Adventures in KAndylaND

August: Our Family's Diaversary Month

August: Our Family's Diaversary Month

For every parent, the birth of their child is a significant month. But for the parent of a child with a rare disease, or a significant diagnosis, the month of diagnosis is also a time that is forever remembered. For some, especially in the diabetes world, we call this our "Diaversary". August is always a hard month for us because both of our children were diagnosed with a rare form of diabetes that month. Neonatal Diabetes

Miss Independence

The ear-piecing scream echoes in my head as I sit at the table watching her eat. She has a sweet angel-face on right now, but I know, like a light switch, she can easily flip on the face of discontent …

I Can Do It Myself!

As Katie has grown up we have had both moments of clarity where we are absolutely sure she is displaying behavior that is typical for her age and moments if confusion where we are just not sure what’s normal. This …

Hopes and Fears Pop Up in Dreams

I know that dreams can have a lot of meaning and sometimes they are a little mysterious and hard to understand.   Then at other times, what you dream is very straightforward and hits you in the face.  Last night I …

Developmental Ups and Downs

We were dealt a blow yesterday.  Katie is behind.  When Andy was on insulin so many years ago, we knew he was behind.  He wasn’t doing anything he should be doing right on track.  As a parent, you always want the best for your child, but you also instinctively “know” when something is wrong. 

Crash Central

Like I’ve said in earlier posts, we seemed to be returning to normal.  Then we get too comfortable with that notion and diabetes likes to rear it’s ugly head once again.  Katie had a huge spike higher than I thinkI’ve ever seen. . .

The Conundrum and the Experiment

a cross-post from my other blog Having 2 children with a rare type of diabetes and a history of Type 2 diabetes in both mine and my husband’s family, you would think we would eat a very healthy diet.  Wrong!  …

Returning to “Normal”

We are finally done with the antibiotics and infections are all cleared up.  Blood sugars are starting to rise again so doses of glyburide are starting to slowly increase.  I know after all this time that I shouldn’t worry too much about lows, . . .

When Diabetes Doesn’t Make Sense

Well, I have to say, after 4 plus years of dealing with glyburide, I thought I was beginning to understand how my kids’ bodies work.  I didn’t think anything could catch me off guard.  However, Diabetes in general does things to a body that even doctors still can’t explain.

Moving (and other life events)

So it’s been a few months since I’ve posted and a LOT has happened in those few months.  Andy became almost completely potty trained in August just before he began Kindergarten.  Katie celebrated her first birthday.  Both kids increased their …

Katie’s weight

I know for most parents, and mothers especially, the months of watching the scale move up while they’re pregnant is replaced by watching the scale move up when their baby is born.  Due to the recommendations from the American Pediatric …

How Do You Measure Success?

I can’t say how most parents measure how they are successful as a parent, but for us, being parents of two children with diabetes, our success is measured in small and unusual ways.  The most obvious success is that our children are alive every day when we wake up.