Injectable insulin is not a bad thing. It is a miracle life support therapy for people living with Type 1 diabetes, and can extend their lives up to normal life expectancy, for an auto-immune disease that used to be a 1 year death sentence.
I will say, though, that the incidence of T1D in the general population has increased over the past 100 years, due to "environmental" factors, they suspect. They can't tell which factors, but I suspect vaccines may very well be one of them. Poisoned food doesn't help, either.
Last June my wife got the bad news that she was diabetic with very high A1C of 11.3 . The doctors immediately gave her a shopping bag full of monitors, test strips, and sample meds to get her sugar "under control".
As a Registered Nurse, she knew her regular stress eating wasn't healthy, but what struck her as most shocking is; the doctors didn't tell her HOW to change her diet. They only pushed the meds as the "routine process" everyone does to get the sugar under control.
She's awake to their medical tyranny and refused ALL THE MEDS and decided at that very moment that our whole family was going to fix our diets. We cut out all processed / prepackaged garbage "food", started eating at least 1 salad everyday and cooking all lean meals with lots of more veggies.
During her 4 week follow-up visit the Dr was very disappointed that she didn't take the meds and said her blood sugar wasn't going to change much. Turns out, her A1C had already dropped to the mid 8's. The Med assistant was astonished and the Dr said she should still go on Ozempic to get under 7.
Since last June:
🟢 Wife has lost over 40 lbs, now has an A1C of 6.7, no longer has dust / pollen allergies and her skin has softened and several skin tags have disintegrated.
🟢 I lost 20 lbs and feel MUCH better and can fast for over 18 hours without debilitating migraines.
🟢 My oldest boy lost 30 lbs and looks like the athlete he used to be before the scamdemic.
I am thrilled for your wife, and your family should all be commended. However, Type 2 diabetes is different than Type 1 diabetes to be clear. Type 2, like the kind your wife was diagnosed with, is a lifestyle disease. Type 1 is autoimmune, where the body's own immune system attacks the insulin-producing pancreas, rendering it useless. T1D cannot be avoided with lifestyle choices nor treated with lifestyle choices. I knew none of this until I had to know, and I wish I never had to know. My daughter is fine now but the disease robbed her of her childhood. Peace and love to all of you frens on this board.
Injectable insulin is not a bad thing. It is a miracle life support therapy for people living with Type 1 diabetes, and can extend their lives up to normal life expectancy, for an auto-immune disease that used to be a 1 year death sentence.
I will say, though, that the incidence of T1D in the general population has increased over the past 100 years, due to "environmental" factors, they suspect. They can't tell which factors, but I suspect vaccines may very well be one of them. Poisoned food doesn't help, either.
Last June my wife got the bad news that she was diabetic with very high A1C of 11.3 . The doctors immediately gave her a shopping bag full of monitors, test strips, and sample meds to get her sugar "under control".
As a Registered Nurse, she knew her regular stress eating wasn't healthy, but what struck her as most shocking is; the doctors didn't tell her HOW to change her diet. They only pushed the meds as the "routine process" everyone does to get the sugar under control.
She's awake to their medical tyranny and refused ALL THE MEDS and decided at that very moment that our whole family was going to fix our diets. We cut out all processed / prepackaged garbage "food", started eating at least 1 salad everyday and cooking all lean meals with lots of more veggies.
During her 4 week follow-up visit the Dr was very disappointed that she didn't take the meds and said her blood sugar wasn't going to change much. Turns out, her A1C had already dropped to the mid 8's. The Med assistant was astonished and the Dr said she should still go on Ozempic to get under 7.
Since last June:
🟢 Wife has lost over 40 lbs, now has an A1C of 6.7, no longer has dust / pollen allergies and her skin has softened and several skin tags have disintegrated.
🟢 I lost 20 lbs and feel MUCH better and can fast for over 18 hours without debilitating migraines.
🟢 My oldest boy lost 30 lbs and looks like the athlete he used to be before the scamdemic.
I am thrilled for your wife, and your family should all be commended. However, Type 2 diabetes is different than Type 1 diabetes to be clear. Type 2, like the kind your wife was diagnosed with, is a lifestyle disease. Type 1 is autoimmune, where the body's own immune system attacks the insulin-producing pancreas, rendering it useless. T1D cannot be avoided with lifestyle choices nor treated with lifestyle choices. I knew none of this until I had to know, and I wish I never had to know. My daughter is fine now but the disease robbed her of her childhood. Peace and love to all of you frens on this board.