Courtesy Amy Tenderich
Tenderich: 'A whole community of "patient bloggers" has grown up around me'
HEALTH TRIUMPHS

A Healing Blog

A shocking diagnosis of type 1 diabetes transformed my life. But, using the Internet, I turned it into a business—and formed a new community of friends.

 

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It seemed like a blessing. Just a few months after the birth of my third daughter, I had lost nearly all my pregnancy weight. I was fitting in to my favorite jeans, and my husband was joking with me about my girlish figure. Sure, I was tired all the time, but that's no surprise with three kids under the age of 5. But my vision was sometimes blurry, and I was parched and famished nearly all the time. Finally I went to see the doctor. A few hours later came the call back from the hospital: come in immediately and stay for a few days, or risk falling into a coma.

I was 37 years old and had been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes—the insulin-dependent kind, not the diet-and-pills-treated kind, which is known as type 2 and is 90 percent more commonly diagnosed among adults. Type 1 is an autoimmune disease that typically strikes children but is becoming increasingly common in people 20 and older. Why it shows up at certain ages is unclear, but a diagnosis often follows an illness that weakens the immune system. In my case, I had been sick with the flu right before I began experiencing my symptoms.

Suddenly my life became all about poking my finger for blood samples to monitor my fluctuating blood glucose levels a dozen times a day, injecting insulin at least six times a day, and constant worry about my diet, activity level and how all of this affected my glucose readings. If my blood sugar went too low, I might pass out. If it went too high, I'd feel listless and irritable and I'd be increasing my risk of serious "diabetes complications"—including blindness, kidney failure and leg amputation. I felt frightened and alone in ways I've never imagined before. Desperate for guidance, I was reduced to setting up coffee dates with friends of friends of friends who might know someone who has type 1 diabetes.

Naturally, I turned to the Internet. Here I would find fellow patients who could help me understand what was happening and demystify my symptoms. Or so I thought. It was 2004, and back then all I could find was a dizzying array of medical journal articles and bad-news headlines—almost all of them incomprehensible for a new patient like me. Where were the other people living with diabetes?

Frustrated, I began searching for a way to share my own thoughts and feelings online. I thought it would be fun and cathartic to document what I was learning about carbohydrate counting, insulin dosing, new glucose meters on the market, and more. I figured I could use my experience as a writer for the high-tech industry to report on happenings in the diabetes world. I could also share my personal experiences, in the hope that other patients would respond in kind. So began my journey into emerging online patient communities.

In fact, the timing was perfect. Had I been diagnosed in 1999 or even 2001 I would have had no means to self-publish on the Web. But as luck would have it, my idea to create a place for patients on the Web took shape in January 2005. New software had just been introduced allowing anybody to create an online journal they could update any time. The idea that the sentiments I was sharing could be read by anyone, anywhere on the planet was almost too much to take in.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: miamiller @ 03/23/2009 3:53:03 PM

    Thank you for creating this blog for all of us, living with diabetes or simply interested or in need to learn more. I have been living with type 1 diabetes for 21 years. while I have always been vocal and interested in educating those i come in contact with about living with diabetes, i have never really joined a larger forum of discussion. I have alot of experience and stories to share about how much this disease influences my way of thinking and being in the world, while not defining me altogether. You inspire me to more involved and the time is right. I am about to move to LA from Brooklyn and begin my massage therapy career, hoping to get link massage and diabetes care in some way. I hope to reach those in need and create a positive image for those of us affected. The need to balance and be aware of our bodies and what happening with our blood sugars points to a larger and more universal need for all of us to slow down and nurture ourselves. I wish you much luck in the future and who knows maybe we will find ourselves in similar circles someday.
    i appreciate your taking action. I am sure your children and friends see how it feeds you and all of us in ways that are very healing.
    Sincerely,
    Mia Miller

  • Posted By: miller.mia @ 03/23/2009 3:51:48 PM

    Thank you for creating this blog for all of us, living with diabetes or simply interested or in need to learn more. I have been living with type 1 diabetes for 21 years. while I have always been vocal and interested in educating those i come in contact with about living with diabetes, i have never really joined a larger forum of discussion. I have alot of experience and stories to share about how much this disease influences my way of thinking and being in the world, while not defining me altogether. You inspire me to more involved and the time is right. I am about to move to LA from Brooklyn and begin my massage therapy career, hoping to get link massage and diabetes care in some way. I hope to reach those in need and create a positive image for those of us affected. The need to balance and be aware of our bodies and what happening with our blood sugars points to a larger and more universal need for all of us to slow down and nurture ourselves. I wish you much luck in the future and who knows maybe we will find ourselves in similar circles someday.
    i appreciate your taking action. I am sure your children and friends see how it feeds you and all of us in ways that are very healing.
    Sincerely,
    Mia Miller

  • Posted By: cj15206 @ 10/01/2008 6:02:48 PM

    Great inspirational story! I don't have diabtes, but I saw what it almost did to my father, who almost died from a diabetic coma. But, luckily he survived, andnow he is helping other diabetics.

    Sincerely,
    Cynthia, a proud and grateful daughter
    www.deathtodiabetes.com

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