, I was very fascinated by it, learning about management and all that that led me to diabetes camps. I went to Chris Dudley basketball camp in Vernonia, Oregon. That was a huge influence in my life, of getting me really interested in living a healthy life with type one, and that you can really thrive with it like Chris Dudley was my role model growing up, played in the NBA for 16 years with type one, and that led me to look at like the healthcare field, and I really did not know what I wanted to do with that. But when my uncle went into a coma from low blood sugar, when I was a senior in high school, went to visit him, his nurse was a male nurse, and at that point, I didn't know that guys were nurses, and so I chatted with his nurse and his his nurse told me all about the nursing field, and really encouraged me to to look into that. And so that's what I did. I looked into it, and ended up going to nursing school, became a nurse, and knew that I ultimately wanted to be a diabetes educator. And so after nursing school, I ended up going to couple different hospitals, but worked on diabetic and kidney units just to get that experience there, and that that gave me enough experience, after about five years, or four or five years, to feel comfortable, to to sit for the the the board exams, or the the exams to be a diabetes educator. And so did that pass the exams, and I've been a diabetes educator ever since.
Scott Benner 4:02
That's awesome. Chris Dudley, by the way, on episode 515 of the podcast, okay, there you go, he was on talking about his is that camp still going? Do you know
Jordan Wagner 4:10
it actually is? Yeah. So I don't know. I don't know exactly where it's at now, they had to move the location, but it was in Vernonia, Oregon for the longest time, and it was just the greatest. I worked there on staff for a little bit. I went to went there as a camper for five years. I mean, I have lifelong friendships from it and it, it set me up very well to understand that I needed to take care of this if I wanted to to thrive like Chris Dudley did,
Scott Benner 4:35
yeah. Had a big impact on you. Huge impact. Yeah. Excellent. Yeah. So you became diabetes. You became an RN, first, yeah,
Jordan Wagner 4:43
yeah, so. RN, so I'm a BSN. RN, CD, CES, wow, yeah, okay, e, i, e, i, o, a lot of letters, I know. And
Scott Benner 4:52
then how long have you been by practicing as a diabetes educator,
Jordan Wagner 4:57
about five years a profession. Really, I always tell people, it's really been like 26 plus years with my personal experience at type one, but five years officially, right as a diabetes educator, how
Scott Benner 5:09
do we find ourselves knowing each other? Trying
Jordan Wagner 5:11
to think here, I think I joined the Facebook group a handful of years ago, and I just started seeing that it was making such a big impact in people's lives there, and I started sharing started sharing it with people at the at the hospital, and so I think that's how we got connected, was just through the Facebook group and posts over the years. Well,
Scott Benner 5:30
Jordan, I'll tell you that I pay attention to what you put on social media. And you know, I know you through, obviously, through the Facebook group, but at the same time, when I see a person like yourself who is so dedicated and thoughtful about how they're helping people, and sees this whole thing, you know, in a way that I think is very clearly, when that person says that you think I'm doing a good job, I'm very touched by that. Yeah, sincerely. You know, if I see you put something online that says, like, you know, you should try this podcast or take a look at this. I think I might be, I might really, actually be doing something right here. It's the same feeling I have as when, you know, when I met Jenny and and, you know, the first time she said to me, I forget exactly how she put it, but she's like, Scott, you could do this professionally. And I thought, like, I was really touched by that, yeah, you know. And so it means a lot to me that this thing that we're putting out there, you're seeing it, you believe in it enough to tell somebody else about it. I really appreciate that. Yeah,
Jordan Wagner 6:31
well, and I truly do believe in this wholeheartedly. I mean, even implementing things from the podcast into my own management. And when I found the podcast, I was like, Oh, I've had diabetes such a long time I can handle this, so I don't really need to learn anything else. And that was such an arrogant way to go about it. But I get into the podcast, and I'm like, Man, this is incredible. And just implementing things I learned on the podcast, I mean, I'm getting my a 1c and the high fives, low sixes, like, for years now, awesome. And it's really cool. It's just a really cool thing. So I believe in sharing that, because there's not a lot of good education resources out there. And so this is something that it's, it's a free resource, and it just benefits so many people. So it's something that people should know about.
Scott Benner 7:13
I'm gonna let you add to that resource. So I, if I let you, I mean, I'm, I'm gonna send you a note Jordan, and say, Hey, would you like to make a series on the podcast? You tell me what you want to talk about, and then come on and speak about it. So you you did. You sent a great list, and we're going to record a few times and put together a short series with you so that people can get you know, from your perspective, what might be important for them to pay attention to? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. Where do you want to
Jordan Wagner 7:41
start? Yeah. Well, I think for this one right here, really want to talk about diabetes management in the hospital. That's just something that a lot of people might not have a lot of experience with outside of being diagnosed with diabetes. I know a lot of people being diagnosed with type one end up being in DKA when they're when they're diagnosed, and that's a very traumatic experience, potentially, but that also could be your only experience with going into the hospital. And so I think there's some things that I've seen as an inpatient educator that could be helpful for people to understand about going to the hospital, different situations, scenarios that may come up outside of that initial diagnosis. And so that's kind of what I really wanted to dive into here today.
Scott Benner 8:22
I'm happy to so we're talking about, you've got type one now, and you find yourself back in the hospital for some reason. Exactly, yeah, exactly. How do you manage that scenario? Right?
Jordan Wagner 8:31
Exactly, yeah. I mean, one of the biggest things I could start off by saying is that hospitals are unpredictable depending on what size hospital you're at. You know, you come in and maybe you need an MRI or something like that. You could be waiting for days to get that MRI, and you might need to be NPO, so nothing by mouth for the particular MRI. And so, you know, how are you going to navigate that, with your blood sugars going to something where you're not supposed to be eating or drinking, and then to find out at the end of the day, oh, a trauma came in and you've been bumped and you're gonna have to do this again tomorrow. So there's a lot of situations like that that come up, and the unpredictability can be really challenging.
Scott Benner 9:11
What usually happens then? Do they just keep people's blood sugars higher without
Jordan Wagner 9:15
a doubt? Yeah. So one thing I like to tell people is that a hospital is not there to fine tune the diabetes. It's there to stabilize it. And essentially, they care that you're in a safe spot. So from a doctor's perspective, if your sugar is 250 for multiple days at a time, you might not feel great at that, but they're looking at it and going, Oh, well, this person's not going low. They're not going crazy, crazy high, so we're good with that. So they're going to intentionally run you a bit higher. And you need to be you need to be aware of that. So I think as a type one, if you do have that tight control, you know you want tighter controlled blood sugars, you have to communicate that you may receive some pushback. That's something. Thing you have to be ready for, which I think is helpful when you have someone there to advocate for you, someone who knows your diabetes well, who can be there to advocate because we don't know the situation of why you're in the hospital, right? I mean, this could be a planned surgical procedure. You need to be in the hospital. Maybe you have, like, appendicitis, but, you know, there's accidents, right? Well, you could be driving down the road, have a car accident, you have type one diabetes, and now you're in the hospital as a type one you don't need to prep for every possible situation, but just have a general idea of going into potentially tough situation, like, what? What are you going to do, like, just maybe the thought exercise of, like, walking through this in your mind, like, come up with a plan. Because
Scott Benner 10:46
what happens real, real world. What happens is that somebody says 250 is fine, but if it happens to be 300 that's not so bad. Either you're sitting there feeling terribly or maybe you're, you know, I always think of it in a slightly different way, like, maybe you're a person who's already got like, an eight and a half or nine, a, 1c, and then you go to a hospital and see that the hospital was perfectly fine with your blood sugar being 250 then you go home thinking, like, well, I don't know why I'm trying so hard. 250 is okay. Diabetes comes with a lot of things to remember, so it's nice when someone takes something off of your plate. Us. Med has done that for us. When it's time for Arden supplies to be refreshed, we get an email rolls up and in your inbox says, Hi, Arden, this is your friendly reorder email from us. Med. You open up the email, it's a big button that says, Click here to reorder, and you're done. Finally, somebody taking away your responsibility instead of adding one. Us. Med has done that for us. An email arrives, we click on a link, and the next thing you know, your products are at the front door. That simple, US med.com/juicebox, or call, 888-721-1514, I never have to wonder if Arden has enough supplies. I click on one link, I open up a box, I put the stuff in the drawer, and we're done. Us. Med carries everything from insulin pumps and diabetes testing supplies to the latest CGM like the libre three and the Dexcom g7 they accept Medicare nationwide over 800 private insurers, and all you have to do to get started is call 888-721-1514, or go to my link, usmed.com/juicebox, using that number or my link helps to support the production of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's episode is brought to you by Omnipod. Did you know that the majority of Omnipod five users pay less than $30 per month at the pharmacy? That's less than $1 a day for tube free automated insulin delivery. And a third of Omnipod five users pay $0 per month. You heard that right? Zero? That's less than your daily coffee for all of the benefits of tubeless, waterproof, automated insulin delivery. My daughter has been wearing an Omnipod every day since she was four years old, and she's about to be 21 my family relies on Omnipod, and I think you'll love it, and you can try it for free right now by requesting your free Starter Kit today at my link, omnipod.com/juicebox, Omnipod has been an advertiser for a decade, but even if they weren't, I would tell you proudly, my daughter wears an Omnipod. Omnipod.com/juicebox Terms and Conditions apply. Eligibility may vary. Why don't you get yourself that free starter kit, full terms and conditions can be found at omnipod.com/juicebox,
Jordan Wagner 13:43
exactly, yeah. It sets up a really poor example, yeah. And in my opinion, and you know, as an educator, I'm always advocating for tighter controlled glucose levels. I see it from the doctor's perspective too. Like, yeah, they are managing a lot of tough situations. And like, for example, my hospital is a trauma one hospital, huge, 700 plus bed hospital, so a 250 blood sugar is pretty low priority for someone who might be having, like, a potentially fatal heart attack, right? So I get it from both sides, but I think the type one advocacy is going to be huge and making sure your blood sugars are well controlled in the hospital.
Scott Benner 14:20
I mean, the reason it's happening, it's not unreasonable, but it's also not valuable as an answer to you, the person whose blood sugar is that high, absolutely, yeah, oh, absolutely. Seriously. Like, if you're in a car accident and one medic shows up and one guy is worse than you are, I understand them going to him first. That's not helping you, and if you died later, the post mortem on that would be, well, I helped the person that was more direly in need. And everybody would go, Well, that was the right thing to do. Yeah, there's a difference between what the system can manage, what other human beings at a hospital can, you know, reasonably accomplish in a in a shift, and. And what you need, deserve and require, absolutely. Yeah, so you need to be the one who says, Look, you got me a 250 here, but I'm not okay with this. And what would you say then, like, what if you didn't, like, there's a difference between, like, if that happened to my daughter and I was there, I'd say, Look, you know, we just need to move this here and move this here. But what if move this here, but what if you just don't know what that thing to do is, you know, you don't want a 250 but you don't know what to say next? Yep.
Jordan Wagner 15:29
So that's where I think the planning ahead comes, comes into play here. So give me an example here. So I had surgery back in July. I didn't have to get to admit it to the hospital, but it was a hospital like scenario, the surgery center, I created a full page document outlining what I wanted to have done with my blood sugars, where I was comfortable, at my Dexcom information. So I gave my phone to the surgical tech, the RN there, and he had that and knew my phone password so he could always access the Dexcom. And then I had my wife, I had her trained up on my pump. And I know a lot of other people in this group have done that too, where they've trained a spouse on how to use a pump. And I presented that outline to the providers there so they had a clear understanding. So
Scott Benner 16:19
Jordan, did they listen to you because you're a professional? Do you think it's possible? Yeah, you're not gonna know that. Honestly,
Jordan Wagner 16:26
though, most people don't come in with a plan like that. Whether
Scott Benner 16:28
I was a professional or not, if I had a plan like that, people would be like, Ooh, this is fancy, and probably listen to it.
Jordan Wagner 16:33
They would most likely, you at least have a much better shot of them actually listening to it. Okay, if you have something typed up like that. And so I suppose it could be a smart idea to have a little something typed up. Like, it doesn't have to be the nitty gritty, but like, hey, if an accident happens and I'm hospitalized, I prefer my blood sugars to be in this range. This person is my go to if I'm not able to handle my pump or my my diabetes, things here, and then you just maybe carry that with you, right, keep it in your little bag, and then you've got that there. So then it's not that you're just getting hospitalized, and you go, Oh, crap. I don't know what I need to do. You've got you're like, I've already had this typed up and, like, maybe we can change a little thing here and there, but I've got a plan, and then you can present that to the doctor, yeah? Because
Scott Benner 17:19
if you're not pre prepared, then it's not a thing you're going to be able to do in the moment, right, right? Exactly. Yeah. Okay, yeah. I guess you could even keep it on your phone too, like in a Notes app or something like that, absolutely, and make sure that, like you're, you know, the person you're, whoever your person is in that situation, has access to it as well. Yeah, yeah. So what do you think needs to be on that, on that document?
Jordan Wagner 17:41
Sure. So I would say that if you're using insulin, you should have all of your your settings there well, so whether this is the pump or if you're on MDI, so multiple daily injections, have your long acting dose there, your meal time, doses, your correction factors, and have that easily accessible. Because here's another scenario that can come up. You've got a patient going, I don't want to be this high. I don't feel good. And the doctor goes, Okay, I hear you. We'll increase your insulin. It's not uncommon for doctors to make substantially large increases to insulin. Honestly, I think it's just maybe even a lack of understanding sometimes. I mean, if you say you have like a hospitalist doctor, they're a general doctor. They're very intelligent people, but they are managing so many different conditions that they might not have the expertise in insulin dosing. And so maybe you go, I need a little bit more Lantus. Well, a little bit more Atlantis to them, could be 10 to 15 units. And then all of a sudden, you're flat on your face the next day. So you actually
Scott Benner 18:40
talk a doctor into helping, then they do the wrong thing, then everybody gets scared, and now you're back to where you started, probably
Jordan Wagner 18:45
worse off you got it, yeah, all right, yep, okay, so having your baseline settings, that's gonna give them something to work with. Here's the other reality, too. A lot of people report their settings and they're not actually accurate. What I mean by that is, maybe I come in and say, oh, yeah, I take 25 units Lantis, but I haven't actually been doing that for a long time. It's just what's prescribed. So the doctor sees that, right? And then they're they're going to automatically, probably reduce your basal by about 20% so you'll be at 80% of your home dose. And so if you actually are following your prescriptions and taking what you report, you could be running high to start because they're playing it safe and reducing your basal rates there,
Scott Benner 19:28
right? You know it always, I mean, always shocks me when I say to somebody while I'm I'm interviewing them, I'm like, Well, what's your basal rate? And they go, I don't know. I have to look. I'm not that involved in ardent settings anymore. And I know ardent settings, yeah, not saying I'm special, but, like, it just, it's such a I mean, it's just your basal and, like, yeah, just know it, you know what I mean, like, because also for day to day, if you're not in the hospital, for day to day, remembering that, you know, I don't know you changed your basal from. 1.1 to point eight, five, and hey, I've been high for a couple of days now. Like, maybe just having that number in your head would make you think, Oh, yeah. Like, I've made my basal different before. Maybe I should put that back. Now, you
Jordan Wagner 20:12
got it. Yeah, that's and that's like that total, the whole idea of the basal testing, like, you got to know your your baseline before you're hospitalized. Because you get hospitalized, everything is going to get thrown out the window potentially. Who knows what's going on? Your body is going to be stressed out. It's already going to be running a little higher. Doctors might not be giving you enough insulin, so you have to understand your baseline. Yeah, and that's where taking the principles of this podcast and other episodes are going to be so important, so that time that you do get into that somewhat emergent situation, or you're in the hospital, you have a solid baseline to look at and then work with. I think
Scott Benner 20:50
it's important to say too, like, nobody wants to think about like, Oh, I'm gonna end up in the hospital one day. But the truth is, it might not be today, and it might not even be, you know, I don't know when it looks gonna be. You're all gonna end up in the hospital at some point, right? Be ready for. Be ready for. I mean, this whole diabetes thing is about, it's so funny that pre bolusing is such a big part of it, because pre pairing is really the core of the whole thing. Like, you just have to be ready and know what you're talking about, so that you're not, I don't know, so that when the fight starts, you don't find yourself diving behind a rock because you don't know what else to do, like you you need to know what you're going to do when the hands start flying. Like that's kind of the way I think about it. So absolutely,
Jordan Wagner 21:31
yeah. And speaking of the Pre Bolus there, so it's also not uncommon to be dosed with insulin after you've eaten your meal in the hospital, depending on your nurse, there might not really be that sense of urgency. So I've seen patients type ones eat a full meal. The nurse gets to them 3045, minutes later with their insulin, yeah. And then, you know, they're 350, 400 the next time, right? And then, if that's not done, well, you might have the doctor going, Wow, we don't. We do not have enough insulin here. And then bump up the insulin too much, and now you're low again, and you get stuck in this roller coaster mode here. So it's like advocacy, right? Being prepared. Those are some of the biggest things that could really hit home there. And then, as far as the like, the meals, you should probably have a conversation with the nurse and let them know, like I am a reliable person, if you're not struggling with, you know, nausea, vomiting, let them know that you can keep your food down and that you want your insulin 15 minutes ahead of time, even five minutes ahead of time, just just before you eat the food. Because in the hospital, most nurses are going to err on the side of, let's make sure this patient can actually eat the food before I give the insulin. Yeah, they're trying
Scott Benner 22:43
not to make more problems for them, functionally for themselves while they're working
Jordan Wagner 22:48
absolutely Yeah, and like, low blood sugar for a lot of people, seeing as, like, the absolute worst possible thing in the hospital. Like, it's, I've seen it before, where a patient goes low one time they're like 65 they barely felt it, not a big deal. But the doctor says, you know, we're gonna hold you another day to make sure that your blood sugars are stable
Scott Benner 23:07
while we make it less stable. Yeah. Also don't disregard the fact that that food coming from the cafeteria the hospital is garbage food. Oh, it is bad, right? So there's gonna be that impact as well. You know, you said something a second ago that I wanted to expound on, and I've had a number of experiences around this. Yeah, when you start off a medical procedure, I find it is very worth spending two minutes establishing with the physician that you are a solid person who understands the situation, absolutely not a cocky thing, not like I've been doing this forever. You don't need to tell me, like, just say, Look, I understand that you meet all kinds of people, but I want you to know this, my daughter's a 1c has been between five, two, and I forget what you know, 6264, whatever, for a dozen years. We know what we're doing. We know how to take care of these meals. I know how to keep her blood sugar stable. You tell me she can't eat overnight. I got no problem. I can bring her in with a stable blood sugar in the morning without her having eaten. We're here now. You want to put her under for 10 minutes. Don't worry, she's going to be okay, like, that kind of stuff like and give them a few examples of what you mean, what I've learned, I think, is that it doesn't take long for you to get across to them that not only do you know what you're talking about, but you might know better than they do, which I've actually seen it bring comfort to them.
Jordan Wagner 24:33
No, it's true. It can bring comfort there. And I like what you said that you you're giving them some examples, because a lot of professionals, health healthcare professionals they work with, like, they want the data, right, right? So if you're saying, Oh, here's my a 1c is, you do see people come in and, like, not want to talk with me, or one of the doctors, because they they say they know what they're doing, but then you look at their information, you go, respectfully, yeah, your a one Cs are eight to 11. Percent for I can see at least five years here. Well, I think
Scott Benner 25:02
what that could be sometimes is people saying, like, don't look at me, because I don't want to have to explain to you that I'm not doing as well as I would like to be, or that you would like me to be, right? And, you know, it kind of brings me to my next point, which I think I've made on the podcast number of times. But like, I grew up with a lot of friends who were police officers, yes, and these are guys that, if you knew them personally, they're just lovely people, right? But every day at work, everyone's lying to them all the time. So true, yeah, and then, except for the people who aren't, and then how do you figure out who's who, right? And I wonder if, if I'm a physician, and what I'm, first of all, I'm working in a hospital. This is a place where people come in emergent situations, right, right? And not just because you got hit by a car, but because something in your body broke down, or doesn't work, or something like that. The people they see with diabetes are not, generally speaking, the healthiest. On top of it patients. So then they start thinking, that's how everyone is, right? You start generalizing whether you want to or not, yep. And then you come in with your five, six, a, 1c, and like, I've been listening to Juicebox Podcast for a dozen years. Like, watch me do this. That's not what they're gonna think. And they co mingle, type one and type two together immediately. Big time. Yep, right? So now you're just a person with diabetes, and most of the people I know with diabetes that come in this hospital don't know what they're doing, so you don't know what you're doing, so I'm not going to listen to you, and you get written off before anybody speaks a word.
Jordan Wagner 26:26
It's so true, and that's why I think having that conversation is important. You know, physicians can be very quick in and out of the room, and so letting them know like this is important to me. I need to discuss this with you is going to be very important. You have to do that early on in your hospitalization, because I've also seen it where patients have a low A, 1c, and the physicians thought is, Well, surely this is false. Let's see if they have some like hemoglobin disorder, or maybe they have some kind of liver disease going on. The way,
Scott Benner 26:55
I try to think about that Jordan is like, imagine how many people they've seen that they can't believe that you're taking good care of yourself. So true. Yeah, their experience is so great that when you walk in there with your six and a half, even a seven probably, right. Like, like, they're like, well, this had to happen by mistake. Like, you know what I mean? Like, and we see that with regular endocrinologist appointments. I see it constantly. People find this podcast. They get their stuff together, right? They go back three months later, and they're like, go ahead, give me the needle, because they're dying for you to get that a 1c back. It comes out. They're super proud of themselves. They've been working super hard for three months. They roll out their lower, more stable, a 1c and the doctor goes, we got to cut your insulin back. You're getting low all the time. I've heard stories directly from dozens of people, probably more, who will say to the doctor, no, no, listen, here's what I figured out. Like, here's my they'll show them graphs like, I'm not getting low, and the doctors can't bring themselves to believe it, because they're so indoctrinated in what they've seen all these years. And you know, so
Jordan Wagner 27:59
true. Yeah. And I mean, building on top of that, you just said the graphs there, if you have a CGM, continue to wear that CGM in the hospital, because that's that's cold, hard evidence, for lack of better words, that that things are in control there. I mean, you could show them a clarity report of the last 90 days, or whatever it is, to show them that you're in control. But also that's going to help with even treatment decisions, yeah, because in the hospital setting, we're only using point of care testing, right? We're poking your finger. We're seeing where your blood sugar is at. If I can come into someone's room and see that they have a CGM on and I'm like, Oh, great, I can look at this graph and see and pinpoint where there's problem times. And maybe we need to adjust the food they're eating, or maybe we need to adjust their insulin, and that's something that you can report back to the doctor there. So whatever you do, keep that CGM on. Same goes for the insulin pump, truly. But I will also tell you that you're going to see some pushback from some of the doctors not wearing a pump or even a CGM. It could be both, but it's going to be way more heavy on the pump side.
Scott Benner 29:01
If somebody told me to take that CGM off of art, and I'd be like, That is not happening. Like you're not taking that off of her. Because also, I think your point is awesome. Now you're settled, and you're in the hospital for a stay. They don't want to give you your insulin at the right time. And you can turn to them and go, Look, here's what happened. This is what I told you was going to happen. Like, my blood sugar went up like this. If we would have just put the insulin right here, that wouldn't have happened. Like, can't we try that? Yes, or can't I keep my pump on and we do this together? Like, I know you've got a bunch of people to help, and it's probably hard. What I'm thinking is, even if I'm a nurse who wants to do this with you, now, there's a cascading effect here. I'm going to give you your insulin 15 minutes before you eat. Minutes before you eat, but I'm not in control when the food comes Correct, right? And now I'm going to have to I got 20 other people to help, and I got to worry that I gave you insulin and the food didn't show up, and you're in that room by yourself with the door closed, and all the other stuff that comes with it. What if they vomit? What if they do this? What if all the things that I've seen happen in. The past happen. So you get into that what if situation, honestly, Jordan, the way you're describing it, and where the conversation is leading me, what it tells me is, is that if it's not a joint effort between the hospital and you, there's no way to actually accomplish this 100% it's gotta be, yeah, it has to be that, right? And by the way, there's a new nurse and a new doctor every so many hours, you're gonna have to have this conversation over and over and over again, just because you told the first person doesn't mean the next one's gonna understand.
Jordan Wagner 30:32
You have to. And then, as hard as this is stay patient, because depending on which doctor you see, and for lack of better words, I'll say a neurodivergent doctor walks in who might be very impatient and not wanting to talk to you, and has an agenda, and only is going to speak to that agenda right there if you're not patient and you have a little attitude, because you've explained this 10 times now that doctor might flat just walk out of the room.
Scott Benner 30:59
Oh yeah, yeah. The 10th time you say it's got to be like the first time you said it Exactly,
Jordan Wagner 31:03
yeah. So, and that's that's challenging, because you might be in pain, you might be feeling terrible from a high blood sugar. And getting back to the earlier point of advocacy, that's where having that special person there for you who can speak to your needs, who can speak to the situations going on. Maybe when you fully can't it's gonna be so important. So you need to have that set up ahead of time. We all
Scott Benner 31:25
have the practice of explaining to Dexcom why we need a sensor replaced, and having to do it a second time. You just take that experience and use it in the hospital. Exactly. I should say, first of all, like, Arden's experience with CGM is very good. Like, we don't get a ton of 'em replaced, but it is crazy. Like, you know, if they, if they happen, and, you know, I don't know, in January, you got a call and they ask you their questions that there's, I mean, this the poor guy on the phone. This is the questions he's got to ask you. And then, you know, three months later, another one, a year later, two more, five years later, you're doing it again, and someone asks you where you're putting, you know, where do you put your sensor? Like, are you following the whatever? Like, there is that feeling inside of you, it feels like I've told you this six times over five years, right? You haven't that person doesn't work there for for six months, probably, and they're just reading to you from a list. So like that practice that you have to use in that situation of just saying, Look, I've said this 1000 times, but I haven't said it to this person even once exactly, you have to keep that in mind. You have to find a way to advocate but you know, I hate the word advocate for yourself, because it makes me feel like someone's not doing their job. I know, but you have to advocate for yourself, and you have to do it in a way that makes the other person want to help you. Absolutely, I know that shouldn't be the way it is. But human interaction like you've got to play the game. You have
Jordan Wagner 32:49
to Yeah, you really do, yeah, just go into it with respect. And what I would say also is it's also okay to disagree with the doctor, so you are in charge of your own health. And so let's say the doctor goes, All right, we're going to increase your insulin. You're going up 10 units Atlantis or 15. You can tell them, like, No, this, that's going to kill me, yeah, or that's going to drop me really low. Like, can we meet in the middle and maybe do seven or something like that? It's it's okay to do those things again. You are in charge. And you can also refuse anything to right? So I don't know, maybe again, with the insulin increase or a different medication, you have the right to refuse a medication. Just because it's prescribed does not mean you have to take it. It's it's within your rights to say, No, I don't want to take that. Right now, yeah, and a lot of patients don't. They don't know that, they'll go in and say, Well, the doctor said I need to do this, and that's why I did it. If you are someone who's really in tune with your body and really knows your diabetes, chances are you know way more about diabetes than the doctor in the moment treating you, right? So use that experience. So Jordan, I'm gonna
Scott Benner 33:52
ask you a question that's probably difficult to answer, right? Because what you do professionally, but is it not the case that most adults with type one just sneak their gear into the hospital and manage themselves privately and quietly.
Jordan Wagner 34:04
Yeah, we definitely see that. And so I'll tell you, our hospital policy is, if we encounter that, we have to bring security up to confiscate the insulin or the whatever medication they're using. That's, that's what I'll say, is, that's the policy there. But does, it happen? Yes, I do. I have encountered that where people are doing that.
Scott Benner 34:24
I mean, I've seen it with my friends. You know, when I was younger, friend of mine ended up in the hospital, calls me up and says, Listen, I need you to go to my house, get my syringes, get my insulin, get my whole kit and sneak it in here for me, because they're not helping me. Yeah. And he's like, and I can't get it accomplished. And then you're like, Okay, you know? So I brought him his stuff and he he hid it in a bag and kept it with him, and if his blood sugar got too high, he brought it back down again. Yeah. I mean, I see all the reasons why that's not a good idea. Like, don't get me wrong, and I'm not advocating for that. I'm advocating for you, setting it up with you. Or with a provider, right? Have
Jordan Wagner 35:01
that conversation, right? Get it straight. But yeah, I mean,
Scott Benner 35:05
there are going to be times where people are just, you're not going to get through to somebody, or maybe you're just not going to be a good communicator, like, maybe you'll just be in the moment when you're like, saying, like, I know what I'm doing, just shut up. And somebody's like, Oh, you're crazy. And then that's the end of the conversation. Yeah, it's tough. Also you have to open up for the possibility, and this is hard, but for some people listening, you might not know what the hell you're talking about. It's true. That's a tough one. Go take, you know, steel man, the doctor side of this. Now is it I got somebody standing in front of me ranting and raving that they know what to do? I look back at their records, they're they got a nine, a, 1c, for the last 10 years. That's not exactly indicative of knowing what to do. And now they're telling me, Don't listen to yourself, doctor, listen to me. And right? You believe in yourself because you think I'm doing great. Maybe that's what you think you know. So,
Jordan Wagner 35:52
right, right, you know. And there's, there's situations too, that despite having flawless control at home, that just, are you gonna throw you for a loop in the hospital, like, for example, steroids come into play all the time, right? That's gonna really, really throw your blood sugars up, especially if, like, let's say you're having an acute, uh, asthma attack, right? Or someone with COPD, they might hit you with some insanely high dose of the steroids, and you're, if you're not prepared, like, your sugar could go to 600 or more, right? And so in those cases there, maybe you do need to have the expertise of, maybe, like, an endocrinologist. So some hospitals are going to have endocrinologist in the hospital. That's not every hospital. Some hospitals have diabetes educators. Maybe it's like, that's the time we go, Hey, can we request the endocrinology team or the diabetes educator team to come on board my case and help out with this? Another scenario we see a lot is tube feeds. That's not something most people encounter on a daily basis, right? Maybe you're not able to eat by mouth for some reason, and they have a tube down your nose into your stomach. That's a lot of carbohydrates that you might not be used to having, and that's going to really throw off your insulin needs and
Scott Benner 37:06
hitting you differently than it normally hits you. So yeah, I mean, there are going to be times where it's not lost on me that if, you know, if my, if my kid went to the hospital and she ended up with like, 150 175 blood sugar for three days, but she wasn't low and she wasn't super high. I would say, You know what, it seems like everybody did a good job here, right? Yeah, you know what I mean? Like, I think it's like you're talking about two, 250, I feel nauseous now because my blood sugar is this high, nobody's doing anything about it. No, we're not doing simple things like, you know, trying to time our meal insulin, right? I think you fight the fight where the fight can be won and where it's safe for people. But I also would ask doctors to really remind themselves that high blood sugars are not a conducive scenario for healing.
Jordan Wagner 37:50
It is not at all right. I mean, the infections go they go way higher. The wounds don't heal. We have to have tighter control, and that's where I mean, I I personally advocate for the patients a lot of that we need this tighter control. And like Scott, like you said earlier, what is that teaching a patient who has an A 1c of eight, nine, and now we're at 250 all the time, and the doctors are saying, Oh well, we're okay right now. You're not having lows. We're working on your blood chairs a little bit. That's going to teach that person that, oh, well, 250 is not that bad. And like you said, then it turns to 300 and if we take the conversation
Scott Benner 38:25
around away from the individual and apply it to the greater good, I think that's the most important part of this conversation. So it's almost like the economy, like, you know, yes, this hurts, but if the whole thing gets better, you got hurt, but it's better going forward, right? And I think that that happens with diabetes all I mean, I think anybody who listened to the Grand Rounds series knows how I feel about it, but everything starts at minute one for every new person with diabetes, right? Yeah. And so going into the hospital is a new minute one, because it's an experience you've never had before. And if somebody is in that hospital who's already been told, Hey, listen, we're shooting for a seven, a, 1c, but yours is eight and a half. You're doing great. I know you're trying like so now all of a sudden, ADA says seven, you're hitting eight and a half. The doctor's trying to give you the benefit of the doubt, or doesn't know how to help you. So now you've been told eight and a half is okay. Meanwhile, Jordan's running around with a high five, low six, and so is my kid. And anybody else listen to this podcast, probably right. So you're at an you're an eight and a half, when you could be at a six, but instead, a person of you know that you're going to respect a doctor, somebody who went to school knows more than you. In your mind, that kind of thing has told you eight and a half is okay. We're shooting for seven, but eight and a half's okay. Then you go into the hospital. And you realize, man, they got my blood sugar 50 points higher than I got it right. They must know what they're talking about. And if you're not all tied into all of this, you could easily rewire yourself into thinking that that's okay without a doubt. Yeah, and it's rewiring the doctors who are saying. Saying, hey, when she left here, she was fine, so I guess it was cool that her her blood sugar was 275 while she was here, because she did. It's okay. It's such a slow slippery slope of like, just keep accepting a little worse. Just keep accepting a little worse, a little worse, a little worse, until you get to the point honestly, like, apply it to anything. 20 years ago. You know, if I would have told you that in it, that an entire generation of human beings could be captured by moving their finger up and down to see pictures, you'd go, that's insane. That'll never happen, right? But we did it. We slowly got everybody there. You can slowly get better or slowly get worse, right? And I just think that when you're presented with this is okay, your brain doesn't say, Oh, this is okay. I'll shoot for better. It's this is okay. I'll try a little less, and as it slowly drifts away, I'll just keep moving the line that I'm okay with absolutely, yeah. I think that's one of the biggest problems for people living with diabetes, not getting good information and good tools early enough on.
Jordan Wagner 41:10
Oh, without a doubt, yeah. And I would say from the hospital doctor's perspective, there's such a culture of, am I gonna get sued over this? You end up having doctors wanting to play things safer, to avoiding those critical low blood sugars, and in the immediate setting again, running 202 5300, that patient is considered safer than if their blood sugar dropped way too low. I think there's just a lot of things floating around on the doctor's mind. I mean, some of my doctor friends. You know they're seeing 2030 patients a day, oh, yeah, in the hospital. So they also don't have a ton of time to spend with everyone there, right? Not every
Scott Benner 41:48
one of your doctors is running around with 145 IQ and can keep 75 balls in the air all at one time. And remember to say to you at the end, hey, listen, we're gonna keep your blood sugar a little high here, but let's remember that's not okay. And as soon as we get you out of here, we need to put it back here. Yes, it's for this moment. It's not forever. I take your point like, how am I gonna even remember to say that in that scenario? Right? I'm only aware of it for having had all of these conversations. You know, after the fact, I have the benefit of talking to somebody who also has the benefit of hindsight. And so they can say, you know, when I look back over my life, this is how I slowly drifted to this place. I don't know how I'm supposed to explain that to an ER doctor who and then tell them at the end of the you know, at the end say, don't forget to tell them that. Hey, listen, this is just for during treatment times, but we're gonna put it back. And do you know how to do that? If you that? If you don't let me explain to you about pre bolusing and getting your setting
Jordan Wagner 42:46
like they can't do that, right? No, they won't do that. I mean, they really won't.
Scott Benner 42:50
They wouldn't or couldn't. It doesn't matter, like they Yeah, not gonna
Jordan Wagner 42:54
happen. It's not gonna happen, yeah, not, not in an inpatient setting. I mean, I've been in rooms with doctors before, and I assume it's just like I said. They're they've got other things going on. They're busy. And the patients get rid of the discharge, and they go, all right, make sure you take your insulin for your food, you know, make sure you're counting your carbs. Try to keep your blood sugar, you know, like under 180 or whatever, and all right. And then follow up with endocrinologist in two to three
Scott Benner 43:17
weeks. They say the banal crap that doesn't lead anybody to success, right, right? But they're covered. Yep, they covered their basis. Yep, for sure. Yeah. Listen, I've been upset about this for 20 years. I've told this story before, but I was in an elevator once at a blogging conference, and I just said to this person who had an incredibly popular blog, why do you talk to them like that when you know that's not true? And that person just said, it's not my job. I'm not sticking my neck out for this. And I was like, Oh, awesome, great. I was like, I'm gonna just go tell them how I take care of this, right? That person said to me, You shouldn't do that. And I was like, I'm going to, I get it. Like, I do get it. And also, by the way, I wasn't being asked to write a blog or make a podcast while I was helping you in the ER, like, like, you know, like, right? Is a different situation, but that's why, you know, maybe there are just some difficulties in life that are only able to be tackled in hindsight. Like, maybe there's just some stuff we can't actually get ahead of for reasons that are too complicated to fix or even understand. Maybe, I
Jordan Wagner 44:17
mean, it's a possibility. I mean, I think it's really important to learn from the past. Yeah, right. So if you had a poor experience in the hospital, learn from that. Maybe write down your thoughts so you can reflect upon it, and then if it happens again in the future, you have a different idea of how to go into the situation there. Well,
Scott Benner 44:36
Jordan, I want to make sure that you have out all your thoughts before I give you my big idea. In case there's a doctor listening. But do you have everything out?
Jordan Wagner 44:42
Yeah. I mean, there's a I want to just say a few more things, a couple topics I wanted to hit real fast, but going back to the surgery stuff, real fast, anesthesia is going to impact people differently. And what I mean by that is, some people detox it really well, and some people don't, upwards of roughly. 40% of the population have that MTHFR gene mutation, also known as the mother effer gene, and that is going to impact your ability to detox from anesthesia. So let's say that you have that gene mutation, you aren't able to detox anesthesia. You could feel really awful for three to five days where you're throwing up after the surgery. So that's going to require some adjustments to your your insulin dosing if you're on a pump, temporary basal is going to be a really good thing to look at. You may need to reduce the amount of insulin that you're getting so that you're not having lows that then you can't treat because you're so nauseous, that's something to think, to think about. Now, I never thought of this until I had the surgery myself, but they had to intubate me during my surgery because it was on my nose. But I woke up. My throat was so incredibly sore that I didn't want to eat food for for a while, and so again, I had to look at my insulin dosing there, reduce it at some times so that I wasn't having those low blood sugars. So there's those kinds of factors there that maybe you don't think about until you've been through it. Okay, like you said, the hindsight learning from the past. So maybe you learn from that you move forward and approach you differently next time, yeah,
Scott Benner 46:20
yeah. I've been under a number of times. Never have any trouble. And I just had a procedure where I was out for 45 minutes and I wasn't vomiting, but I felt like crap for about four or five days afterwards, yep, and I think they that anesthesiologist used a different cocktail than what I'm normally getting, and it really wrecked me for a while. I felt crappy for days.
Jordan Wagner 46:42
Yeah, and steroids are really common to use in that process. I had requested that no steroids be used during my procedure. That was helpful, but it's very common if you get a large dose of steroids in conjunction with anesthesia, so then you come up and it's a weird combination. So again, to tie this all back together. Having that person there to advocate for you throughout your hospital stay is like going to be one of the greatest things possible. Yeah, yeah, 100%
Scott Benner 47:09
I and it's listen. It's tough to have all the information you need and make sure there's somebody there with you, but again, I just think just be as pre prepared as possible. That's it. Yeah. Jordan's initial idea of having this all written down ahead of time is just, you know, I mean, it couldn't, it couldn't be a better idea. And put it on your calendar, like, every year, like, Hey, sit back down and make sure my emergency sheet is updated. Absolutely take 10 years to change your settings and or something like that. Yeah,
Jordan Wagner 47:38
yeah. That's a good way to do it, man, put in your calendar there and make sure it's, like, on a yearly basis, we have a, like, a go bag, like, if there was a major emergency I needed to go, and we just updated ours, not that long ago, updated all the diabetes supplies. It's a similar concept, right? Yes, it's being prepared for a situation before it happens. It's stuff
Scott Benner 47:55
that's not fun to do that one day you'll be super happy you did it absolutely, yeah, 100% anything else that I that?
Jordan Wagner 48:02
No, we covered everything there. I'm sure I'll get off this and be like, Oh, I forgot that. But that's
Scott Benner 48:06
okay. You're gonna come back tell people what we're gonna talk about next time. Yeah,
Jordan Wagner 48:10
so there's a couple other things I'd like to talk about. One of the big things would be like, how, like, nutrition and stress impact blood sugars there. Definitely wanna look at how Ultra processed foods are really hurting the health of people in this country and in the United States, eating a healthier diet without diving too much into it can actually really help with your insulin sensitivity and things like that. Okay, we'll look at different CGM and how that can compare to blood sugar checks and why there's some inaccuracies at times. There's quite a few things that can throw CGM off. So that would be something to look at, for sure. So we'll dive into a few different things there. Yep,
Scott Benner 48:46
just know that I if you enjoyed listening to Jordan, I just said to him, You tell me, if I gave you a series to talk to people about diabetes, what would you want to tell them? And he put a list together, and those are the things we're talking about. So yep, that's what you're going to hear in other episodes. Now, Jordan, if you have a minute to hear my big idea, hear my big idea, let's do it. Okay. So I don't wanna give away too much about how I do things, but I guess I'm gonna have to to say this. So I was telling Jordan before we started recording that I keep a list of all of the repetitious questions that are asked by people in the Facebook group, and then we pre create content for you so that we can answer those questions with that content. So instead of waiting to the moment when you say, like, I don't understand this, and then somebody having to sit down and, like, dump their thoughts out to give it back to you, which is good, we still see that happen through the community. People give their lived experiences, but somebody from the podcast, or you know me, or somebody who's helping with the Facebook group will also come and say you should try this episode. It has that information. Or here's a blog post that explains that that comes, not by mistake, that's a life lived helping people with telling. Bone diabetes and keeping track of that information in a repository somewhere, so that it is accessible. That's awesome. And what I found myself thinking was so again, this is going to be a bigger idea, but as the world gets more automated, we're going to lose more and more of those people who have been doing things forever, who just know how to do it and how it works best, and what needs to be addressed, and what's kind of bull. You know, sounds nice, but doesn't really help anybody like they're gonna have those ideas, and I am just a large proponent of people sitting down and talking into a microphone and then taking that audio and making it into a transcript, and then feeding a large language model with that transcript. Oh, that'd be crazy. And I'm telling you that if I was a hospital, I would hire three dorks. I would stick them in a corner, and one of those dorks would be in charge of you coming in and just telling your story as the RN, telling your story as the nurse, telling your story as the doctor, the things that you think are important, over and over again, and feed that large language model with everybody's lived experience. Wow. And then one day you'd have a prompt in front of you, 25 years from now, when people are still nurses, except that we've lost all the people who had the job for 40 years, and you know, knew what to do in the right situation, and everybody learned from them. And you could sit down at a prompt and say, This is what's happening right now. Here's this patient, like, what do you think I should do? And instead of, it's not the internet that's being asked, it's every person who's ever worked at that hospital and shared their experience. To give you a list of ideas of what to look into. I mean,
Jordan Wagner 51:43
that's incredible. That would be really incredible.
Scott Benner 51:45
I am telling you, I think it's a huge I'm literally trying to talk my son into starting a business where he just goes to other business and captures thought leaders ideas. I think it's, I genuinely think, instead of like, waiting for the Internet to give you the answer, or waiting for just a generalized, large language model to go out on the internet and pull back in the answer, like, why not get people who you trust to tell you what their experience was? And then one day you'll just have this, the hospital will have a, you know, I don't know, a pool of information, and then you can, you could, if you want, put a group of doctors in charge of it, to go look at it and say, You know what that part? Let's take that out, somebody to review it. And to, I don't, I'm telling you, man, it's a great idea. No one's going to listen to
Jordan Wagner 52:34
me. That is a great idea that, I mean, that would help a lot. Honestly, it would
Scott Benner 52:39
work for and it would work for anything, but it would work so much better in healthcare, because, like, if you want a bicycle shop, it would work, but it wouldn't be that valuable. But, like, but in healthcare where you have these doctors who just know this stuff because they've done it so many times, right, or you have a nurse who just has this information that was not taught to them in nursing school. That isn't a thing that's written down anywhere they just know works like that's the stuff that you need to keep and I think amplify. I'm behind the scenes doing it for all of you guys. Like my last gesture. I want my last gesture to be that when I'm done with all this Juicebox podcast.com, is just a prompt where you can ask questions, and you'll be asking it of everybody who's ever had a conversation on the podcast.
Jordan Wagner 53:29
I mean, it's, it's, that's such an incredible idea. Yeah,
Scott Benner 53:32
and it'll work. So I think it would. Yeah, no. 100% it absolutely will anyway, matter of just creating it. I know this isn't a patent, but don't steal my idea.
Jordan Wagner 53:41
There you go. All right, I won't hold on one second.
Scott Benner 53:51
This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Omnipod five, and at my link, omnipod.com/juicebox you can get yourself a free, what I just say, a free Omnipod five starter kit, free. Get out of here. Go click on that link, omnipod.com/juicebox, check it out. Terms and Conditions apply. Eligibility may vary. Full terms and conditions can be found at omnipod.com/juicebox, links in the show notes, links at Juicebox podcast.com. The conversation you just enjoyed was brought to you by us. Med, us. Med.com/juicebox, or call 888-721-1514, get started today and get your supplies from us. Med, thanks so much to Jordan for spending his time with us. If you're enjoying Jordan on the podcast and you'd like him to come back, go find him on Instagram, the diabetic murse, and let him know how much you enjoyed him on the show. Hey, thanks for listening all the way to the end. I really appreciate your loyalty and listenership. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of The Juicebox pod. Podcast, if you're looking for community around type one diabetes, check out the Juicebox Podcast. Private Facebook group. Juicebox Podcast, type one diabetes, but everybody is welcome. Type one, type two, gestational loved ones. It doesn't matter to me, if you're impacted by diabetes and you're looking for support, comfort or community. Check out Juicebox Podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook, the episode you just heard was professionally edited by wrong way recording, wrongway recording.com,
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Three Generations, One Diagnosis — Laura’s Unspoken Legacy of Diabetes and the Son Who’s Breaking the Silence.
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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Scott Benner 0:00
Welcome back friends to another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.
Laura 0:13
Hey, Scott. This is Laura. Thanks for having me. I am your very first speaker that I emailed you yesterday, talking to you today, I've been listening to you for about six years. My son was diagnosed six years ago in middle school, and I would say I found your podcast within that first week. You are really who grounded me if
Scott Benner 0:41
this is your first time listening to the Juicebox Podcast and you'd like to hear more, download Apple podcast or Spotify, really, any audio app at all, look for the Juicebox Podcast and follow or subscribe. We put out new content every day that you'll enjoy. Want to learn more about your diabetes management, go to Juicebox podcast.com, up in the menu and look for bold beginnings, the diabetes Pro Tip series and much more. This podcast is full of collections and series of information that will help you to live better with insulin. Nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the twist a ID system powered by tide pool that features the twist loop algorithm, which you can target to a glucose level as low as 87 Learn more at twist.com/juicebox. That's twist with two eyes.com/juicebox. Get precision insulin delivery with a target range that you choose at twist.com/juicebox. That's t, w, i, i s, t.com/juicebox. Is t.com/juicebox this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by Medtronic diabetes and their mini med 780 G system designed to help ease the burden of diabetes management. Imagine fewer worries about Miss boluses or miscalculated carbs thanks to meal detection technology and automatic correction doses, learn more and get started today at Medtronic diabetes.com/juicebox this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the contour next gen blood glucose meter. Learn more and get started today at contour. Next.com/juicebox
Laura 2:40
Hey, Scott, this is Laura. Thanks for having me. I am your very first speaker that I emailed you yesterday and I'm talking to you today. Yes, I've been listening to you for about six years. My son was diagnosed six years ago in middle school, and I would say, I found your podcast within that first week. You are really who grounded me? Are
Scott Benner 3:09
you gonna cry? This is wonderful. I love one listen in the first minute and a half. I'm great and you're crying. Perfect podcast. Keep going,
Laura 3:19
No, I think it's funny. I would say, I'm just trying to break the
Scott Benner 3:23
pension for you. Laura, that's
Laura 3:27
all, no, I know. No, it's really, you're like, almost, this is, like, the counseling session, you know, I don't think very many people that you know have a child diagnosed with diabetes. Always have, you know, an actual, like, real life support system, sure. So that that's kind of what you are for me,
Scott Benner 3:45
oh, oh, this is Oh, you're having, like, a real, genuine moment. Thank you for that. Oh, you're very welcome. Are you hearing me? Okay, I am, I am, are you hearing me? Okay, I am. I just there's a pause, and I don't know if it's because you're because you're upset, or if it's because something's not working. That's all. I just wanted to say, okay,
Laura 4:03
that, uh, it made a little bit of a glitch. Okay, so that was family. That was my emotional part from just my family life. My mom was diagnosed diabetes at 18 years old. She had a pretty rough go about it, go with it. And did pass away at 49 She lived her life without telling anyone she actually had diabetes. Your
Scott Benner 4:31
mom passed away when she was 49 she was diagnosed when she was 18. Ah, yes, wow. And that was how long ago? So
Laura 4:38
I'm 50 now. It was, she died in 9797
Scott Benner 4:44
Oh, I'm so sorry. When you jump on and you start introducing yourself and you get overwhelmed, like, is that because of the connection? Like, is it because we're talking Is it because you're thinking about your mom? What hit you? Right then?
Laura 4:57
I don't always talk about. Like, personal things in my life. So like, this is good. It's not something I don't really talk about it very much myself. Yeah.
Scott Benner 5:07
So in complete candid openness, I was looking at the amount of episodes that we have done, and I felt like I was like, we don't have as many as I like having on hand. And I kind of offhandedly texted Rob, and I was like, hey, you know we're doing all right, right. We have this many episodes. He goes, I wish we had 10 more. And I was like, Oh, me too. I was hoping he would tell me, No, you're fine. So I have all these days held to talk to Jenny and to Erica and to people like that, and we just don't have much of that going on right now. And so I said, Okay, well, let me fill in those dates with like, regular people. Now, most people listening would think, well, why don't you just contact the people who are already set up on the schedule and move them? And the answer is, that would be a lot of work. So I went online instead, and I was like, hey, who can who can record, you know, quickly, next Monday, two Mondays from now. And how about tomorrow? Because I had a person from Australia drop out, and it left today open, and you were like, I can do it tomorrow. And then I have never in my life had someone sign up, and then I recorded with them, 24 hours later. And I'm wondering if by not having time, like, are you more emotional? Because it's happening very quickly, I wonder, will we ever know? We'll
Laura 6:28
never know. Okay, all right, I see, and I would say my mom makes me more emotional than even my son or my dad. So as we continue on, my dad also ended up getting diagnosed. But he got diagnosed around 40 with type one. It's questionable. So he technically got diabetes, diagnosed with type two, but I would say, and probably because of your podcast, you know, within the last like several years, I was like, you know, you really do need to get your you really should be tested. Like, I really think you're type one, and he does have some, some of the antibodies, so I think he's probably 1.5 Yeah,
Scott Benner 7:10
very slow onset. Your mom had type one, and then your dad
Laura 7:14
got it. Yeah, it was a weird twist of fate. How
Scott Benner 7:18
many kids do you have? I have two How many brothers and sisters do you have one sister and your one child is the only type one. But are there other autoimmune things
Laura 7:29
on my husband's side of the family? There is
Scott Benner 7:33
so this was always
Laura 7:37
we thought we had great genes. Personally,
Scott Benner 7:42
those fools.
Laura 7:46
His sister has MS, and she actually has quite a few autoimmune issues. She has. She had Haji motos ms, and then possibly lupus, like she could be our own podcast, wow. And then, and then my mother in law also has, MS, no
Scott Benner 8:02
kidding, your mother in law, and your and your sister in law, they do, oh, gosh, that's a lot. Okay, so your mom has been gone for 30 years. Is that right? Just about, uh, yep. And so she died when you were 20,
Laura 8:15
uh, 22 my math might be a little off, but
Scott Benner 8:19
Laura, do you mind if we talk about that for a minute? Sure. Okay. I mean, what's that like, losing your mom when you're so young? Well, clearly,
Laura 8:27
very hard that 30 years later, it's still she was my everything. So it was, it was tough. She was an extremely positive person. But when, when she was diagnosed, you know, she grew up in a family that was very positive, and just never talked about difficult things. You know, everything is just great. So she was in college, I think she was a freshman in college, and then, you know, whatever her symptoms were, she went to the hospital. She stayed there for a week. They taught her, you know, how to treat herself, and then her family never talked about it again. It was kind of her burden to bear. What was she going to college for? I think just liberal arts. Okay, she was going for her Mrs. She was getting her Mrs.
Scott Benner 9:12
Degree. She's like, I'm gonna find it, yeah, I'm gonna find a handsome boy who also is gonna get type one diabetes, and we're gonna make a little stew for people, and one day, exactly, Laura's kid can deal with it. Exactly. There's a lot here, honestly, though, like, so, so your, your poor mom is diagnosed in college at a time when she needs help to begin with, and no one helps her. No one tell they just send her back to school. And they're like, Hey, you got this. And then we're just gonna smile like robots and hope this is okay
Laura 9:40
Pretty much, yeah, Catholic, yep. Sorry. Oh no. It's funny how they really are. There's stereotypes for a reason. Yeah,
Scott Benner 9:52
I was apologizing to the other Catholics. I figured you've made your peace with it already. Then did you have to do the same thing when she passed away? We used to. Supposed to just all put it in a box and just keep moving.
Laura 10:03
Um, I don't know if I was supposed to or I just did. Yeah,
Scott Benner 10:07
that's what I meant when I said supposed to. So, so you, you just, that's it. My mom's gone, by the way, at the same age that she got her terrible news. You got terrible news, yes, yeah, right. Like, So how old are your kids now?
Laura 10:21
So my 20 and 21 Do
Scott Benner 10:26
you have any weird feelings that the something odds about the befall them
Laura 10:30
more me? No, I don't feel like I'm gonna die, but it's I'm at that age now that I've lived longer than my mom lived. And that's a weird feeling.
Scott Benner 10:41
It is. I mean, how does it feel? Does it feel unfair? Do you feel like you're Are you sad that you're out living her contour? Next.com/juicebox that's the link you'll use to find out more about the contour. Next Gen blood glucose meter. When you get there, there's a little bit at the top. You can click right on blood glucose monitoring. I'll do it with you. Go to meters, click on any of the meters, I'll click on the Next Gen, and you're going to get more information. It's easy to use and highly accurate. Smart light provides a simple understanding of your blood glucose levels. And of course, with Second Chance sampling technology, you can save money with fewer wasted test strips. As if all that wasn't enough, the contour. Next Gen also has a compatible app for an easy way to share and see your blood glucose results. Contour next.com/juicebox and if you scroll down at that link, you're going to see things like a Buy Now button. You could register your meter after you purchase it. Or what is this? Download a coupon, oh, receive a free contour next gen blood glucose meter. Do tell contour next.com/juicebox head over there now get the same accurate and reliable meter that we use. The brand new twist insulin pump offers peace of mind with unmatched personalization, and allows you to target a glucose level as low as 87 there are more reasons why you might be interested in checking out twist, but just in case that one got you twist.com/juicebox, that's twist with two eyes.com/juicebox. You can target glucose levels between 87 and 180 it's completely up to you. In addition to precision insulin delivery that's made possible by twist design. Twist also offers you the ability to edit your carb entries even after you've bolused. This gives the twist loop algorithm the best information to make its decisions with, and the twist loop algorithm lives on the pump, so you don't have to stay next to your phone for it to do its job. Twist is coming very soon. So if you'd like to learn more or get on the wait list, go to twist.com/juicebox. That's twist with two eyes.com/juicebox. Links in the show notes, links at Juicebox podcast.com.
Laura 13:00
It's, it is what it is, I guess, I mean, it's, we're reaching that age. I think you're similar ish in age, sure that there are, you know, I've, I've now known people are known of people that have passed away around this age. And you it's just amazing how much life, you know, my my dad is 78 and just how much more life she missed out on. Yeah,
Scott Benner 13:26
it really is upsetting. I have an acquaintances, parents, I'm trying to be very vague here. And the mom, just like, she just got a headache and died, you know what I mean? Like, and she was like, younger than me. Yeah, it's, it's really, yeah, just insane. It feels insane because, like you said, you feel like, Listen, 50 is older, but in a world where you can live to 80, no problem, it's not that bad, you know, like, so you're like, No, I have a lot more time. And then when it's just gone like that, as horrible as is the loss for your mom. Like, you know what she doesn't get to do? Like, it leaves you in a bad time in your life. Like, that's too young to lose a parent, I think, and not to deal with it too. Like, you've never gone to therapy. You've never talked to anybody about it. You talk to your husband about it, not really. Is he Catholic too. He is not overly religious, but, but he grew up the same way, is my point.
Laura 14:26
And you know, even I guess that goes on to when my son was diagnosed, he actually ended up quitting his job two months later, flat out. But nothing like he hit that wall of, I think he put on such a front of being the strong man that then he cracked. Oh, no
Scott Benner 14:47
kidding. Hey, listen, when you guys have sex, does it go like this? This is very enjoyable. Yes, indeed, it is. Does it go like that? Or
Laura 14:59
no, maybe a. The beginning
Scott Benner 15:05
happening. I want to watch that new Matt locker reboot with that lady. There's the thing no one under 50 even knows exists, but it's just a lot of repression. I mean, I don't mean that like you were probably like, Hey, I just went to jump on the podcast and tell you how great it was. How great.
Laura 15:23
I told you I wanted to just see where this takes you. Okay, all right, so feel free to ask questions.
Scott Benner 15:30
All right, cool. Thank you. I really appreciate you doing this. By the way.
Laura 15:33
I'm trying to be an open book. Well, listen, trying to get rid of all my repression
Scott Benner 15:38
here. Yeah, like, Yeah, let's just let it all go right here. Let it all out. You said he cracked. But like, did he hate his job? And then, like, this thing happened to your kid, and then he was just like, life's too short. Like, was it that thing, or did he just not was he unable to cope? I
Laura 15:53
don't really know. His job was very stressful. He worked. He worked long hours. You know, he'd gone through different managers, and his his manager was tougher, and he just couldn't get things accomplished at work. And, you know, it's, it's life, he probably would have kept going. And then one day he started crying in the bathroom, and it was like, something is not right here. Wow.
Scott Benner 16:15
How old was he then,
Laura 16:17
probably 40 ish, he'd worked at the same company for 25 years. It was his very first job out of college. Wow. But I was just, I think, I think it was about two months into my son's diagnosis, and I literally remember, you know, you just start catching your breath and being like, Okay, I got this. I, you know, Skip,
Scott Benner 16:37
he's crying in the bathroom, and you're like, Oh, good. The one I got is broken.
Laura 16:45
I literally remember driving and thinking, You know what? I'm blessed. We have, you know, my husband has a good job. We have good insurance. You know, things could be much worse. And then he came home and he's like, can we have a little conversation outside? You're like, great, you're gonna leave me god,
Scott Benner 17:02
he's been the girl up the street. Jesus Christ. Like, I bet you wished he was having sex with someone else when he started crying, right?
Laura 17:13
Yeah. I mean, he's always, like, the strong one. And clearly, I'm I am more emotional better. He asked permission. He didn't just like, say, I quit my job, but his permission was, I can either stay and be dead in like, five years or quit my job. Were
Scott Benner 17:30
you like, oh, well, we do have some life insurance on you, so I guess that's fine. I tell my wife all the time, like, you get back in there until you die, exactly.
Laura 17:39
So it all worked out. I mean, he he actually has a much better job now and is happier. He didn't
Scott Benner 17:45
start playing the bong like the bongos and smoking weed. He went looked for a different
Laura 17:49
job. He took the summer off. So, and we had, we had enough savings. We knew where, you know, how long we could go, yeah. But had to, you know, figure out the whole Cobra thing and, oh yeah, because
Scott Benner 18:01
your kid just had got diabetes exactly, you're like, you want to quit now. How about next summer? Kind
Laura 18:09
of, I mean, on a positive, we'd already had our out of pocket Max.
Scott Benner 18:16
There's a thing that people who live with diabetes, they just talk about every year like, it's the most like, oh, the out of pockets over this is wonderful. Seriously, like he takes you outside. You're like, Oh, God, he's gonna leave me. He's not gonna leave you. He's crying. He wants to leave his job. What's your first reaction? Are you worried about him? Are you worried about your family? What happens first? I'm so interested.
Laura 18:35
I would say I was worried about his health. Okay? For him to come to me with that was a lot, you know, yeah, you go through a lot of things while married, and I knew he needed it. He like he he would not be coming to me, asking that and showing weakness unless he really was in a dark place
Scott Benner 18:57
five seconds before the porch meeting. Can we call it that porch meeting? Maybe that's true. My God, your episode might be called porch meeting. Five seconds before that, could you have guessed this about him? No, not at all. What has that taught you, Laura, about holding your feelings inside? Not a goddamn thing.
Laura 19:19
I don't know. I mean, I think everyone has their own coping mechanisms, and I'm talking to you, so I'm letting my feelings out in
Scott Benner 19:29
my personal life. Maybe this is problematic too, like it probably is in some way, there's nothing bothering me that the people around me are not aware of. If I were to say something to my family right now that they had never heard before, they'd be shocked, and I don't have anything to say that. They don't know. There's a lot of silence. Are you processing that? Or did your headphones stop working? Today's episode is sponsored by Medtronic diabetes, who is making life with diabetes easier with the mini med 780 G system. The mini med 780 G. Three automated insulin delivery system anticipates, adjusts and corrects every five minutes. Real world results show people achieving up to 80% time and range with recommended settings, without increasing lows. But of course, Individual results may vary. The 780 G works around the clock, so you can focus on what matters. Have you heard about Medtronic extended infusion set? It's the first and only infusion set labeled for up to a seven day wear. This feature is repeatedly asked for, and Medtronic has delivered. 97% of people using the 780 G reported that they could manage their diabetes without major disruptions of sleep. They felt more free to eat what they wanted, and they felt less stress with fewer alarms and alerts. You can't beat that. Learn more about how you can spend less time and effort managing your diabetes by visiting Medtronic diabetes.com/juicebox,
Laura 20:56
processing. I mean, I think I'm a happy person. I don't, I don't think I'm a closed book. But I definitely probably am more reserved. And this sounds like after several years, you psychoanalyzed yourself. One, I think I do cry easy, clearly, and because of that, well, one, where my mom wasn't open, I almost overcompensated personality wise, that I wanted to be able to demonstrate to her I could handle everything. You know, I do take a lot on. You know, someone does have a problem. I want to be able to listen and be there, right? Because I felt that she didn't trust I don't even know what happened. I mean, quite honestly, my sister and I knew she had diabetes just because you think you can hide it, but you really can't. Yeah, yeah. And my sister, my mom and sister, got in a fight when my sister was in high school, and my mom was like, you you know you're lot, you know you're lying. You can't, you can't keep lying about all these things. And my sister was like, Well, you're a liar, like you lied about having, you know, not having diabetes. And that's, that's how it came out, you know, it was like in a fight, and, I mean, we knew. And so then it was the weird secret that she didn't know we knew.
Scott Benner 22:18
Wait, you're telling me that while your sister was in high school, how old were you?
Laura 22:25
We were two years apart, so I think I was in high school as well.
Scott Benner 22:28
Okay, so you're a handful of years from your away from your mom passing away, and she believes that the diabetes she's had for some 25 years at that point you're unaware of she believes you don't know
Laura 22:43
that's insane. Yeah. Oh, you
Scott Benner 22:47
Catholics. I'm so sorry for you. Oh, my God, what you must be going through. I'm not even kidding. Hey, listen, let me just say a couple things to you Catholics, right now, your vagina and your penis are fine. Don't, don't be embarrassed about them at all. Okay, that's the first thing, and then secondly, it's okay to, like, have a feeling, what do you count? Are you wait? Are you Irish? On top of all this? I am.
Laura 23:12
I mean, she did go through some hard times, so when she had a boyfriend, when she was diagnosed, and he ended up breaking up with her because of her diabetes. When she was married, when she married my dad, they moved to New York City, and I think she actually, I think she might have been like a social work, like some sociology or something like that. She had her first job lined up. They moved to New York City, and then she was just filling out the paperwork and check the box that she had diabetes or whatever, and they said they didn't realize she had that. And they, you know, different times they did, your dad, know when my dad, my dad, no, okay, but, uh, she, she lost her first job because of diabetes. Oh, so
Scott Benner 23:57
she lost a boyfriend, then a job, and then she's probably like, I'm not telling people about this anymore, but was the unconsidered circumstance of that, that by lying about it and hiding it so much, she wasn't taking care of it,
Laura 24:08
I think she believed she was in very good control, you know, even as she described it, you know, she was at the high side of normal. So I asked my dad relatively recently, you know, when she was happy with a a 1c, of eight. So she definitely kept it higher. Yeah,
Scott Benner 24:29
she thought she was doing well and but she passes at 49 of what, what was, what, what took her
Laura 24:35
pretty much every side effect you could have she did, yeah, but at day's end, she had a she had a wound on her foot that didn't heal, and then she actually had her leg amputated, but then she had her official cause of death was, I mean, she had sepsis, like had cellulitis. So, yeah,
Scott Benner 24:55
everything got her at once. It did. Yeah, I know what. Calling our episode, but I won't tell you till the end.
Laura 25:03
Okay, okay, I don't know. You might still change it. No, I got it.
Scott Benner 25:06
I know what I'm calling it. Don't you worry. All right, tell me a little bit about your child's diagnosis. So
Laura 25:11
with him, I did catch it early. I again, the Catholic, Irish Catholic. I didn't tell anyone. I suspected it, but I was just noticing he'd come home from school and we he never drank soda. But it was around Easter time, so we had, he would just go out and, like, down, like, a can of soda. And then I was just noticed that, you know, we were playing cards, and he got up, like, multiple times to go to the bathroom. It just well, within, like, a very short time period. So, and then, you know, I could hear him going to the bathroom in the night. He lost weight, but he also had a huge growth spurt. So he wasn't like, skin and bones. And my mom, I had no idea that it was there was a genetic component, okay, quite honestly. So, you know, it's like the odds, I'm kind of being ridiculous, like, there's no way he has diabetes.
Scott Benner 26:06
Oh, you thought somebody in my life's already had this. There's no way it's going to happen again. What are the odds? Yeah, they are. What are the odds it's already happened to one person and my mom, yeah?
Laura 26:16
And where I didn't think it was genetic,
Scott Benner 26:19
right? Yeah. Or just familial. I don't know how to talk about it, to be perfectly honest. Like, is it genetic? Is it familial? Is it like, do you know, autoimmune issues just kind of run in clusters? Like, your dad probably has lot of your mom had type one. Your husband's got stuff on his side of the family. You guys get together, or it's gonna happen. Like, is that? It's not great, exactly. Yeah.
Laura 26:41
So, um, you know, I went to the drug we still had the high, high deductible plan, and I'm like, I'm not going to take them just to get a test. Like, this is silly. And he had a, he did have a physical coming up. So then I went to CVS, and I was going to buy a test kit. And quite honestly, even with two parents with diabetes, it was like, I don't even know what I'm supposed to get. So that was a fail. And then, in the midst of all this, we were having our kitchen remodeled so we're I spent the night at my mother in laws while they while they did the floors, and I forgot she actually is type two, sort of, okay. I went to the bathroom and she had, like, you know, the test strips on the counter. And I was like, I can't deal with it. Like, if he does have diabetes, I can't deal with it right now.
Scott Benner 27:35
I love that you're getting your kitchen redone. That's the most Catholic thing you've said so far. Like, your husband's like, in a fetal position. You're hiding everything. Your mom didn't tell anybody about her diabetes, your bike, but look how nice the kitchen looks. Am I right? Yeah, that's the most Catholic thing you've said so far. Can I real quickly, I dated a girl when I was young who is very Catholic, and I certainly won't give out any of her details, because I'm sure she wouldn't want them out. But her family was a disaster. But the front of their house always looked awesome. They made very carefully sure that the front of the house and the lawn and how the cars were and everything that you could see from the street was great. And as you went into the house, there was yelling and turmoil. And then you got to the backyard, it looked like a junkyard. But as long as the people from the street thought it looked good, they were happy. It's really
Laura 28:29
interesting. Well, as a sidebar, I think one of this did not like trigger me, thinking diabetes, but as far as like cleanliness goes, I was noticing, like, in the bathroom, the toilet kept having like black in it. I was like, Jesus, I'm doing a terrible job cleaning the house. And I have heard after the fact that, like with the high blood sugar, yeah, you can get like, mold in your toilet. Like, it's actually somewhat not common, but not uncommon. No
Scott Benner 29:01
kidding. A week ago I had a young guy on from Australia, and now I said Australia twice today, and he talked about that about like, he's like, my my toilet was like a petri dish, and I couldn't figure out why. Yeah,
Laura 29:12
it was kind of disgusting. Yeah, oh, my God, I'm terrible. But anyway, so then my son did have a he had his physical and they're like, Oh, do you have any concerns? And I said, No, but I did, and then
Scott Benner 29:26
you went to a doctor's appointment thinking your kid had diabetes. He said, Is there any concerns? You're like, nothing that God can't take care of if we just ignore it enough.
Laura 29:34
Again, I didn't know how to bring it up. So then, like, as the physical was completely wrapped up. I was like, by the way, can you test his blood
Scott Benner 29:43
sugar? Were they like, Hey, what the hell I think so,
Laura 29:47
because I actually got charged for two doctor's appointments.
Scott Benner 29:51
They were like, you can, but you're paying twice, honey. They did. I was so mad.
Laura 29:57
So then the nurse came in. She tested his sugar. Her and, like, looked down and walked out, and I was like, so then the doctor came back and shipped us right to children's, yeah,
Scott Benner 30:11
the Boston thing just makes this story better. I just want you
Laura 30:15
to know, okay, Irish,
Scott Benner 30:16
Catholic Boston, yeah? Like, yeah. Just, I love that, that it's, by the way, you're gonna have one of those episodes where, like, the crazy things you say are gonna keep happening, but like that you didn't mention it at the top of the doctor's visit. Is really interesting. Yeah,
Laura 30:31
I don't, I didn't know how to, I mean, and my son, so again, if we're hiding things, I didn't tell anyone. I was concerned. So then I had to call my husband and be like, oh, yeah, we're going to children's right now. And I mean, my son was 14. I think he didn't know I was concerned. It was like, the most awkward drive
Scott Benner 30:55
down. Did the kid how old at that point was he? Think he was 14? Did he look at you afterwards and go, Hey, how come you didn't mention this? No, no, you taught him to shut up and keep his thoughts inside too. It
Laura 31:07
was a quiet down. He's high functioning autistic, so back in the day when there was Asperger's, that's what you would classify him with. Okay, so it was really hard, like I didn't know what he was feeling. You know, I give him, like, knowing diabetes, it's a life changing diagnosis. Yeah, can I
Scott Benner 31:31
ask a couple of weird questions? Sure, are you very thin, like, your body, stature? No, you're not,
Laura 31:37
like, I'm not fat, but I used to be thinner. Are
Scott Benner 31:40
you like nervous thin is what I'm asking. You know what I mean when I say nervous thin? No, but I wish I was Do you know you don't? You know
Laura 31:49
I did lose 20 pounds with his diagnosis, though? Well, I'm just
Scott Benner 31:53
gonna generalize here. People can just be mad later. I think we all know a lady who seems high strung and is very thin. No, do we all know
Laura 32:01
a person like that? Yeah, I wouldn't say that's me.
Scott Benner 32:05
That's not you, okay?
Laura 32:06
But I might be, I mean, it might be me, and I just don't see myself that way. It's possible.
Scott Benner 32:10
Okay? So, like, I'm gonna tell you, I didn't want to say it till later because I didn't want to impede you. But like, I'm going to tell you what I'm calling the episode. What do you think I'm going to call it? I don't know. I think I'm gonna call it scribbling, okay, because, because you can hear me, because I called you out on it, like, for noise reasons, you're not stopping, and I'm so I assumed that you didn't stop because this is your coping mechanism. It probably is, and I didn't want you to stop if that, if it was helping you. And at the same time, I gotta wonder what's happening inside of you that, like, being honest, like this is literally causing your hand to move like that. Like, do you know what I mean? Like, do you wonder about that? Or No,
Laura 32:56
no, that's just who I am. Are you
Scott Benner 32:59
nervous right now? Are you upset? Are you uncomfortable? Like, what's happening?
Laura 33:05
I'd say whenever I'm on the phone, I need to either be state, walking or scribbling, because it helps me process. Is
Scott Benner 33:15
it like? Is it a like? Is it like, a spectrum thing, or is it like, I don't know, like, I'm trying to figure out if it's you have so much pent up energy that it that you're vibrating inside. Maybe do people are people comfortable around you? I think so. Yeah, I hope so. I hope. No. I mean, like, do you make other people vibrate? No, no, okay. Do you notice when other people are like that? When they're like, I'm using the words high strung because I'm old. I don't really know what I mean, but, like, we all know what I mean, right? Like, somebody who's just like, never stops, never sits still is always busy working, like, bouncing off of walls for no real reason, like when you stand next to them, they make you feel nervous? Do you know a person like that?
Laura 34:02
I do. Okay, I wouldn't say that's who I am. I think just when I'm on the phone, for whatever reason, it's literally just a move, it is. Oh No,
Scott Benner 34:11
kidding. So you think of yourself as pretty chill. Otherwise, yeah, interesting. Would other people describe you that way?
Laura 34:19
I think so, yeah, but then my sister in law does think on the topic, needs to be in con and for certain things, I need to be in control.
Scott Benner 34:27
You need that like that, that illusion that you're running things, I
Laura 34:31
wouldn't say, running things I've described myself as. I need to have a plan. I don't need to be the one that makes the plan, but I need to know what's just like a plan is, is
Scott Benner 34:40
the vibrating person in your life, your husband, maybe,
Laura 34:44
maybe, probably, probably, gotcha. This
Scott Benner 34:47
is so much fun. I'm so glad I started a podcast. But can you imagine me right now in a sheet metal shop with all these thoughts in my head, like, how, like, crazed I must have been when I was doing this. I was like, talking to people, and they were probably like, why? Is he asking me these stupid questions that, like, I so interested in
Laura 35:03
people? No, no. People are reaching out to you, being like, I want to talk to you.
Scott Benner 35:08
Like, and at the end, some of them are like, Can I send you my co pay? And I'm like, Sure, I'll take it, but nobody ever sends it. I just want to point that out, because there's so much you can learn about somebody by just stopping and talking to them. You know, just really interesting, like, but, but again, like, I feel like you've now told five little stories whose moral is all you should tell people how you feel and what you're thinking, you know, I mean, like you took your your son is at that appointment you never mentioned to him, like, we want to check on a thing. Like your husband somehow was where he was, but five seconds before that, you had no idea. Like, does it make you wonder what you don't know about him right now?
Laura 35:48
Probably, yeah, but for the most part, he's, he's very like he's, he's very stable, and very much he works in operations. We decided, after my son was diagnosed, that he probably has Asperger's himself. Your husband most likely, okay,
Scott Benner 36:07
is that a thing you noticed about him when you were dating? No, because
Laura 36:11
my sister and I also think my dad, you know, once Asperger's didn't exist. You know, 50 years ago, my dad probably, you know, he wasn't the most emotional guy right growing up. So then I think my husband just seemed normal to me. Gotcha. Wow.
Scott Benner 36:30
Do you have any like Do you have any thoughts about you, what you want to talk about? Or do you want me to keep asking
Laura 36:37
questions? You can keep asking one at least somewhat funny thing to, you know, after so my son only spent one night in the hospital, which is terrifying, you know, yeah, yeah, you learn everything. And then they're like, Okay, you can go home now and then, maybe not yet. And then we're out, you know, our kitchen, it was a complete gut remodel. And then I'd say, we're like, I don't know, three weeks in, and then, you know, you've got your contractor guy that's there every morning, so he was the very first person I saw after diagnosis. Oh, so, you know, and it's just weird, because I was here every morning, and then I'm just not here. So he just, like, looked at me, and then I just started crying. Started crying. So
Scott Benner 37:26
like, Jesus, I just want to get paid. These people can't fall apart right now. I got a lot of money into this place.
Laura 37:34
It was just like, so weird though, because, I mean, it's like invasive, having someone in your house while you're going through, like, trauma, yeah,
Scott Benner 37:40
did you end up sharing a lot of it with the contractor because of that?
Laura 37:45
Yeah. I mean, I, I, I tried really hard to not be my mom. So, like, I'm like, um, this can't be a secret. This can't be something that is hidden. This is just how life is going to be. You know, this is your life.
Scott Benner 38:00
How successful were you in being more open?
Laura 38:05
I would say I was open, but then my son doesn't, he doesn't hide it. But I also felt it was his story to tell. Okay, so I, you know, in different situations. I'm not gonna, like, shout it out if that's not something he wants to discuss.
Scott Benner 38:26
Yeah, I could do an entire, like, series of ardent stories, of things my wife has said to other people that aren't it's like, why are we telling people that?
Laura 38:36
And it's, it's hard to be respect. You know? It's, yeah, need to be respectful. But then there's also a safety component,
Scott Benner 38:44
yeah, I figure that, I think everybody goes to that, right? Like, as the parent you're, you're like, Well, this is kind of my story. Like, you know what I mean? Like, my kid is having this experience. Like, I'd like to talk to somebody about this experience that I'm, I'm having through, you know, parenting my child with it, except the pre once the kid gets to a certain age, you're like, that's not your story. It's my story. And it's interesting, though, because both are true. And so what do you do? So as the parent, you're supposed to, like, dummy up and not say anything, right? Or get a friend that won't let anybody know that you've shared that thing with them,
Laura 39:19
exactly. And I think that's, you know, you're, I'd say, you know, Arden's a couple years older, which, following the podcast was kind of nice, because, other than the period, I kind of know what was coming in the next couple of years, you know. So, you know, college was a change, and a stay at home mom for the most part, and then diabetes really does become your life, and then all of a sudden, it's not
Scott Benner 39:49
Yeah, so he went away. How long ago?
Laura 39:53
He's a sophomore right now? Or no, okay?
Scott Benner 39:54
And is he managing to your expectation, like in a way that makes you. Comfortable, or do you feel on edge the whole time that he's away? A
Laura 40:03
little bit of both? He's not in as well of control as he would be if I was managing it. But I also know he I'm giving him grace, and it's something he has to live with and figure out. So he definitely runs higher than I'd like him to but as long as he doesn't, you know, die, I'm letting him go with you know, he always doses, he always corrects. It's just he does get high blood sugars that stay high longer than I'd like, yeah,
Scott Benner 40:36
how aware of your mom's situation is he probably not at all. You don't think he knows his grandmother had type one. I
Laura 40:47
think he knew that, but never gotten into
Scott Benner 40:50
that she passed from it, right? Really, any details? Do you think you'll ever tell him that I'm not hiding? I feel like I know it's like, I feel like I know the answer, but I'm just,
Laura 41:05
yeah, I thought, I mean, if you were to ask questions, I definitely would, but I don't think I'd. I mean, at this point, I think it would be kind of terrifying. I mean, she legitimately, she had Corrective Eye Surgery, but, like, had the broken blood vessels in her eyes. So went through periods she couldn't see her fingers actually, like started losing circulation and literally started falling off. At what age? Well, she died at 49 and I'd say the last couple years. And
Scott Benner 41:35
did she still think she was doing well while her fingers were tumbling off?
Laura 41:39
Or does she know at that point she wasn't the damage is done, you know?
Scott Benner 41:43
Yeah, but I'm saying, like, is this like, a five seconds before that happens? Thing was she would she have said, I'm doing great. Probably, yeah. Then I think the question has to be, and I feel weird because you and I are the same age, and I feel like I'm talking to you, like, Hey, let me explain something to you, which makes me feel weird, but you know, it's okay. Yes, it's my job, so I'm just gonna keep doing it. It's your podcast. Well, yeah, exactly so. And you're here willfully. Nobody made you. Nobody made you. Yeah, you look, yeah, that's, by the way, when some people are like, couldn't you tell they were uncomfortable? I'm like, they could have stopped at any point. Like, I didn't, like, I'm not holding any anywhere, not the point. I hope you see that what you said is correct. I think that if you just pulled him aside right now and you're like, hey, here's a story about grandma, and then you told him all that, it would be a lot, and probably too much for him. But I also think that if you don't tell him anything, and don't slowly open him up to that story, that one day when he finds out, and he will find out one day, he's gonna be pissed at you for not telling him. There's a balance you have to keep in there. You have to give it, you have to tell the story slowly over years. That makes sense.
Laura 42:54
Yeah? I mean, he knows he died of diabetes and complications, yeah. But
Scott Benner 42:59
you know what I mean? Like, the bigger picture, like, what I'm saying is, I don't think you want to be 70, when he's 40, and have him come to you and say, Hey, I really want to know about all this. And then when you tell him, he goes, Oh, I wish I would have known this sooner. You can't control which way it goes. No matter what you get. You want the opposite. That's about as human of a thing as I've ever seen in my life. So if you gave him all the information, he would say later, I wish she wouldn't have told me all that. It was overwhelming. And if you keep it all from him, he's going to say, I wish somebody would have told me that I could have used that information. So I think it's a game of like, disseminating it as appropriate over time, with the idea of getting it all out at a time where he's capable of handling it, which, in my mind, would be after he's 25 like, that's my thought. But also, you know him better than I do, but I feel like I'm saying this because you seem like you come from a family of people who don't share anything with each other.
Laura 44:03
That's fair. Well, he's coming home today for cop for Easter. I'll let him know. Hey, how about that bunny?
Scott Benner 44:12
Are you still Catholic, or are you recovering, as they say, a recovering Catholic,
Laura 44:16
non practicing Catholic.
Scott Benner 44:18
I say still a believer, but
Laura 44:22
not going to church. Was
Scott Benner 44:23
it the church part that got you, or was it the the parenting style that
Laura 44:28
got you? I would say laziness.
Scott Benner 44:33
Wait, wait, explain that, when
Laura 44:35
the kids were little, you know, and then they're crying going to church, you know. Okay, babies cry. It got too I mean, it's terrible to say, it was too hard, but
Scott Benner 44:45
it felt like a job, not a calling. Is that fair, right? Okay, how would you describe your dad's parenting after your mom passed, we were probably
Laura 44:53
dysfunctional for a while, so he got remarried very shortly after, shortly after, yeah. Was the
Scott Benner 45:02
handsome man. I like that. You're laughing, but you're about to say something horrible, and you're like, Oh, here's a good one. He
Laura 45:10
didn't tell us. He didn't
Scott Benner 45:13
tell you. They got married.
Laura 45:16
No, get the out of here. Now you might change the name. I have
Scott Benner 45:24
to tell you, I think I'm not recording enough. Recording once a day. I feel like I'm leaving a lot on the table. Wait a minute. Jesus Christ. Yeah, that was weird. How long had your mom been gone? I think
Laura 45:37
he got married within a year.
Scott Benner 45:39
Within a year, were they happy? Yes
Laura 45:43
and no. It got dysfunctional at the end. So my dad got diagnosed with diabetes, pretty close to where my mom started failing. And then I think there's part of him that blame. Blamed her for her. Oh, like she didn't do it. Yeah, okay. So then he got a type A trying to, like, control, like, control her and make her treat it different daily. It almost became a competition. Oh,
Scott Benner 46:16
awesome. So was he, gosh, you know, sometimes I don't know. Sometimes things pop in my head and I think don't say that. Well, you say that now, but was he just looking for someone to hold his penis, or was he like, ex like, is he lonely? Or was he like, Why do you think he got married, remarried so quickly? Sorry to say penis. Talking about your dad.
Laura 46:41
I apologize. You can say penis. So that was actually how he got diagnosed. To change the subject was he was driving, my mom and dad were maybe driving, like, on an hour trip, and he had to pee so bad that he actually made her hold his penis and while he peed in a cup, and then she's like, this is not normal. I
Scott Benner 47:05
am the best interviewer in the world. Seriously, you know those guys that people would, they say, like, Dan Rather, and all that bullshit.
Laura 47:12
Like, right? You say penis, like, a story. I got that story
Scott Benner 47:17
from you. Yeah, wow. So your mom and dad are driving down the road. He's got undiagnosed diabetes, probably lot of and he's peeing so much that your mom handles the thing, the thing handle, I don't know where to go. She handles everything while he's driving, so that they stop, so that, you know, it's nice. You call your dad's penis a unit. I think he'd like that and and so she because instead of pulling over constantly,
Laura 47:47
he they were on the like the highway, and he had to go so bad, I
Scott Benner 47:53
gotta say, I'm assuming the romance was gone by then. I
Laura 47:57
don't know she was holding it,
Scott Benner 48:00
Laura, that's your description of sex, not mine. Fair, wow, how about that? Well, that's the best story anyone's ever gonna tell. We can just close the podcast down now. It's over awesome, but no back to him, but back to him. Sneaky. Getting married. Like, how long was your dad married before you knew it? Remarried?
Laura 48:20
Like six months,
Scott Benner 48:23
so you would score your college. So I
Laura 48:25
was out of college at this point, living in Connecticut, and then my sister still lived, like in the hometown, but not your
Scott Benner 48:33
sister lived in a home in the town your dad lived in, but like going to school, but pretty locally, but not in the house. He was married for six months, and nobody knew it. And go ahead, whatever you're going to say I want to hear.
Laura 48:46
I think he was ashamed. And then I think he got bullied a little bit into getting married sooner than he wanted to. Okay.
Scott Benner 48:54
So he was ashamed, ultimatums, okay. He was ashamed to be in a relationship, and then a bossy Lady made him marry her. Kind of are they still married? They are? Is she still bossy? You don't like her at all. Do you?
Laura 49:13
You don't have to say,
Scott Benner 49:14
okay, all right, sorry. Sometimes I forget. Other people are going to hear
Laura 49:20
this. It's well, it's one of those, do you share that you did a podcast or just be like generic Laura, which probably after I said my mom was holding my dad's penis, I'll just,
Scott Benner 49:29
I want to be completely clear. You shouldn't tell anybody about this. No, I wouldn't tell your husband. I wouldn't. I literally not. This is the one time I'm going to tell you, I'd keep this to myself.
Laura 49:43
Shouldn't I tell my son? Thought that was your advice. You should start
Scott Benner 49:46
being honest tomorrow. Okay, not today. Yeah, you've been too you've been too honest. If you No, there's no way you should tell anybody about this. No, I'm thinking, I won't. You said your husband cry. Act like was 10 minutes into this. Okay, so I just need to know, where do you meet? Is it like a lady up the street who was like, Oh, look, who's free? Was it one of those things?
Laura 50:10
She is Korean and had like, a store, like a convenience store, okay, I don't know. I don't know what
Scott Benner 50:18
her being Korean has to do with this, but that's awesome. I really appreciate that you said that for some reason. Well, she wasn't Catholic. She, oh, you're just letting me know she wasn't Catholic. I see, I think Koreans can be Catholic. That's fair. Yeah, I think there's a whole episode of The West Wing about that, is there not? I don't know. I spent this a long time ago. Sorry. Okay. Wow, holy, not usually this tired before an hour,
Laura 50:49
I kept a lot in, man,
Scott Benner 50:50
wow, you let a lot out, too. You've been listening to the podcast for six years. Do you think I'm looking at your notes?
Laura 50:57
Yeah, so it's funny. I was going back so I don't listen to it as much as I used to. Oh, I'm
Scott Benner 51:04
sorry. Goodbye. No wait, what?
Laura 51:07
So basically, I would say listen to it up until my son went to college, because there's nothing I can really do to change him now, like he doesn't want my advice. Oh, I just feel like, if I listen and then get press, you know, want to tell him something, and he's just like, whatever, mom, yeah, almost like, would make me more frustrated. So I still listen periodically. Say, enjoy listening to but I would say at the beginning I started very close to when you were doing the series with Jenny. So it was just very informative in a very easy to digest way. And you didn't do as as many podcasts back then. So what I would do, I would have, I went a year back, so I would listen to all of your current ones, and then have like another, like, starting from a year until I caught up. Oh,
Scott Benner 52:04
I see. Okay. Am I making too much? Should I stop? No, okay, I can't stop. Now, by the way, this thing's a runaway train. I'm not in charge of that anymore. By the way it gets made, the way it gets made. Now, honestly, where the excitement comes from for me, like, literally, is, after talking to you today, I just want to go talk to somebody else. Like, I'd like to hang up, have a sandwich, come back and talk to somebody else like, I love, I genuinely love doing this. I'm starting to think about making other podcasts that I don't even think people are ever going to hear, like, I'll tell you a secret. I've already set one up. I found this person who's just really expert at a thing. And I told him, I'm like, I would like to sit and talk to you for hours, like, just hours and hours, and it's got nothing to do with diabetes, and I'll just put it out in a different podcast. I don't even care if anybody listens to it or not, like I just think it's interesting to find a person who's so expert at something. I don't want a bullet pointed like, the slide show about, like, here's the things I do. And like, I don't give a about any of that. Like, I want to know about how a person who's that good at something and that dedicated to it, how they think, like, about other things. Like, I think there's something to be learned in there. And I'm going to do the interview how for as many hours as it takes, and then I'm gonna put it together, and then I'm gonna go look for somebody else who's like, interesting like that, and have a conversation with them. I don't even care if anybody ever hears it like I think it'd just be great to do so the truth is, is that I could put out an episode every 12 hours, I think, if I really followed my heart on it, but I'm slowing myself down because I'm now putting episodes out like every day, like every and people are consuming them. So, you know, I don't know like, I just, I love talking to people like you were so interesting. Oh, thank
Laura 53:55
you. I think you have a good podcast voice. So if you do another one, I'll listen to you. It'll work
Scott Benner 54:00
out. Okay, it'll work out. You'll at least have one follower a topic. You don't give it, you don't care anything about just talking to the person. Maybe
Laura 54:07
you should just go on the streets and find someone and be like, Hey, want to talk. I
Scott Benner 54:12
think I could, by the way, like I, there's part of me that thinks I could show up at a diner and just like, keep putting people in a booth and talking to them. I think there's something really interesting about a lot of people, plus, look at all the stuff they hold inside.
Laura 54:27
Exactly No. I think everyone has a story. Yeah, tell
Scott Benner 54:31
me something crazy that you haven't told me yet. Like, think crazier is there a story? Does something pop into your head, even if you don't want to tell it to tell it to me, you don't have to tell it to me. But does it like, does something like, If I said, tell me something about yourself, you don't tell other people that, I would go, Oh, my god, is that true? Like, does something come into your head?
Laura 54:53
I can't think of anything interesting.
Scott Benner 54:54
You need the conversation to find it. Yeah, I do. Yeah. No, not just you. So I was kind of making a point, sorry.
Laura 55:01
Like, now think about it all day. People don't
Scott Benner 55:06
know what's interesting about them. I think that's it ends up being true over and over again. Like, I if you asked me about me, I don't know how to talk about me, which people are probably like, that's a lie. But like, if you got me away from this microphone and said, like, I think I did an interview the other day with a guy named Nick, and he's like, What do you do for fun? And I was like, I don't know. Man, I just make this podcast, like, this is fun. So when the tables were turned on me, and he just asked me, I didn't have an immediate answer. Now, he wasn't, you know, he wasn't trying or skilled at, like, getting it out of me. Like, so I'm sure somebody could get it out of me, but at the same time, I don't know if I could stop long. Stop long enough to answer their questions, but that's
Laura 55:44
what I think is interesting for you to do this podcast and another, you know, you've diabetes has been your life since Arden was two or four, and now she's in college. She's an adult, and she doesn't need you quite as much. And you know you're still giving so much to the community, but it almost is like you can take a step back. I think
Scott Benner 56:07
that I've taken my ability, or my skill, or whatever the hell this is, right, whatever, however, we got to all the things about your life. We got to in 58 minutes. And I will submit that we got to a lot, okay, like, so whatever. And part of that is because you trust me and because you've been listening for a long time. Like, and I and you feel you I'm putting words in your mouth, but you probably feel grateful to me in some way, right? I do. Yeah, right. So, like, so, you're open to me already. Like, so, but like, I'm almost interested, like, these skills that I've developed to have conversations for people with diabetes, like, would it transfer over to something like, when I can't ask about like, Hey, tell me about your diagnosis. I know this is going to sound crazy to people, maybe, but like, when I ask about your diagnosis, like, that's me being lazy and me realizing that you want to hear about people's diabetes. That's why you're here. But my inclination is not to talk about the diabetes as much like I think that part just comes out in a conversation. But I don't know if I'm I might be wrong. So I
Laura 57:09
agree to a point. I think everyone's story you know, whether you know it's your whoever, whoever is important to you that's diagnosed, whether it happened a week ago or it happened 30 years ago. It's, it was, it's such a traumatic part of life, of your life, and you can remember every single detail, like I remember, like watching, I mean, I can still go back to the hospital and remember that uncomfortable chair I slept in. I remember the person in the room we were sharing the room with. I remember, like, what was on the TV. So I think when doing a podcast, the details of the diagnosis are so bright and brilliant that you just remember them. And it's easy to talk about
Scott Benner 57:59
no and I, and don't get me wrong, like, I I want people to talk about that stuff. I kind of meant from like, a interviewing perspective, like, those are the ones I just ask, like, because I know people want the answers, but like, well, you
Laura 58:11
can't really ask, did your mom ever hold your dad's penis? Well, yeah, although that's gonna
Scott Benner 58:15
be the opening question. Now I'm gonna be like, instead of asking people there's other autoimmune in their family, I'd be like, have your parents ever driven and peed at the same time? That's my question. So the way I think of this is the conversation that you and I had today is about being a person, and yes, you're the mother of a child with type one, and you're the mother of a child who's, you know, on the spectrum. You're the daughter of a woman who hid her, her her diabetes. You're the daughter of a woman who died early because of it, of a of a father who probably has Lada. You know, you're a child of, you know, an upbringing that taught you to keep things private. And I think that if you're listening to this like you can't tell right now, but another person listening to this, like all those things go together, and then hopefully they see those things in their own life, and they think, oh, I should probably be more open about this, because it'll very likely lead to a healthier outcome for me or my kid like that. To me, is what we talked about today, but you have to be honest and open for it to come out. Because I could just say it. I could drag Erica on here every day, and I could say, hey, Erica, hey, we're going to tell people about how they need to be open so they'll be healthy at the end. And you know what everybody will do? They'll go like, this one, shut this. Like nobody wants to hear that. Like it might be true and it might be valuable, but nobody's going to sit for that. I was listening to my own podcast this morning because somebody told me to listen to one of them. They're like, You have to really listen back to this one. So I'm listening to it, and I jump in the shower and it ends, and another podcast comes on, not mine, somebody else's. And as they're like, talking it up, all I could think was, Oh, I gotta shut this off. I like. Oh, this is, this is painful, like the way and but they were setting up like, what I think would have been a really important conversation. I just didn't like the way they were doing it. And it wasn't holding my
Laura 1:00:10
attention. Is it their voice or their questions? A
Scott Benner 1:00:13
little bit of everything, their voice was a little not great the like, the boringness of the setup. I recognized the importance of what they were talking about, the way they were saying. I was like, Oh, do I really want to live through that conversation? Like, ew. And I even thought, like, I could use this information, but they're not going to present it in a way that's going to capture my attention. You got on this podcast and spoke honestly about about 50 things. That's why somebody's listening, and hopefully now, at the end, when they're getting ready to shut it off, they say to themselves, I should probably be more open and honest. I think it would be healthier, like, that's all I'm trying to do. But I don't know that I'm trying to do that when you jump on, because I don't know who you are, until we start talking.
Laura 1:00:55
Sure, yeah, listening to podcasts. If someone's not honest, their podcast is boring. I think everyone has, I don't wanna say secrets, but things that you know. The more you're open, the more of the flow of a conversation, and hopefully the more interesting podcast.
Scott Benner 1:01:12
I'm hoping to do that tomorrow, like I'm getting to interview a professional football player tomorrow that has type one, and I'm super excited about it, and I have a whole pathway that I think the conversation should go. But they also were like, you know, can you send him some of the questions ahead of time? Like, so he's like, ready? And I'm like, can we not? Like, I was like, can't, can I just talk to him the way I talked to Laura? Like, wouldn't it be great to find out if his mom was holding, like, his, you know, whatever, and he's not gonna let that out anyway. So, like, I want to be like, let me just pick at this and but so instead of just sending a bunch of benign, like questions to them, I said, this is how I just ended up sitting down and having the conversation in my head without him. And I said, this is how I hope for it to go, because I still think there's some I think there's something really important to learn from this person, and I think this is what it is. But you know what's gonna happen if I start digging in and that's not the truth, then it's gonna, it's gonna die right there, and then I'll have to, you'll know later, like, He'll either, like, be chill and go with it, or you'll hear me ask a bunch of the canned questions that I have, like, aside for him. Like, that's how you'll figure out how it went and, you know, but I'm really hopeful, because they say he's really great guy, and he's super open and everything. So I'm excited. Well, good, yeah. Anyway, all right, what have we not talked about that we should have?
Laura 1:02:32
Think that's probably it. Otherwise, we'd have to do
Scott Benner 1:02:36
a whole nother podcast. Are you in any way, shape or form, thinking of going to talk therapy. Now,
Laura 1:02:42
I think I just had my talk therapy. I think this will do it. I'm good. I
Scott Benner 1:02:46
don't think I'm a professional. If you feel better after this, but not good. Do you think you'd say to yourself, maybe I should find a therapist to talk to or do? Is that not a thing you would
Laura 1:02:56
do? I did it. I did go to one once, just one time. It's just not really I'm not against it. I feel day to day, good enough. Awesome.
Scott Benner 1:03:08
Wait, that's a great way to describe your life. Day to day. I feel good enough. Good enough. If you heard your All right, ready? If you heard your kid describe their life like that, what would your next thought be,
Laura 1:03:21
how can we make it better? Yeah, so, how can you make it
Scott Benner 1:03:26
better? We've said it 50 times, Laura, I need you to say it. I
Laura 1:03:30
need to talk more. Right, right? There you go. That's all. Just let it
Scott Benner 1:03:33
out more. Find somebody and if the people around you aren't the right people, then find somebody else you can you'll be happy you did it. Are you happy that you had this conversation? I am.
Laura 1:03:43
I think it's funny. After talking to you for or listening to you for so many years, it's just, you know, I know so much about you, obviously, well now you know more about me, but it's it's interesting. Why
Scott Benner 1:03:56
actually be on a podcast? Why is it interesting? Tell me just
Laura 1:04:00
because, again, I know, I feel like I know so much about you, you know, and every you know, all you share so much and are so open. It's just kind of neat to actually be able to talk to you, to
Scott Benner 1:04:11
be able to talk to me. Okay, all right. Am I open? Does that? Is that how I strike you as being really open? I think you are very open. Yeah, I think I am. But there's so much more I would say that if I didn't think, you know, we didn't live through the whole last couple of years where everybody's so like hell bent on, you know, not each other for saying how they feel about things. But it's going, I don't know if you notice, it's your other podcast. It's going away, though. I don't know if you notice that the zeitgeist is getting we're drifting back to the 70s again. I can't wait. I want to, I want to be podcasting still when it's okay again to just say how you feel, although you said a lady was Korean today for no reason, so I guess we're getting just like there was no reason to say that at
Laura 1:04:51
all. I would say I said it culturally. So she's, she's from Korea, so I. I mean, she speaks English, but
Scott Benner 1:05:03
Laura, stop, stop. I know you don't mean anything by it. Like, that's my point. I don't mean anything about it. I think it was just, I don't know I'm saying. I'm excited to get back to the point where somebody can just say something like that and it just, and people don't want to be offended by it. Do you see what I'm saying? Like, there are plenty of people who would make a comment about somebody's background and mean something by it. You clearly don't mean anything poor about it at all. I'm excited for a time where people just hear that and keep rolling and don't hear it and go, Oh, you know, we got on our hands here. This lady's a racist. Like, No, she's not. Like, stop it. You know what I mean? Like, like, that kind of thing. Like, I'm excited for that part, like, where we can, like, I really feel like we're back there again, like it's happening. So I'm super excited, but it's one of the most ill intended consequences of one of the political things that's happened that I'd never expected. Like, I didn't expect to be happy at all for the next couple of years, but I was like, Oh, this one thing is actually like, pleasant, like, oh, okay, oh, I guess I'll take that, see,
Laura 1:06:03
and you, you have to be more careful on the podcast, I can offend people, but you can't. I'm
Scott Benner 1:06:08
also not looking I shouldn't, yeah, well, there's no listen. There's no good reason to like, I don't. I wouldn't understand if you had a grocery store and you, you felt very strongly politically, one way or the other, I would have no understanding of you making that public. Like, are you trying to sell groceries to everybody, not just the people who agree with your whims about you know, I don't understand that idea like you're selling groceries. Like, go sell groceries to people you we don't need to hear about your opinion. And I'm trying to help people with their diabetes, not just people with diabetes who lean one way or the other so, and the truth is is I don't feel strongly in any direction, like I find myself thinking mostly like I hear things and I go, that makes sense. That's a common sense thing. And so is that. And I think that somebody would take the first thought and attribute it way right, and the other thought and attribute it way left. And I listen to both of them, and I think those things make a lot of sense to me. So yeah,
Laura 1:07:04
back in the day, I was, well, I still think I'm independent, but I have opinions. I
Scott Benner 1:07:10
honestly, for the first time, said to somebody, I was like, should I spend five minutes changing my affiliation to independent? Like, would that be a better representation of me? And then I was like, does it even matter? Like, I don't know. You know, it matters or not. It doesn't really matter. Yeah. Also, I come from a time where being moderate was a good thing, and then they people spent years telling you that that meant you didn't have an opinion. And I'm like, that's not true. So I don't know it's very strange. But anyway, I like where we're headed right now, in that, in this, in this one vein, I like that everybody's not running around, judging everybody every five seconds, because that was really tiresome and boring, and I did not enjoy it at all. So okay, well, here we go, Laura, you're awesome. We're calling this episode scribbling. Seriously, it was awesome. Like I I could not have had a better time with you. I appreciate you jumping on on such short notice.
Laura 1:08:06
Oh, good. I'm glad you replied. I'm glad I got to talk to you. You were the
Scott Benner 1:08:10
first person that said they were available, by the way, you weren't the only person who said they were available tomorrow. You were the first person. And I said, first come, first serve. And then there you are. So I genuinely appreciate it. All right. Hold on one second for me. Give me one second.
Thanks for tuning in today, and thanks to Medtronic diabetes for sponsoring this episode. We've been talking about Medtronic mini med 780 G system today, an automated insulin delivery system that helps make diabetes management easier day and night, whether it's their meal detection technology for the Medtronic extended infusion set, it all comes together to simplify life with diabetes. Go find out more at my link, Medtronic diabetes.com/juicebox you 90s, I'd like to thank the blood glucose meter that my daughter carries, the contour next gen blood glucose meter. Learn more and get started today at contour, next.com/juicebox and don't forget, you may be paying more through your insurance right now for the meter you have, then you would pay for the contour next gen in cash. There are links in the show notes of the audio app you're listening in right now, and links at Juicebox podcast.com to contour and all of the sponsors. The episode you just enjoyed was sponsored by the twist a ID system powered by tide pool. If you want a commercially available insulin pump with twist loop that offers unmatched personalization and precision or peace of mind. You want twist, twist.com/juicebox
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#1551 Smart Bites: Processed Foods and Their Impact
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Processed Foods and their Impact on Health
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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.
Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends and welcome back to another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.
Welcome to my nutrition series with Jenny Smith. Jenny and I are going to in very clear and easy to understand ways, walk you from basic through intermediate and into advanced nutritional ideas. We're going to tie it all together with type one diabetes. Talk about processed foods and how you can share these simple concepts with the people in your life, whether it's your children, other adults or even seniors, besides being the person you've heard on the bold beginnings and Pro Tip series and so much more. Jennifer Smith is a person living with type one diabetes for over 35 years. She actually holds a bachelor's degree in Human Nutrition and biology from the University of Wisconsin. She's a registered and licensed dietitian, a certified diabetes educator. She's a trainer on all kinds of pumps and CGM. She's my friend, and I think you're going to enjoy her thoughts on better eating. My diabetes Pro Tip series is about cutting through the clutter of diabetes management to give you the straightforward, practical insights that truly make a difference, this series is all about mastering the fundamentals, whether it's the basics of insulin dosing adjustments or everyday management strategies that will empower you to take control. I'm joined by Jenny Smith, who is a diabetes educator with over 35 years of personal experience, and we break down complex concepts into simple, actionable tips. The Diabetes Pro Tip series runs between Episode 1001 1025 in your podcast player, where you can listen to it at Juicebox podcast.com by going up into the menu, nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan. This episode is sponsored by the tandem mobi system, which is powered by tandems newest algorithm control iq plus technology. Tandem Moby has a predictive algorithm that helps prevent highs and lows, and is now available for ages two and up. Learn more and get started today at tandem diabetes.com/juicebox this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by us med. Us med.com/juicebox, or call 888-721-1514, get your supplies the same way we do from us. Med, today's episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the ever since 365 the one year where CGM, that's one insertion a year. That's it. And here's a little bonus for you. How about there's no limit on how many friends and family you can share your data with with the ever since now, app, no limits. Ever since Jenny, we are moving on to module three, processed foods and their impact on health. Woo hoo. Yay. I love the things you're excited by. I'm gonna open this up, and then I'm gonna let you pick through. It says processed foods can impact health in a variety of ways depending on the type of processing, the ingredients used and how frequently they're consumed. And then we're gonna talk about a number of different impacts and and factors here. So I'm gonna let you go through them also. By the way, I just said, it says, Here, it's notes that we put together. But it is exactly like something told us this. But go ahead. No,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 3:28
they're notes that we put together. Yeah, no. And I think this, this particular kind of topic, I like, where it lies in our flow, because of the way that we've kind of ended with different types of diets or plans for eating along with what happens to the food when you put it in your diet, where digestion goes, it kind of leads into processed food. In general, doesn't typically get digested, absorbed, the same way that foods that are just natural, like an apple versus apple pie from the grocery store full of whatever, yeah, right, or the packaged apple pie slice that's sitting on the shelf at the grocery store. And you're wondering, is the shelf stable, right?
Scott Benner 4:11
How come this doesn't expire for 17 years, right?
Jennifer Smith, CDE 4:14
Like, and another one that'd be kind of along the same lines, like Pop Tarts, right? Right? It's like, technically, fruit in the middle of those maybe, but you get the idea, right? So process versus real food, and I think one of the big ones is because we live, we live in a world today where food is so very available. And I use that term food very loosely, in terms of processed food, if we looked at our nutrient quality in terms of what we take in, we would likely find that a fair number of people actually have some nutrient deficiencies in their body, and oftentimes it comes because the processed foods, as I think we've talked about before, they kind of get stripped of what they started. What food they started out as, and so you'll end up seeing a lot of the boxed packaged foods on the shelves saying enriched, fortified, because they've taken out the stuff that was there to begin with that they grew with, stripped them down to this like white powder, so to speak. And now they have to add everything back in order to qualify it for some type of nutrient value. Yeah, I actually
Scott Benner 5:23
just did a little, a little dive while you were talking. So, oh, I asked our overlords, is there fruit in Pop Tarts? Oh, it says The short answer is kind of, but not really. Some flavors contain a small amount of fruit puree or concentrate, but it's minimal and heavily processed, and it gives examples the strawberries or dried apples or pear concentrate, and that's used to bulk up the fruit flavor. So this is actually from the packaging Kellogg says contains 2% or less of dried strawberries, dried pears or dried apples. So then the answer is, technically, yes, there is fruit in this. But it goes on to say it's processed to oblivion, heated, sweetened and stabilized. The amount is incredibly tiny, and mainly it's just there to flavor it or justify the name, correct, and it's mixed with corn syrup, sugar, artificial flavors and coloring. So if you're imagining a spoonful of mashed up fresh strawberries in there, I'm sorry, it says that ship has sailed. And then it goes on to be it picks a little bit through the marketing of it, and it says, Look, you know, why do they even bother putting fruit into it? It's because it sounds wholesome. It includes trace amounts. So it's allowed to be called Strawberry Pop Tarts, and the fruit, or fruit light taste does help cut the sweetness in all the sugar. So anyway, yes, that's it. And what
Jennifer Smith, CDE 6:51
do we as a good example? I mean, I'm sorry that we're like, hitting on Pop Tarts. Here it was, like one of those first things that came to mind worth talking about Apple. I
Scott Benner 6:58
guess I don't know why we have to apologize to them.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 7:02
You know, in terms of the comparison there, right? You know, their high calorie is one of the first things that I recognize with processed foods. Is an apple. A rough estimate is approximately 50 calories for your typical store bought medium sized Apple, 50 calories. I don't know even what a pop tart is. I'd have to look at the package, but it's probably like per single Pop Tart, even though they come to too little cellophane package is what like 150 calories, 180 calories. So again, not that I'm expecting people are saying, well, I'm eating an apple because I ate an apple Pop Tart, but as a comparison, from a food or a meal type of replacement, you could do better eating the apple with some nut butter or peanut butter. Maybe have similar caloric amount, but they're not empty calories. They're not calories that your body is going to not really recognize in terms of how it processes it on a cellular level, a digestive function level. Whereas the 150 200 calorie Pop Tart, it has very little nutritional value. There's just not there, I
Scott Benner 8:13
would say too. I looked again while you were talking, a pop tart could have 190 to 210 calories in one so that it's 380, to 420, for the pack. And then I went on it a little bit and asked a couple of more questions. A sedentary toddler needs 1000 to 1200 calories a day. Six to eight year old girl who's active 1600 to 1800 like there's a whole list here, but the point is, is that even a very active teenage boy needs only about 3000 calories a day. If you're talking about the teenage boy, you're giving away 1/6 of their calories to two of those pop tarts that then there's nothing functionally valuable in
Jennifer Smith, CDE 8:52
it. And giving away, that's a great way to say it. You're essentially giving away what could be quality nutrient intake that's actually helping in the growing population, you know, the little kids, the sort of pre teen, teenage years, anybody who might be an athlete into their adulthood, you are giving away what could really be boosting cellular benefit? Yeah, you know, so and relying on, you know, what portion of the American Standard American Diet is really relying on processed food for calorie intake. I think people think calories, and have for a very long time, especially since the whole low fat craze came out eons ago, right? It's all calories, calories, calories. But what do we eat food for? Yes, calories. But the behind the scenes is we want the nutrient pieces out of them, the macronutrients that we talked about, the micronutrients that we're supposed to be getting that help overall in our body, not only here and now, but long term.
Scott Benner 9:52
I'm going to kind of tack onto this here by telling you that I searched for give me 20 foods that technically contain real ingredient. It's like fruit, but, oh, this will be good, but amounts so small or processed that they barely resemble a real thing. Can I guess one, Jenny, the amount of things on this list that you've said to me over the years is actually kind of stunning, but it's stunning. But go ahead, guess one Today's episode is sponsored by a long term CGM. It's going to help you to stay on top of your glucose readings the ever since 365 I'm talking, of course, about the world's first and only CGM that lasts for one year, one year, one CGM. Are you tired of those other CGM, the ones that give you all those problems that you didn't expect, knocking them off, false alerts not lasting as long as they're supposed to. If you're tired of those constant frustrations, use my link ever since cgm.com/juicebox, to learn more about the ever since 365 some of you may be able to experience the ever since 365 for as low as $199 for a full year at my link, you'll find those details and can learn about eligibility ever since cgm.com/juicebox, check it out. This episode is sponsored by tandem Diabetes Care, and today I'm going to tell you about tandems, newest pump and algorithm, the tandem mobi system with control iq plus technology features auto Bolus, which can cover missed meal boluses and help prevent hyperglycemia. It has a dedicated sleep activity setting and is controlled from your personal iPhone. Tandem will help you to check your benefits today through my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox, this is going to help you to get started with tandem, smallest pump yet that's powered by its best algorithm ever control iq plus technology helps to keep blood sugars in range by predicting glucose levels 30 minutes ahead, and it adjusts insulin accordingly. You can wear the tandemobi in a number of ways. Wear it on body with a patch like adhesive sleeve that is sold separately. Clip it discreetly to your clothing or slip it into your pocket. Head now to my link, tandem diabetes.com/juicebox, to check out your benefits and get started today, I
Jennifer Smith, CDE 12:11
would guarantee that something along the lines of fruit chews or gummy bears is on the list.
Scott Benner 12:17
Number one, fruit roll ups, mostly corn syrup and sugar with a smidge of pear concentrate posing as strawberry Capri Sun fruit punch. Here's one that I think would stun people, original Yoplait yogurt. Yes, there's fruit in it, but it's more sugar sauce than actual fruit. Sugar sauce is upsetting to me. Well, it's just fruit snacks, Toaster Strudels. Then it gets into vegetable based ideas, veggie straws, which is the thing I brought up before v8 splash Spaghettios, Campbell's tomato soup. It actually says is real tomato Yes, but sugar, salt and starch dominate its profile. Garden veggie chips, which I think is a pretty popular I think they're kind of similar to veggie straws, almost potato starch, oil, few sprinkles of vegetable powder, things that are made with real cheese. It says kind of spray cheese, cheez, its Velveeta nacho cheese, Doritos, things that we've brought up before. Yep, here's one for you, made with meat. Lunchable pizza with pepperoni. The pepperoni in quotes, is usually a blend of meats and fillers, Hot Pockets, real meat and cheese are listed, but highly processed, chopped and stabilized. God only knows what stabilized means. A meat stick that once new beef is how it describes a Slim Jim that once new beef. I love that it's now filled with mechanically separated meat and additives. Chicken Nuggets contains chicken, but often ground, emulsified and padded with starches and binders. And didn't you
Jennifer Smith, CDE 13:49
tell me years ago when Arden liked them, right? And you're like, I can make these and I can make them from real food, right? It's
Scott Benner 13:56
one of the things that all I knew, is that I was not as healthy as I should be. I had kids, and I was now in charge of feeding them, and I didn't know what I was doing, and they love chicken nuggets. I said, One day I'm like, these. This is just, if it's just chicken with breading on it, why the hell don't I buy chicken, cut it up and put breading on it? Right? Yeah. And a to extend the rest of that story, it took a while before my kids were like, oh, okay, I'll eat these. Because the first time they were like, hey, actually, my son goes, This doesn't taste like chicken. And I thought, oh, in the face of eating real chicken, he's like, this isn't chicken. I was like, oh, like, what am I doing here? You know what I mean? Yeah.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 14:37
I mean, if we went down that rabbit tunnel, which I'll give a one second kind of one minute kind of thing, but it's a lot of children today. I think adults are a little bit more knowledgeable, obviously, but kids don't typically know where food comes from, right? And if we're educating, it is very and from a meat standpoint, too. It's like your son. Didn't think it tasted like chicken, because what he was getting was, as you just stated, a mix of a whole bunch of processed stuff with little tidbits of some type of factory farm processed chicken that got mulled down, and then whole whole bunches of other things added to it. And that's what they identify as chicken. It's not chicken, right? I mean, if you start showing kids where their food comes from, meat specifically, their eyes open up,
Scott Benner 15:25
yeah? Well, and nowadays, by the way, if I gave him, like a frozen chicken nugget, he'd be like, What is this? Don't give me this garbage, right? Yeah, let's move forward. Because this, I feel like he could just keep whipping this horse forever, forever. Yeah, because I have found myself, I did a follow up and ask it like to do a deeper dive on what the chicken like. The way it it described chicken nuggets like. What does that actually mean? And it's breaking down mechanically processed chicken emulsifying processes. None of this is exciting. No, not one of these things. Do you read and think, oh, I should eat this?
Jennifer Smith, CDE 16:02
No. And their video is actually their YouTube video is showing how chicken nuggets get made. And once you watch it, and the pink paste that comes out and gets formed and coated, I guarantee you won't eat a chicken nugget in your life. Again. If you
Scott Benner 16:16
ever bought one, you're gonna say, no. But have you ever bought a chicken nugget from McDonald's, and the first bite into it, you're like, This is awesome, but if it cools off even a little bit and you take another bite, you go, ooh, something's wrong,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 16:29
good. I need the whole container of barbecue sauce to put this next bite in. For me, it
Scott Benner 16:34
would be sweet and sour, but I'm right there. Okay, yeah. Are we gonna move to number two here? Yeah,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 16:39
number two, you know processed food? I mean, there are a lot of hits coming from processed foods, and they're widely available, but weight gain, obesity, I mean, they are. They're a huge piece. Why? Because the foods call in, again, high calorie intake. Processed foods contain what you've already and I've already said high sugar amounts, high fat amounts, high sodium amounts, and they don't lead to satiety, or the feeling of being satisfied in the aftermath of a meal, so you end up eating more of them, right? You don't get the four piece. You get the 12 piece, because you know that the four piece isn't going to be enough. Well, four piece probably also isn't balanced. If you put a side salad with it, if you need an apple with it, you know the balance there, right? So in terms of weight management, overall, we end up eating a lot more when it comes to processed food. To finally get the brain sensation from our stomach that, yes, you've now had enough to eat, and by that point, you've probably over eaten by a minimum of 500 calories.
Scott Benner 17:47
Yeah, yeah, that's crazy. And that's at a meal or a sitting Correct, right? And then you might do that two or three more times today, right? Yeah, absolutely.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 17:54
And, you know, I mean, in terms of those other pieces, there are books, easy books to read that have been written on what the manufacturing companies know about the hit point, right? What they want is you to become sort of encouraged to continue purchasing their product. It's like a hit, you know, you eat one of those shaped potato chips out of the cans. You mean? Pringles? Oh, Pringles, thank you. Yes, you can't just eat one, right? Why? Because they've, they've now kind of hooked you, and it hits all of the places that in your brain tell you to do it more. It's like an addiction. It becomes like an addiction, and then it's hard to break that, and it's hard to despite being a smart person and knowing you shouldn't do it, it's hard to not do it because it's become a habit that goes in your grocery cart. It comes home, it makes you feel good when you've had a crappy day, you come home and your Pringle can is there? Whatever it is,
Scott Benner 18:52
yeah, no, I hear you. So you're eating a bunch of food quantity. It's got a ton of calories in it, but yet, it's not doing the thing that eating is supposed to do for you. I used to hate ordering my daughter's diabetes supplies. I never had a good experience, and it was frustrating. But it hasn't been that way for a while, actually, for about three years now, because that's how long we've been using us Med, US med.com/juicebox, or call, 888-721-1514, us. Med is the number one distributor for FreeStyle Libre systems nationwide. They are the number one specialty distributor for Omnipod dash, the number one fastest growing tandem distributor nationwide, the number one rated distributor in Dexcom customer satisfaction surveys, they have served over 1 million people with diabetes since 1996 and they always provide 90 days worth of supplies and fast and free shipping us med carries everything from insulin pumps and diabetes testing supplies to the latest CGMS. Like the libre three and Dexcom g7 they accept Medicare nationwide and over 800 private insurers find out why us med has an A plus rating with a better business bureau at us med.com/juicebox, or just call them at 888-721-1514, get started right now, and you'll be getting your supplies the same way we do
Jennifer Smith, CDE 20:26
correct, yeah, exactly what goes along with it? We're, you know, bringing diabetes into the whole mix, whether you have type one or type two, or maybe pre diabetes, or maybe you have a family history with, you know, some type of weight management issue. What goes along with it is insulin resistance, right? And anytime we're putting in more of these processed kinds of foods, what are most processed foods? What's the macronutrient?
Scott Benner 20:51
After reading all this, I don't
Jennifer Smith, CDE 20:55
know even all the the processed stuff that your list brought up,
Scott Benner 20:58
carbs, yeah, but I was gonna say goo on my brain is completely rewired.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 21:04
Yes, it's kind of goo. It's like a paste, right? Instead of white rice, it's white rice flour in many of or whatever it is. And so we end up getting the spike, the rapid up down, because carbs get processed fast. We know that with diabetes from learning about insulin timing and all of that kind of stuff. But the more we have to hit that spike, the faster it gets processed out of our system. With the insulin that we take to management down, we swing blood sugar is dropping, and now we end up eating more and we take more insulin. It goes in, or our bodies make more insulin, you know, whether you have type two or or whatever. And so over time that hit in the body requires it to respond more and more and more and insulin resistance specific to the type two population, it means that your betas kind of get pooped out. Yeah, right. And overall, it's then a risk for those who are at risk of type two diabetes. It also, I mean processed foods, they're not great for having you have like you mentioned before about more steady energy when we were talking previously about the different kinds of diets, right? That you feel like you have a lot more stable, steady energy in the past couple of years, as you've cleaned up your lifestyle and you've made some changes to things, but processed food that call for more of it. Oh, it's out, I need more. Oh, it's out, I need more. That energy pull from the body leaves you feeling considerably fatigued, because it's not giving you anything sustainable, right?
Scott Benner 22:41
And also, then you couple that with people's sometimes varied understanding of how to actually use their insulin to begin with, and now they're putting themselves in situations where they're constantly having to eat, and oftentimes constantly having to eat, like, high sugar foods to keep you know, all of a sudden the food becomes medicine, and you can't not do it, right? I'm 77 two hours down. I'm eating sugar like, this is what's gonna happen, yeah? Oh, it just goes back. You know, it's interesting, as we continue to have this conversation, it made me wonder, what year did the book Soylent Green come out? And it's 1973 so we've been talking about this since at least, like I was born in 71 so this is a conversation in society for 50 plus years that, like, you know, you know the book? I do know that. Yeah, okay, all right. So if you don't know the book, you should look into it, right? But it's basically, it's a look at climate change, food insecurity, corporate power over food pharma, urban overpopulation, like that whole thing, of like, there's a lot of people here, and we got to feed them, and we got to take care of them, so we're going to make this goo and feed it to them, you know? And I so it's funny, because I get it, and the entire time we're having this conversation, it's not lost on me. The people who are listening are not the people who put this process into place. No, correct? Yeah, they're just going to the food store, and they're trying to stay alive, right? Like, and they have a certain amount of money and a certain amount of time, and they're like, listen, I know a pop tart is not good for my kid. I'm not an idiot, thanks. But, like, I don't know what to do. And, right? You know what I mean? Like, it's the entire time we're having this conversation, I feel that, like, just under the surface, I feel like we're saying something that is either not obvious to people or it's obvious to them, and they have to ignore it for a number of different reasons. And on top of all that, and not to feel political, but like, on top of all that, they're in a they're in a situation not of their own making.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 24:35
Correct? Yeah, no, absolutely. And it's, it's also not, you know, I'm not blind to the fact of processed foods can look I say, I would say, like, economically better,
Scott Benner 24:48
not right? But, yeah, not
Jennifer Smith, CDE 24:51
lately. But in general, like, you know, all the commercials that I rarely see if I'm ever watching television, but the things that come up, like, get them. Real Deal. You know, it's got this and this and this. And you're thinking, great, that's a lot of food. It's a lot of quote, unquote food. But really, what it is, it's a lot of calorie, yeah, and it's, it is bulk, right? And it may feed a family, but what are you missing? Going back to the nutrients you're missing, what really your body is craving. And again, it's not lost on me, either. The fact of food is expensive these days. I mean, the past several years, food has continued to increase in price. There are economical ways to eat real food at a price that could work for the majority of people. Yeah,
Scott Benner 25:41
you have to get over the hump of the I'll just call it the addiction. Like, you have to get over the hump of the addiction. You have to the processed foods that you've been eating and clear, clear that out of yourself so that you can keep going. But the truth is, is, like you, you could buy, listen, it's not inexpensive, but you could probably buy four chicken breasts for somewhere around seven to $9 like, right? And, and I weigh 180 I don't know what I weighed 178 pounds this morning, right? I can only eat like half a chicken breast. You can get three, four pounds of ground meat if you have a large family and give everybody a cheeseburger, at least it's actually ground meat. You know what I mean, so or
Jennifer Smith, CDE 26:16
making it go further, you know, things like vegetable protein casseroles or really good soups. I mean, you can stretch food to be both satisfying as well as quality, in terms of the nutrients you want to provide, even on a really tight budget. I mean, one of the things I would again, if I was going back to school for a lot of different things, I would love to be able to somebody would have to economically help me. But I'd love to, like, go to people's homes who wanted me there and be like, What should I clean up? How can I make this versus this? How can I change this versus change that? Because I think there is a want, but I think people are so lost in their habits of what does work and what they figure figured out budget wise that it's it's hard to make that change on their own. Yeah, and I feel bad about that.
Scott Benner 27:05
Just the entire time we're talking, I'm thinking, we're either telling people something they don't know and they're happy to hear, or we're telling people something that they completely understand and don't know how to escape, right? They can't apply it. Yeah, when you look down this list of I mean, you just went over blood sugar and insulin resistance. Insulin resistance. But you know, in a minute, we're going to talk about inflammation, your heart, your gut health, your mental health, right, like and risk some other chronic diseases, all from this, the root of this one problem, you know?
Jennifer Smith, CDE 27:34
So, yeah, and it, as you listed them, kind of increased inflammation, right? That's a heavy hitter. We hear the word inflammation a lot, but when we look at the other pieces here, heart health and your gut health and how your brain functions, and even those big chronic diseases that we hear about over and over and over again, a lot of them are linked to inflammation in the body. It's how the body processes a lot of different things. I mean, stress can also create inflammation, but food is a is another hit there in terms of inflammatory process. And some people might have more inflammation because their body doesn't like even if it is a healthy food, maybe your body doesn't like it the most. So that could create gut inflammation until you take it out of your, you know, out of your diet, but these foods often contain a lot more unhealthy processed types of fats. Thankfully, we've gotten rid of most, like trans fats are technically like allowed anymore, but it doesn't take care of the fat we talked about before was like canola oil and some of the seed oils and those types of things. I mean, they're in all of these packaged processed foods. You may talk about preservatives. There's a lot of back and forth. It's like a 5050 when we talk about artificial sweeteners and what that does in the body, and also the food colors and the dyes and those kinds of things. And you know, whichever side you're going to sit on, just know that they weren't really created in the field across the street, in the farmer's lot, right? They just they weren't. So we talk about inflammation, it's really boils down to, how does your body deal with it? And if it's once a year that you're eating blue gummy bears, probably not that big of a deal. But if that's something that's in your diet, on an ongoing process, I guarantee that your body is not responding well to that. Yeah.
Scott Benner 29:26
And that's tough, because everybody who's listening right now just said, Oh, my God, I have a bag of gummy bears in my house. Yeah? And listen, I buy a five pound bag of gummy bears probably twice a year. And I would say that a third of them get thrown away because they're in people's cars or they're in bags, and they get stale eventually, and, like, you don't end up using them. But right? They're also mainly how Arden, like, stabilizes a low blood sugar. Is a gummy bear here, gummy bear there. It's, I don't know, Jenny, this whole thing is upsetting. It
Jennifer Smith, CDE 29:57
is. And I that's where I'm like, God, treat your low blood sugar, slow. Right, right? Yeah, we're not
Scott Benner 30:00
gonna not do that, right? I'll explode it out for a second. If everyone was eating the way Jenny is eating, I don't think you'd have as many low blood sugars. Is that fair? Because you wouldn't be using as much insulin, you wouldn't have as many spikes, you wouldn't be making as many big, aggressive Bolus I mean, honestly, how often do you get low? Define
Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:18
low because, I mean, I define a low by whether or not it needs to be treated. I am using an A I D system, right? So I do have a saver in terms of that. But
Scott Benner 30:28
how often are you saying, Oh, no, this isn't gonna stop. I have to have something, and it's so emergent that it has to be sugary and quick. Oh,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:35
emergent. Very, very rare. Do
Scott Benner 30:38
you not think that's somewhat a mix of an A I D system healthy eating and exercise
Jennifer Smith, CDE 30:45
and knowledge about what my typical variables do, right and how to
Scott Benner 30:49
adjust your insulin, where it needs to be adjusted. Yeah, yeah, no. Again, like, you've been doing this a very long time, and we've talked about this before. You had a very like, you had an excellent launch into life about food from your parents, like you got, I think you got lucky there. That's, that's incredibly Yeah, 100% Yeah. Like, even as we're talking and I realized that I was able to break whatever addiction I had to food. I used the GOP to do it. Not everybody could do that. And if I didn't have that, I don't think I could have done it either. And I just had an experience with a an acquaintance the other day, who, after a year of just fighting to get a GLP medication, they got it, and now, three months later, are telling me, like, I don't want to do this anymore. And I said, why? And they said, Well, I haven't lost any weight. And that person's on the phone with me sitting outside of a convenience store having lunch. And I was like, Yeah, well, I mean, I feel like maybe you're just eating through it. Like, you know what I mean, like, you can, like, just don't have lunch here. Like, I think that would be, like, a great start. First start. It's not magic. You don't put it in and, like, you magically, like, start dwindling away. Like, it should make you not think about food quite as often so you can get over this addiction. Blah, blah, blah. And the person said, No, I just love food. And when, when he started talking about it, I realized that, like, his identity, like, you know, how we talked about in the last episode about, like, special diets and people like, you know, like, well, you know, I had a personal experience with this, and that's why I feel like this is universal truth, or it's tribalism, right? Like, you're like, Oh no, it's keto. It's the way to go. Sometimes, nutrition can be confusing or whatever. Like, I realized that his tribe is, I like food. I didn't think of that as this as a fueling plan, but it is like in people's minds, and
Jennifer Smith, CDE 32:33
what does it boil back to? I mean, one of the things that we're, you know, kind of going to get to, but we could, it fits right here, is addiction, like eating habits, yeah, and why? Right? The food, as you described, he's not sitting somewhere eating a whole roasted chicken. He's sitting outside of a convenience store eating a meal of whatever it was. But what's in that food? Again, high inflammatory types of ingredients, sugars, fats, sodium, and those foods have grabbed that addictive piece in his brain and have landed him unfortunately. I mean, he is, this is completely not a conscious thought to him. Oh no, as to why.
Scott Benner 33:15
And then once you get to like the talking about it part, it's all so ingrained, like, I really don't mean, I know this is going to sound like crazy to somebody, but he talked about eating the way I've heard, like, people talk about drugs, like, not, I don't mean, like, weed. I mean, like, you know, like, I'm talking about, like, Yo, man, you don't understand. I need the thing. Like, like, heroin kind of, like, talk like, serious it
Jennifer Smith, CDE 33:37
is, yeah, they're palatable. A lot of people don't realize, again, as we've said, food digestion kind of starts in the mouth, but a lot of people are very on a subconscious level. They like the way certain foods like feel, feel as they chew them, as their taste buds get the tastes that all mingle together, and because processed foods are so clicked in to hitting all of those places. You know, your taste buds taste different things around your whole mouth, right? There's salt in one place, there's sweeter in one place, there's sour in another place. And they've figured out how to manufacture these foods to hit all of the desire places. And then you can't get away from that
Scott Benner 34:17
to circle back to inflammation for a second. Yeah. Most of you listening already have autoimmune problems in your life, correct, right? And so you're, you're probably experiencing inflammation to begin with, and now this is probably adding to that problem.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 34:33
Yeah, and with diabetes, you know, multiple of these, along with that inflammation, inflammation pieces, you know, we know that we are more we have more potential to heart health issues, more cardiovascular risk factors. We're told about it probably every single time we go to the doctor, right? They look at your lipid panel or your cholesterol panel. They look at, you know, what's your lifestyle like, etc. But you. Inflammation is a huge piece in heart health. It's in the vessels in the body, and what that leads to in the heart, and how, how well your heart can pump, versus how hard it has to pump, to move the blood around your body, to circulate the nutrients that are supposed to be in the food that you're eating, right? And when we have the potential to have that mismanaged in our body. We want to do as much as we possibly can to decrease this inflammation. And if some of it, not all of it, but if some of it can come from healthier choices in what we put in for the caloric part of you know, what we what our bodies need, it can make a difference. Yeah.
Scott Benner 35:40
I find myself sitting here thinking about all the conversations I've I've ever witnessed online around food, talking about tribalism. Like, there are people who, once they figure this out, instead of just talking about the way you and I are right now, which I think is a very like, measured, reasonable, like, look, here it is. You know, you do whatever you take what you need do whatever you want with it, right? But there are some people who come from the like, No, you're wrong and you're killing yourself and blah, blah, blah. And I figured it out, they get tribal about it, and then these conversations never happen in community settings, because you're either a crazy health person or you're a crazy unhealthy person. And like, and then that's how people think of each other, right? And the person who's not eating super clean, they're like, I'm not doing anything terrible here. Like, I'm just, I'm at the grocery store buying food, just like everybody else. And also, like, like, with many things, eating this kind of way, like the way we're saying, like, try not to eat this way if you can. When you do that, it's not like, you have a pop tart and then you're in, your foot falls off. It's not like your head pops off after you eat, like Cheerios. It's just like diabetes really, like you cannot take care of yourself. The drift is so slow that you don't feel it happening. And then once you get there, you don't even know you're there, because it took so it took so long. I think eating and diabetes have that very much in common, absolutely,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 37:02
100% I you know, and in any health condition, which is why, you know, we bring up these health conditions in terms of that processed food singular piece, you know, we look at not only heart health, but you know, gut health, right? We talked a lot before about how food processes gets through your digestive system, where nutrients get absorbed, etc, but our digestive system is also supposed to clean out things, you know, poop, right? It's like, I was like the word poop 2o, is 2p. Is what's not to like, if it's
Scott Benner 37:31
not coming out, right, Jenny, it's probably not going in, right? That's all
Jennifer Smith, CDE 37:34
correct. No, that's it's a great way to think about it. Many processed foods are low in what? What helps you poop, fiber, fiber, right? So if you're not going to the bathroom regularly, you can start looking at, well, what's the percent of process in the diet that I eat? Maybe I could sneak in some salad every single day instead of the veggie straws, for example, right? And in terms of digestive issues, things like constipation and whatever in diabetes, can certainly mean fluctuations in blood sugar. If that food isn't processing through your system efficiently the way that it's supposed to, it will make a difference in your blood sugars. I don't want
Scott Benner 38:17
to say this because I'm so afraid you'll hear it, but I know it's been said in the podcast in the past. I watched Arden from a distance have a sticky blood sugar in the 170s yesterday afternoon, and then she doesn't listen anyway. Not only she hears this, right? They had lunch, and she stood up and she's like, I'll be back. And I was like, Okay. And then she left for a while and came back, and then her blood sugar started to fall. You know, where she went? The bathroom. She went to the bathroom. Yep, the bathroom. Things happen, and her blood sugar started to come
Jennifer Smith, CDE 38:48
down. So and then, you know, in the whole process, food, kind of consideration, what's another piece that helps things move through your body is water. Water, plain and simple, right? And processed has also hit the fluid piece of our intake. We no longer just drink water. It's got to have something in it. It's got to taste like something. It's, you know, and so depending on what that makeup is, it could actually be leading to more disruption in our digestive system as well.
Scott Benner 39:18
I'm guilty of that, of not only drinking things that taste like something I've tried so many different times, and I just, I still can't break the idea of like the problem with water is tastes like water. And I know that's ridiculous, but it literally. I mean, listen, I grew up in the 70s, like we used to have a container on the top of our refrigerator that I guarantee was 18 inches high, and probably like a football around, and it just had powder and a scoop in it. And there was a one gallon jug, and you'd fill it at the sink and put in a bunch of scoops and mix it up. And that was what you drank.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 39:52
That was what you drank, right? And, I mean, you know, water doesn't have to taste like nothing. Put a little bit of lemon juice, lime juice, put squish up. An orange slice and put it in the bottom. It enhances the flavor of the water. So it doesn't have to be truly just plain water, damn
Scott Benner 40:06
it. Jenny, I'm gonna do that as soon as we're done. There you go. I'm gonna go downstairs. I have a water jug. I'm gonna put I have oranges. I'm just gonna do that, and then I'm gonna try my hardest to drink that today instead of I'm absolutely gonna try. Is there value in adding a little like fiber to your diet? If you can't get it into your diet, like Metamucil or something like that? Sure.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 40:28
I mean, Metamucil is out there. Citrusy is out there. One of the ones that I typically recommend is psyllium husk powder or fiber, again, any of these. It's not a slow drink through the day. If you add any of these to your water, it's a you have to drink the whole eight ounce, 10 ounce glass at once, or it's going to get like sludge at the bottom. But absolutely, it could be helpful to add it in if you do know that your diet is lacking in that department. Again, we just want things moving sufficiently through your digestive system you should be eliminating every single day. Yes, you
Scott Benner 41:03
gotta poop every day. You have to poop every day. Everybody poops not. Everybody poops every day. Yes, yep, gut health too. I'll say for myself to get over a hump and get my gut health together. I used probiotics for a while. Sure, there are people in my family who, have, you know, sometimes have uneasiness in their stomach, but they're very consistent with probiotics, and it helps them a lot. Yeah, you know to help that. I know it's a thing that's probably understood by the people understand it, but not much by the general public. About You know, the gut biome is, it's a big deal. It has a lot to do with our next topic here too, is your mental health. I tell people how their diet impacts their mood. So
Jennifer Smith, CDE 41:42
again, when we have nutrient dense food, we take in the nutrients that our body truly and actually needs. Our cells use them. It sends them to all the places in the body that require this nutrient versus that nutrient, right? So when we have a lot of processed food versus the other quality types of of nutrients. Essentially, we end up having as we've already talked about some blood sugar instability. We've also talked about inflammation. You can have inflammation in the brain as well, and it really impacts your mood. Think about the roller coaster that you have in blood sugar versus a day that runs nice and smooth. There is a very big difference in what you have to pay attention to on the roller coaster day compared to the non roller coaster day, right? They impact a lot of the different refined types of foods in these processed foods that we might be eating can also affect different they're called neurotransmitters in the brain, and they can really mess with the feel good response versus the more depressive response in the body. They can disrupt sleep. How much quality sleep you're actually getting, which we know sleep is huge in mental health and also in blood sugar management. You know, in terms of nutrients, the quality would put in makes a difference all over the body, inclusive of your brain. Living with diabetes already more stable blood sugar means that you have, you have less in a way to navigate, and that can improve your mood. You're not always fighting something. You've got it navigated so that the ups and downs are truly they're there because you'd expect them to be there, and you know how to manage them, so it's less less attention from a diabetes angle,
Scott Benner 43:35
right? So your brain gets fuel starved, and that impacts emotional regulations, you can get hit with a lot of hormones like, gosh, adrenaline and cortisol, right? That could make you snappy or anxious or whatever, sure, right? Then there's impulse control problems. If your blood sugar gets low, right, impaired prefrontal cortex, yep, struggling to think rationally, lashing out before you process making poor decisions like eating. It actually says like eating four Snickers bars instead of having a meal, correct? That kind of not talking about a low blood sugar, like an emergent low blood sugar, but just in general, right? But just
Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:11
in general. And then what's the opposite? The opposite is high, I know high blood sugars, at least for me, what my my symptom that I absolutely hate, and thus really work hard to not have high blood sugars, is sleepiness, fatigue, almost like a cloudiness in the way that I move through my I feel like I'm kind of like slogging through mud. I just don't have the energy that I have, you know, hoped to have to get
Scott Benner 44:37
through the day. If you push through hunger instead of fueling you could it slows down your digestion, shifts your metabolism, fatigue and weakness sets in, and your body could start eating muscle or and breaking down muscle for energy, right? We don't
Jennifer Smith, CDE 44:50
want to happen. No, you want to keep as much muscle as you possibly can, because at some point, muscle starts to decline anyway in life. So you want to keep as much. As you possibly
Scott Benner 45:00
can. And if all that doesn't motivate you, it can affect your empathy, like the actual like communication. You can misinterpret neutral comments as attacks. You can get sarcastic cold or passive aggressive and snap at people you care about, and then, of course, regret it later.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 45:14
And with today's communication being often without facial connection, yeah, talk can happen much more frequently, right? If you can't see how somebody's responding to the comment that you've made, but it's a text message or something you've popped in on an online forum. If you're already on this roller coaster of emotion, it's going to be even worse. Yeah, you pick
Scott Benner 45:33
up your phone, you think, what does that mean? And everyone's guilty of that, I'll tell you too, online is a great example. Y'all don't know how many notes I get from people that say, Hey, I saw you deleted my comment, or you suspended me for a day, or something that I just wanted to tell you my blood sugar was low, and I'm really sorry, like, it's not how I actually interviewed a woman yesterday, before we started recording, she said, you know, you once suspended me from the group for three days, and I always thought about reaching out to apologize to you, and then just told me a story about she had a low blood sugar. She jumped on saw something, it hit her the wrong way, and she got typing, and that was it. And I was like, No, but that's this. I know that's crazy to think, but for some of you, but it could just be what you're eating, so
Jennifer Smith, CDE 46:19
some of Yeah, or how you're how you're navigating what you're eating, and everything that goes with it, and the whole general scheme of things, processed foods are
Scott Benner 46:28
harder. Yeah? And Jenny, I don't want to minimize it. Some of you might be, but that's but it also could be this, do you want to keep going? Or are you out of time? Yeah, no, I'm good. I've got about like, 15 minutes. Oh, awesome. We could finish this up. Yeah, absolutely. All right. Well, here's a here's an upbeat one. Go ahead.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 46:45
Yeah, risk of chronic diseases, all of the I mean, we're really hitting on the big ones that encompass the majority of unfortunately, like death in especially in the United States, we've got heart disease that we talked about, we just talked about mental health. But diving deeper is more like dementia and Alzheimer's kind of beyond, right? And then we've got, what other chronic diseases, cancer risk? Yeah, right. So we've got, I mean, there are many, many, many studies that look at food, real food, versus more processed food. And we already talked about meats, your chicken nugget example, right? But the more processed and meat process, thinking beyond what you know, we talked about things like your hot dogs, your deli meats, foods with a lot of artificial preservative, things like nitrates in them, they do have some good studies relative to the processed nature of those foods and the additives and the ingredients leading to higher cancer risk, especially like your digestive cancers,
Scott Benner 47:52
colon, esophageal, even, or No, I wonder maybe that's too
Jennifer Smith, CDE 47:58
that might be too high. Yeah, the esophagus is more relative to how your body is responding to that, like a GERD. You have this little like GERD, right? You're supposed to have this little valve at the top that doesn't allow food to come back and again, depending on maybe your body's response to food, you may actually not be tolerating some of the things that you're taking in. Maybe they are more processed. They could come back up, and that can erode things, creating more risk. There
Scott Benner 48:23
that one example, deli meats. My father in law, he thought that was like, deli meat was like quality food because it was expensive and he couldn't afford it when he was younger. So interesting, right? Like, we couldn't afford to, like, stand at the deli like proper people and wait for our half a pound of this and quarter a pound of that and stuff. That and stuff like that. But once he could afford it, he thought he was eating well, like, and you couldn't have talked him out of it in a million years. Like, I still have trouble telling my wife, because she grew up with watching her dad be like, No, this is like, look, this is us properly succeeding. You know what I mean? And I all the time I'm like, That's not food. Like, it just isn't, like, that's not Turkey. There is Turkey. You could buy it and we can make it and then take out your knife and cut it yourself and slice it up. Yeah, and I do that, by the way. And sometimes people it just sits. I'll get like, a half a turkey breast and make it and slice it, and it's awesome, and I'll pick at it, and but some people will just like, Oh, it's too like, it's almost like, it's more, I don't know what the word is, but when you make it that thin slice, it somehow attracts people's like, I don't know what I'm saying. Well, what is it? Also, it's almost like the packaging sexier, for some reason, like,
Jennifer Smith, CDE 49:34
almost. But it's also, what are we talking about in general? With processed foods, they're convenient. It's easy. Yeah, easy. You take the slices out of the package. Oh, goodness, it goes pretty far. I can make, you know, 12 sandwiches out of this pack of meat. Now, are there quality choices? Sure. Go to the deli counter, ask what the ingredients are in the deli meats that aren't packaged in plastic at your grocery store. Watch them slice it from the. Actual, like breast right? There are ways that you can still have deli meats, so to speak, that don't include a lot of those artificial preservatives. Yeah, but again, it takes looking for them and then buying them. So
Scott Benner 50:12
it's all about the pre the preservation too, about it's about them being able to unwrap it today, slice them off of it, wrap it back up, and have it there again tomorrow and the next day and the next day, and it doesn't go bad. And you know, if you took my process and just took a turkey breast and put it in the deli, it'd be bad in a few hours, like just sitting out in the air like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Jennifer Smith, CDE 50:33
And then, you know, again, other chronic diseases, and we talked about diabetes, type two diabetes, but where do things actually get started? It's something that we call metabolic syndrome, right, which includes a lot of different factors that we we kind of lump it into heart health or cardiovascular diseases, things like changes in your blood pressure, changes in your cholesterol levels. You know, even a family history of some of the things like stroke or heart attack definitely includes elevated blood sugar levels. Obviously, all of these we're looking at when you don't have type one diabetes. We're looking at more from the realm of type two. But can you have metabolic syndrome along with type one diabetes? Yeah, absolutely you can. Oh, sure,
Scott Benner 51:15
I've seen people have it. I think Arden has it from PCOS, like just, she basically has type one diabetes and she's insulin resistant, and they're not the same, they're not the same focus, no. And
Jennifer Smith, CDE 51:28
the resistance is the hard part of that. The insulin resistance, despite doing the healthy food things and getting some kind of exercise, even PCOS, is a really difficult one to navigate, because it brings in some of these things that are metabolic in nature, despite you doing your best at managing your lifestyle stuff. So
Scott Benner 51:49
it's a lot of work. It really is, like, you wouldn't, like, you know, you wouldn't bring Arden in here, look at her and think, like, Oh, she's, you know, she has insulin resistance. Like, he just wouldn't think that about her. But it's, a lot to fight through. It, really is. It is, I guess we've hit on this a couple of times. But to finish up with the addiction, like eating habits. Yeah, your
Jennifer Smith, CDE 52:07
friend was the best example. I think, you know, in terms of making the foods have been made. They're made essentially for your body to like them, your brain to like them. That's where the hit point for any addiction comes is your brain and some personalities, honestly, are much more likely to have an addictive quality to them, and because of the way that these processed foods have all of the right pieces linked together, the reason you can keep going back and going back and going back and again, because they're nutrient poor and calorically dense, you don't fill up on just a little bit of it. You have to keep going back and going back and get more of it. And again, thus overeating and, you know, triggers things in the brain that lead you to doing it more and more and more. It's like, like, Halloween, right? You get started on eating a Halloween bucket, and it's, it's so good, like, you just want to go back for another little Snickers bite. You just want to go back for another little you know, whatever.
Scott Benner 53:12
11 days later, you're pulling, like, some candy out of the bottom. You're like, I don't even like this, but hey, I don't know what this is. The basket empties. And you're like, Oh, all right, I guess I go back to my and you look up and it's the middle of November, right? You've been eating Halloween candy for weeks. And
Jennifer Smith, CDE 53:28
what does it bring in, you know, to those people who are more, I guess, receptive to kind of emotional eating, or more receptive to this dysregulation in their own ability to choose, you end up having a really poor relationship with understanding why you're eating. If you're eating to satisfy a desire, you're not eating to satisfy. The real reason for putting food in your mouth, and is that it's to sustain life,
Scott Benner 53:59
right? And it's not that there's not a balance, like, you said it earlier, right? Like, it's cool. If once in a while you're like, hey, yeah, I like this. This is fun. You know what I mean? Like, yes, I think it's the availability of the food 100% that causes the problem for somebody. Like, right? If you had to, like, get up on Sunday morning and go get a bushel of apples and squish them up to make an apple pie. Well, you'd have an apple pie once in a while, but, yes, but when there's a hand size, like, literally, a hand sized apple pie at the cash register while you're leaving the gas station, Well, hell, we can eat them all the time, right? And then it's like, well, there's three for $1 like, awesome. I'll get three of them. And, like, I don't have one for later. And then, oh, I can go wait. I can go to a big box store and get 50 of these. Like, oh, now they're in the closet. It's that, if you don't see the same thing as when I told the story about, like, I caught my little brother smoking when he was a kid. And I said, Listen, if I was you, I would just think about 10 really rich people in a boardroom laughing at you for buying their cigarettes. Like, that's kind of how I feel about the food, too. Yeah, like, someone has marketed you into a health issue or a future health issue, and they're going to be rich and you're going to be dead, and that's tough. Like, it's just what it is, you know? So, right? Anyway, no, and
Jennifer Smith, CDE 55:13
that's, it's a, it's a good example, essentially, because really, you're, you're feeding a desire in your brain that came from somebody's idea of how to actually get you addicted? Yeah,
Scott Benner 55:23
no, somebody took advantage of what they understand about how the human body works to get you to think, oh, I absolutely need this candy bar, or I absolutely should be drinking this soda. I We haven't even, like, hit on soda yet, but soda is just like, unconscionable that it's even made. And I like a glass of soda once in a while, but like, it's, it's not 1955 and you're not having a coke at the soda counter. Soda counter, yeah, it's not the same thing. You've bought 17 bottles because it was on sale, $9 for four. And you're like, Oh, it's a deal. And
Jennifer Smith, CDE 55:56
that's a very good example going to, so to speak, the soda counter for a nice glass of that they, you know, bring you. It's got ice in it, and it's frosty on the outside. And you were probably there with your boyfriend or your girlfriend who you wanted to take along with you, and it was like 10 cents for the glass. And it was a treat. However, you weren't
Scott Benner 56:16
going to have another one Until next Saturday, correct? Yeah, yes, it wasn't
Jennifer Smith, CDE 56:20
the god, there are cans of this on the shelf. So why should we go to the soda counter? Right?
Scott Benner 56:24
Right? I mean, I'm gonna guess that a bucket of popcorn at a movie in 1960 didn't like it wasn't as big as my dog.
Unknown Speaker 56:33
Wasn't a bucket at all. It said free
Scott Benner 56:36
refills at the end, and you're like, oh, it's only $20 what a deal there's free, I don't know. And then you got to go put buttery, buttery flavored topping on it. And it's probably, it's just none of it's, it's a lot of what you're doing isn't what you think you're doing, I guess is my point. So, all right, I'll let you go. Thank you so much. No, thank you. You
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