Are you trying to tell us something? I think congratulations are in order
Iām agreeing with heat and humidity, along with one other thought. Iām active and work out consistently, but what Iāve found by looking at some of my trends is that sometimes extra exercise during a period of time can show up in my numbers and insulin requirements days and days later. At least it seems to be the case for me. As Iāve become more and more fit, my insulin requirements have continued to steadily drop as well, with a few plateauās along the wayā¦ I wonder if this idea can be applied over a longer period of time, say weeks after being particularly active for a prolonged period.
I totally agree w/ Kimberly. at least, honeymooning, heat, and humidity (depending on which part of mexico). Probably activity, as well. When on vacation, you typically do abnormal activities, so itās hard to compare them to your typical routine.
When you get back, you shoudl consider getting or checking out from your local library āThink Like a Pancreas.ā It helped my engineerās mind.
Hey thanks for this. Just wanted to let you know that I actually did go to the library when Dxād and checked out that book. Was my favorite one and all the rest seemed too superficial. Just thought Iād let you know that even though I already read it (and strangely for free from the library), you should definitely keep encouraging us logical people to pick it up.
Thanks,
āErik
Did you say diving? Diving can also give you hypos (and after the dive). Did you check out DAN?