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Podcast Episodes

The Juicebox Podcast is from the writer of the popular diabetes parenting blog Arden's Day and the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal: Confessions of a Stay-At-Home Dad'. Hosted by Scott Benner, the show features intimate conversations of living and parenting with type I diabetes.

Filtering by Category: Dexcom

#566 Vikki Became a Diabetes Educator

Scott Benner

Vikki is also the mom of a type 1.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


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
You're listening to Episode 566 of the Juicebox Podcast.

The key is a diabetes care education specialist. She's also the mother of a child with Type One Diabetes. Today she comes on the show in an attempt to tell us about moving to that career. I say an attempt because you know, I'm going to think of a bunch of questions and then I mean, who knows what we end up really talking about, but that's not the point. You're gonna love the conversation. So don't be so judgmental. Nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast, please remember this please, please, that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan. We're becoming bold with insulin. You do not have to consult a physician to follow me on tik tok at Juicebox Podcast on Instagram at Juicebox Podcast. The private Facebook group that's called Juicebox Podcast Type One Diabetes you don't have to ask a physician before you take the T one D survey at T one d exchange.org. forward slash juicebox these things are all those are free well things you can just do that. Alright? For this ham fisted, I don't want to tell you it's Sunday night I'm doing a bunch of ads and I'm a little I'm a little woozy. Not gonna lie to you. But don't worry, when I recorded the episode sharp is attack this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Contour Next One blood glucose meter. Learn more at Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox you're also sponsored we are also sponsored whose way we are also sponsored today we it's me I do the whole thing I do the booking the scheduling the editing, the social media, and then I say we as if there's some grand group of people here. I guess I can't say I I'm sponsored today. I mean, I could but that sounds terrible, right? That doesn't sound like me. Me Me. The whole thing's about me. Yeah. Oh, how about this, the podcast is also sponsored today. By touched by type one, go to touched by type one.org Ford slash juice box to learn more about them. And to see if they've got tickets to their big dance extravaganza that's coming up, which I bet they do. So go look touched by type one.org. fidget delivery. I'm sure you had. I'm recording By the way, but I'm sure you haven't read this. But there's a book about hitting a baseball. That says something to the effect of if I tell you, if I say Vicki, no matter what you do, the next thing you do should not be imagine a pink elephant with purple dots on it. The your brain immediately conjures a picture of a pink elephant. So that's why they tell you in sports, not the like you don't tell a kid you know, don't strike out. You tell them to hit the ball. That like real little ideas like that, because your brain manifests things anyway. Don't fidget. Don't fidget do not go ahead. Introduce yourself first.

Vikki 3:15
Okay, um, my name is Vikki. I am a certified diabetes educator or a now a Diabetes Care and Education Specialist, my nurse and a parent to three boys including 110 year old boy with Type One Diabetes.

Scott Benner 3:32
So my question I was gonna ask you is do any of those boys play baseball?

Vikki 3:35
They do not. They are not particularly athletic. There's just not ever enjoyed it or excelled at it. And so I have to coerce physical activity out of them.

Scott Benner 3:48
They're not particularly athletic. I gotcha. The reason I said because I'm gonna have to leave in what I said at the beginning. Because if you ever notice with a man on third in a child's baseball game, the coach feels encumbered and they have to walk out to the pitcher and say, Okay, now look, we got a man on third here, just make a good pitch. And inevitably, the next pitches in the dirt bounces behind the catcher and the man on third walks home. It's almost like you're taking time to point out to the pitcher, hey, don't forget the guy on third who you're trying desperately not to let score. And it just it makes it happen. I'm telling you, it's a it's the biggest mistake a youth coach could make. So that's from me to anybody listening who coaches kids playing baseball. Don't remind them there's a man on third make a good pitch, because you might as well just tell them roll the ball up there. Anyway, there's a lot of words you don't know because your kids don't play.

Vikki 4:40
Right? I knew it was labor intensive baseball in particular, that it was several nights a week, so I never really encouraged it. That seemed like a lot of work on my part.

Scott Benner 4:49
Yeah, I've said it here before but we actively made sure my son did not know what soccer was because my wife doesn't like it.

Vikki 4:57
That's smart. Yeah. It's

Scott Benner 4:59
the greatest thing I'll tell it in two seconds is that we were stopped at a red light. And there was a men's league at this park, where hundreds of men were playing on like three or four fields. My son's like, what are they doing? And my wife looks over and looks back, she goes, I have no idea. We just sat there quietly and drove away when the light turned green. That's so funny. If you've ever talked to her, she'll tell you about being drugged to soccer games for her sisters through her whole life. scarred her. She did not write again, she does not like soccer. Anyway. So Vicki, you are on the show, because I asked if somebody can remind me what I said,

Vikki 5:38
if someone had was a CTE, or had recently become one, and so I was certified, it's been a little over a year now I think at the time that it had been just that a year or something like that,

Scott Benner 5:48
yes, thank you. I need other people in my life to remind me of what I mean and what credibly handy, I have to tell you, like, it's way better than having to remember for yourself. So my, my reasoning behind that was that people ask about becoming CDs, a lot of nurses that listen, and people who are looking to educate themselves as an adult. And I thought we could walk through it now. My super secret, like, you know, secret for myself wanting to do it is because I'm trying to make a whole bunch of Juicebox Podcast thinking CDs in the world. And then one day I'll take over the world with with the chip that Bill Gates put in your vaccine. Well, March to victory anyway, that's a different thing. So when did you become a nurse?

Vikki 6:43
So I became a nurse in 2006. It was my second career. I was a teacher first, and then I got married and went to nursing school.

Scott Benner 6:53
Wow. So you were a teacher as a as a younger single person? Yes. What made you switch careers? Can I ask?

Vikki 7:01
Well, I had wanted to be a doctor. And then I discovered beer in college and didn't study as I should have. And teaching didn't require that GPA. So I was a science teacher for four years, and just always knew I wanted to be in medicine. And so when I got married, I had someone that could support me while I went back to school.

Scott Benner 7:27
So now Vicki, I have children who are almost through the education system, as far as at least High School goes, but are you trying to scare the living hell out of all the young parents in the world?

Vikki 7:35
No, we can edit that part out. I just, no, no, we're

Scott Benner 7:39
leaving it in. That's hilarious. Be careful when you're talking.

Vikki 7:46
Now, just high school was so easy in college. I went to Georgia Tech. And so it was very humbling. And my grades suffered because I didn't realize I was going to have to put a whole lot more effort into it. And then I just decided it was way more fun to not put effort into it.

Scott Benner 8:09
So it's not your It wasn't your intellect because you went back around and did it again. Was it maturity?

Vikki 8:14
It may have been Yeah, it was the first thing I was pretty sheltered, I guess. And

away from home and private, more so than I'd ever been. No, it was a public

Scott Benner 8:26
school. Your your high school was, was public.

Vikki 8:29
No, no, that yes, yes. Sorry. Yeah, that was public. I just was kind of a homebody and didn't go out much. College was different. I found my people, you know how you. I feel like sometimes, high school wasn't great. But college I found people I connected with more and have more fun.

Scott Benner 8:47
Gotcha. Would you have been up a more social person in high school? Do you think if you met more people that you jive with? Where do you know, it's funny This is your like, I've listened this podcast enough to know that we're never going to talk about how I became a CT. Don't worry, we will. I'm just fascinated because I've seen a number of people come out of the private high school system with these great grades and they get to college, and they go, Oh, I don't think I'm as smart as I thought I was. But sometimes their grades are bolstered by the private high schools desire for their parents to keep paying for private high school.

Vikki 9:26
Right, right, right.

Scott Benner 9:28
You know what I mean? It wasn't the case. No, it doesn't sound like it because once you went back and did it, you were fine.

Vikki 9:34
Yeah. But you know, oh, no, I probably shouldn't mention the other school. I feel like the other school that I got my my nursing degree from was it was just very different. And honestly, I found those classes way more enjoyable, the atmosphere more enjoyable. Georgia Tech is a it's an engineering school and it's it's just very rigorous.

Scott Benner 9:58
I guess. Gotcha. No I am interested to understand Okay, so you were a teacher. So everybody now when you go back back to school night, just look that person in the face and think I wonder if they're here because they want to be or because

this teacher was formed by myka Loeb

Vikki 10:20
with Miller Lite.

Scott Benner 10:25
Okay, I didn't expect that this much fun. Um, so, okay, so you go back to nursing to and then what kind of nursing Do you do and for how long do you do it?

Vikki 10:35
Okay, so I, my first nursing job was on a step down cardiac floor. And so I dealt with patients with heart failure. Patients a couple of days post heart attack, people that had had angioplasty had a stent placed. So I did that for how many years about five years, and then when my twins, so I have three boys, the oldest is 13, the youngest younger two are 1010 year old twins. And when they were born, it was too much work to go to work, if that makes sense. Like, their dad did the best he could. But I felt like I had to spend four more hours when I got home after a 12 hour shift to clean up the mess he made to be ready for the next day. And so I just stayed home for until they went to preschool. So about two and a half years after that,

Scott Benner 11:33
okay, I'm not this has anything to do with anything. But was your husband really messy? Or are you just type A and you didn't like it not being the way you wanted it?

Vikki 11:42
He what he's my ex husband now. Oh, um, he is very messy. Yes, it. And so now he's in his own house down the street. And he can be as messy as he wants with a maid once a week. And I don't have to deal with that my house stays clean for days. It's amazing.

Scott Benner 12:00
We figure out what's wrong with the house. So okay, so 13 and 210s are the 210s and everybody's a boy. What What age was your child diagnosed that

Vikki 12:15
he was diagnosed while we were on vacation? At five. He had started kindergarten that year.

So yeah, that was what does that make it? It'll be five years in September.

Scott Benner 12:30
Five years in September, so like, it's 21. So they go back to like, like, 1995 9696

Vikki 12:40
Wait, what? What? When he was diagnosed? Yeah.

Scott Benner 12:44
Oh, no. No, I mean, 2016 Yeah, I took that.

Vikki 12:50
What kind of mouth are you doing?

Scott Benner 12:52
They taught me in middle school. My my paid attention to it. Sorry. 2006 2016 is when he was diagnosed. Okay. And when did you become a nurse?

Vikki 13:05
I became a nurse in 2006. So I had been a nurse for 10 years, but I hadn't. I guess I had been back to work a year and a half before he was diagnosed, something like that.

Scott Benner 13:15
Okay. So what was the diagnosis process like in your house? Did you? Were you you were there the entire time? It was on you mostly.

Vikki 13:27
When before he was diagnosed? No. Right after I'm

Scott Benner 13:29
sorry. When he was diagnosed? Was it something that was kind of handled by the whole family or did it fall mostly to you? How did that go? In the beginning it

Vikki 13:36
was. So he had just started kindergarten and he started on a couple of months into it started wetting the bed again. And I thought it was just being in kindergarten schedule was different. We have fall break here in Georgia. And we had gone to visit my aunt moved Destin, Florida. And while we were getting ready to go to the beach, I noticed I got them all some ice water, he drank his and about 20 seconds and then asked for more. And then he had to go to the bathroom. And he asked to go to the bathroom like three more times the next hour. And it was the first time I'd had a chance to really sit down with that information. I was like at the beach with my boys. And he was being super fussy. And usually he's like my most easygoing child. And I just looked at it and I was like, Oh my goodness, that those are the totally the symptoms of type one diabetes, which in my mind, that was like a inherited thing. I guess I didn't know enough specifically, I just knew the signs. But I texted their dad. We were still married at the time and told them that I was like, I'm probably being crazy but called a pediatrician. You've got all these symptoms. Just find out what they say make an appointment, and so he made an appointment for like the next week because in my mind, it wasn't an emergency. But then, as the day goes by, I'm just thinking more about it. He's getting crappier and crappier. And we're staying with my aunt who is a vet. And so I asked her if she could check his urine. And it's the same dipstick they use for cats that for humans, so we went to her office, and she was like I was I was praying It was a UTI. And she said, there's no bacteria, but it's, what is it for plus glucose? And I was like, Well, what else could that be? because surely, it's still not diabetes. But I tried to talk myself out of doing anything about it until the next day, or until we got home. And then finally we're like, no, we're going to the urgent care, or no to the emergency room. And then they had to take us by ambulance to the Children's Hospital. And luckily, my niece was with us, and she could take my other two boys and watch them. So anyway, we went to Pensacola Children's Hospital, I believe. And I had to call their dad and he had to jump in the car and drive there. And it was just a whirlwind of education and

Scott Benner 16:12
insanity.

Vikki 16:13
insanity. Yeah. And we were out of state. So they couldn't make an appointment with an endo. In Georgia. And that was a big struggle, too. Because when I called them when I got back into town on Monday, or whatever, they were like, we can see you in December. And it was like September, when he got diagnosed, and he's five years old.

Scott Benner 16:37
Hey, we thought he had distemper, but it turns out this is diabetes. We're gonna need to see him a little sooner, please. Yeah. He's that fascinating when you're talking to the scheduler? I know they don't know all the time, right? Because it is really what you're doing. You're talking to a scheduling nurse, but they should still know. You're telling them your five year old has type one diabetes, they were diagnosed at a state and they're like, Oh, that's no problem. Can you come in three months from now?

Vikki 17:00
Real? I'm like, no. So we were about to go to the emergency room and just get admitted that way. Because, you know, they put you on, I think he was on like five units of levemir and was going low every single night. And we had no idea what a honeymoon period was, or any of those things. We just know, we were just constantly feeding the insulin that they were on, he has to have 45 grams of carbs per meal. And he has to take these five units of insulin. So I posted on Facebook, and several of my Facebook friends had suggested camp kudzu, which is a camp for children with type one diabetes, and coincidentally, their fall family camping was the next weekend. So we went and we met an endo there who gave us a you know, a number to get in like the next week. So it was awesome. It was meant to be

Scott Benner 17:53
to wander around that camp, just looking for anybody to help you at all. Yeah, so please, we're like come on, written on a piece of cardboard, like recently diagnosed, no one will help.

Vikki 18:03
Please. They, they had you raise your hand like who was the most recently diagnosed? And we of course one because it had been like three days. And so yeah, we got to talk to the doctor. And he gave us a number to call to get scheduled right away, and they fit us in. So that was great. That's fascinating, but it was still always turned.

Scott Benner 18:25
Aside from that. It's just like now in hindsight, right? It's fascinating, but that's what happened. Like, I know, you know, just imagine if somebody said to you now like, Hey, I think you have, I don't know cancer? Can you come back in three months? And we'll check to make sure. We'll just see. Fine. I mean, is your heart in arrhythmia? Try not to run out the steps too fast till we can get you in here. Such an interesting like, response from medical people. Mm hmm. You know, that's really fascinating. Okay, so started off with injections. You said this sounds like there was a bit of a honeymoon period? What were the what were your findings over the first like six months that was it completely overwhelming? Is he alive by luck? Did you start figuring it out? Did your nursing get in the way or help?

Vikki 19:12
I think it did. I found I had no idea how insulin worked. I thought somehow it was magic. And it just knew what it was supposed to do. It would do what it needed to do. And that's something I've learned in my professional experience since is it absolutely is not magic. You know, I heard a doctor say this once that insulin works until it's done. It's not smart. It works until it's done. And so that's what I have said almost every day of my career since is you have to be the smart one. You're the brain behind the operation, and it took several months to kind of get a better understanding of that. They pulled way back and he was off long acting for several months and just did a tiny bit of the rapid acting With me on

Scott Benner 20:02
how much do you weigh when is diagnosed, like

Vikki 20:05
40 something 4444

Scott Benner 20:09
foot weight on after he was diagnosed? You know, I

Vikki 20:12
don't think he had had it very long. I looked at pictures and I think I caught it pretty early. I like to think I did. Because I don't remember him being particularly thin. But he used to be taller than his twin and they are not identical. But he used to be taller than his twin and his twin shot up. And honestly, this may have happened anyway. But his twin has now been bigger ever since.

Scott Benner 20:35
It's possible. We're gonna call this episode diabetes made me short. So have you had his thyroid checked?

Vikki 20:44
But prior to that? We have since Yes. So his dad has both celiac and hypothyroidism. So yeah, they're, I mean, I think they would have been checking for those things anyway. But

Scott Benner 20:56
one day, a long time ago, a young Vicky met a man who gave her a messy house and a kid with diabetes. The reason I asked is because Arden was the smallest person in her school for the girls for a really, really long time. And then she got I guess we should probably like do a whole episode about this at some point. But she got make we thought she was dying. like she'd come home from school and lay her head on the countertop. And she'd fall asleep like facedown on the countertop. And she was just racked. And we eventually like okay, maybe this is her thyroid, and we got a checked in, you know, her labs were, you know, in range, I'm making air quotes. And the, in the, you know, the hospitals like Well, we're she's in range, we don't usually treat this and I was like, Oh, you're just gonna treat it. And so, so they gave her medicine and she stood right back up again. And then she and now today, Arden is 579 she's one of the tallest girls in high school.

Vikki 22:05
Oh, they caught up. Yeah, he's not shorter than me. He's still a good size kid. He is smaller than his brother. Right? Um, his. His dad and I are fairly tall and so

Scott Benner 22:19
either short compared to you guys, maybe. Yeah, that's funny. Arden talks about that. She's like, when I'm with my friends at school. I feel like a giant and as soon as I come home, even though we're not incredibly tall people, we are all taller than her. She's like, I feel short in the house. So but but my point is, is that if you get that test, and you know he's got a TSH of like, 2.1 Don't let Don't let them tell you that's in range. It's common is what that is. Okay. All right. Yeah,

Vikki 22:46
he gets his labs again this summer. We just went to the end of the day, actually. So next set. next appointment is the yearly lab. So I will Yeah, pay more attention to

Scott Benner 22:57
that episode that I did with Dr. Benito about thyroid is, it's absolutely, like, comprehensive. And she will treat anything, like anything over to like so.

Vikki 23:08
Yeah, well, I'm gonna make sure his dad listens to that, because honestly, I have not been invested in how well he manages his own. So

Scott Benner 23:16
well, you know, it's interesting to note that I'm trying to get you guys back together. I'm not doing that. But, you know, when you're unregulated, hypothyroid or hashimotos, you can be a bit of a jackass. And it's hard to not saying your husband was maybe Listen, maybe this is all your fault. I don't know. I'm just saying that. I'm just saying that. It really alters who you are. Okay. And it's not it's not. It's not in any way seen by the person that's happening to like, they don't know they're being jerky. Okay, we're short tempered or unreasonable. I like to tell people privately, I don't think I've ever said it here. But we couldn't get a doctor to give my wife a thyroid medication for seven years. And it really like ravaged her. And she was always in range. But you know, they'd be like, Oh, you're in range. And finally I threatened a doctor and I was just like, Look, just give me I said, is the medicine gonna hurt or if you're wrong, and he said no one I'm like, but then just give it to her. And I said, because I've already dug a hole on our property to put her into so because I'm gonna snap and kill her one day, because she's really unreasonable sometimes. So like, we're all laughing like, you know, like a bunch of married people laughing in a room. And and I'm like, but seriously give it to her. And I would say that within a week, she turned back into the person that I remembered

Vikki 24:35
was really amazing. That quick, yeah, it was

Scott Benner 24:39
very fast. So it's worth it's worth, it's worth looking into. And even if he are being medicated, you might not be being medicated enough. And the difference between just your GP giving you Synthroid and a doctor who really understands thyroid function that can look at those labs and say, we are not medicating the number we are medicating the symptoms until that until you find somebody that will do that you don't know where you're at. So that's my advice about thyroid All right, good luck would not be if you like turned back into like some great guy and you're like, damn it Oh No, I'm just kidding. Don't tell me about your life. I don't care. I don't try to do that. I want to find out how to be a CD. So at what point do you say and it's not a CD anymore I know but you're not going to get me to say the other thing. So we should you say it when it's your turn.

Vikki 25:36
When did I might get it wrong because they changed it like a month after I took the test.

Scott Benner 25:41
Okay, what point did you say to yourself, I'm gonna do this.

I'm going to keep going with what I did in Episode 565, which is read to you from the private Facebook group what people had to say about the advertisers. So today we're going to talk about the Contour Next One blood glucose meter which you can learn more about it Contour Next one.com forward slash juice box. Jess says she loves it because it's inexpensive and it's super accurate. She says I love how cheap the Contour Next One is for being so accurate. She got a couple of them so she keeps one upstairs by the bed downstairs and wonder purse gives her one less thing to think about because she knows she has a Contour Next One nearby. When he says that the second chance test strips or her farm. Her fervor are her favorite part about the Contour Next One. It's fantastic. She said if the first drop isn't enough, you get to do it over again without needing a new strip.

You Angie keeps it and she keeps it simple. She says Contour Next One small, simple to use accurate. Julia says the accuracy is amazing. I have two of them. So if I'm ever concerned that my other gear isn't right, where stuff is disagreeing, I pull out that meter and give it a look. I like what Jonathan says here Contour Next One. I've used it for a long time and it just works. So that's a little bit from some of the listeners here's some from me. Contour Next One comm forward slash juicebox amazing website explains everything you may be eligible for a free meter. There's test trip savings program that you could be eligible for the Contour Next One may be cheaper in cash than you're paying for a different meter through your insurance. I know that's hard to wrap your head around. It's great, it's small, it's easy to use, easy to hold easy to transport bright light for nighttime viewing Second Chance test trips. It's the best damn blood glucose meter I've ever used Contour Next one.com forward slash juice box now let's move over to touched by type one Amanda says my daughter virtually attends a touched by type one dance class. She loves that everyone in the class is just like her and smiles when ever she hears anyone else beeping there's some other stuff here about touched by type one from listeners but I actually have to tell you about their dancing for diabetes extravaganza which is coming up pretty darn soon. Are you can see this yourself if you head over to touch by type one org but go to their programs tab. And you'll see there that the 21st annual dancing for diabetes showcase which features award winning dancers and raises funds to support those touched by type one diabetes is happening on November 13 2021. At 7pm in the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets begin at $15 and are on sale right now. I see a button it says Get your tickets much what happens if I click on? Oh, I can buy tickets. That's perfect. That's exactly how it's supposed to work. Touched by type one.org. Go to the program's tab. Get your tickets. Where's this at? You're asking it's in the Walt Disney theater. The Walt Disney theater. I think it's probably named after Walt Disney. If I'm guessing Oh, look at how nice the theater is. There's a picture here RP Damn. Well Disney theater Orlando, Florida. Hey, if you're local head over and check out dancing for diabetes presented by touch by type one touch by type one.org we don't forget Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox. links in the show notes links at Juicebox Podcast comm support the sponsors support the show.

Vikki 29:50
I kind of just looked into it. So after I went back to work when my twins went to preschool, I worked in a call center still as a nurse, but no longer at the bedside, like in a hospital, so I was working for a department called population health and our health system created it to help support our Medicare population. So I was making phone calls to them, after a hospital stay to try to make sure they could get their medication, they have transportation, they understood their disease, and weren't going to go back to the hospital as a result of what brought them there in the first place. So I was doing that and just peer in which is like a healthcare term for as needed. I was just filling in when my kids are at preschool, or I had childcare. There was somebody on my team that was diabetes specific, and only focused on diabetes on the Medicare patients on our list who had diabetes, I'm and I kind of would, would talk to that person all the time. And then as I learned more and more after Theo was diagnosed with kidney was I, that person started asking me questions like it was interesting. So that person who had the role prior to me, became pregnant and decided to quit. So that job was open. And so it was announced by my manager to the team that this role was open. She wanted to see if we had any internal candidates. And I reached out and I was like, well, I talked to my then husband and asked him how he felt about me going full time. And he was like, I think that's a great idea. And I emailed my manager, and within like two minutes, she was like, Oh, yes, you'd be my first choice. Can we talk right now. And so she was super excited about it. And then I was super excited about it, it was actually a friend at work that it said you should do this. Because before that, I was like, I don't work full time. I just take care of my boys mostly. So anyways, this friend that really pushed me into doing it. But she told me as part of the role, they wanted me to become a CDE. And so I really lucked out because it is hard. It's a challenge to get that number of hours, you need to be able to test for it. So you not only have to be certified or licensed in a particular discipline, you also have to have the experience so

Scott Benner 32:25
and that's hours at your job like so you need them to put you with diabetes patients over over and over how many hours do you need? I forget the number 1000. Right.

Vikki 32:35
And the majority of it had to be within the last calendar year, I think they may have changed things a little bit due to COVID. But most of it had to be fairly recent. All of it had to be within five years, and most of it I think within the last 12 months. So I was diabetes specifics on it. And all I did, but even you know, 40 hours a week, which you can't really count every hour. You don't count

Scott Benner 33:01
chart where when you?

Vikki 33:04
Yeah. So I didn't keep careful records. I was audited. I have another coworker that tested at the same time. And she did not keep the same records. She was not audited. And then luckily oh my goodness, I was not Luckily, I was audited. So I had to turn in my log time. But

Scott Benner 33:25
you had good specific records in that. Yeah. So that was

Vikki 33:29
the lucky part was that I had been keeping careful records. And with no patient information, but just like I don't know, I made up a number and would say what date and how much time I had spent with each of them. I diabetes specific education.

Scott Benner 33:46
I think I could turn in the podcast, I might be able to get through.

Vikki 33:48
I think you could I think you could if you have they're really particular about the disciplines. They're expanding that a little bit I think maybe like personal trainers can get it now and health coaches and social workers and they've kind of expanded who's able to get it, what disciplines they'll allow. But most people, in my experience have been either a nurse or a dietitian. Yeah, I

Scott Benner 34:11
don't really want to do that I was just being

Vikki 34:14
really there's not a lot of glory in it.

Scott Benner 34:16
I've had a lot of conversations, a lot of people diabetes, I might be able to get to 1000 hours I'm thinking Wait, tell me again, what year that was that that whole decision was made?

Vikki 34:27
So that's a really good question. Um, I think it took me When was that?

Scott Benner 34:37
I'm looking for like the day they were like, Who wants this job? And you're like, I'll do it.

Vikki 34:41
I think it was three years when I took the time the job full time. So I think I decided that in like January of what was three years ago.

Scott Benner 34:51
2018 2018. So your son, your son had had diabetes for a couple of years at that point.

Vikki 34:56
Yeah. A little over a year at that point. Yeah.

Scott Benner 34:58
Excellent. Okay. So So how much of what you were experiencing? Having a child with diabetes? Is? What's my question? How much of it did you see in the actual training? I guess?

Vikki 35:17
Well, that was something that I thought quite a lot about. So most of the training, I think, is geared toward patients with type two diabetes 95% of people diabetes have type two, and then they always err on the side of caution. So it's whatever they can, you can't really make a hard and fast rule that applies to everybody. So a lot of what I've learned, kind of hindered me a little in studying and I kind of had to have two different sides to my brain, like what, you know, the ADA recommends, and what I'm actually going to do with my child, like, cuz they're, they have to be very conservative, because not everyone is paying attention. Even me, like I've been, I have a new job now. And I don't have that same flexibility where I can look at his Dexcom every 10 minutes to see what's going on, I kind of have to trust that, that he and the school nurse are doing what they're supposed to be doing. So I want things there's not as much bumping and nudging lately. So it is it's very different.

Scott Benner 36:25
So there's what works. And there's what you need to know to pass the test,

Vikki 36:29
basically. Yes. And but a lot of the test was, I think, kind of subjective. Like, what would you do in this situation? You have to figure out what is the most important thing for the patient? And there's, you have to put on like a social worker hat for a minute and be like, well, what can they afford? What can they realistic, three, accomplish? Like, what can you like, safely? You know, because not everybody has the same home life, not everybody has the same resources, we are all coming from a different place. So

Scott Benner 36:57
plain English, do you have to assess people's intelligence? Yes. And their ability to understand what you're saying? Yes, very

Vikki 37:05
much, because I think I talked to, to most of the patients in my former Job had type two, but some had type one, and someone had it for a long time. And if they wouldn't have been on my list, had it been well managed. I only got people with a onesies overnight for most of the time I did this. So they were not very well controlled, not tightly controlled. And one of them flat out asked me, How often does your son go to the emergency room for higher low blood sugars. And I was like, well, he's never been since diagnosis, I've never had to take him for that. I mean, he's had to go for a stomach bug now. But when he was diagnosed, I was convinced we were going to be there all the time. My my ex actually moved out, he moved back in just because we thought every one of us was always going to have to be at the doctor with him. Anyway, you know,

Scott Benner 37:57
I met a child, once one at one of my speaking engagements. And the emergency room was a regular part of their monthly diabetes plan. Oh, like they knew they were going to be in the emergency room multiple times a month. And I was I was absolutely fascinated by it. And two parents who were trying really hard and seem to have Yeah,

Vikki 38:19
it's not for lack of effort. Yeah. And I felt Not always.

Scott Benner 38:23
Well, yeah, and there are some people, right, who were just like, I don't care, I'm not gonna take care of myself. Like that's with anything, I would imagine just diabetes. But I'm still fascinated about the idea that it's such a, it's such a bureaucrat, bag, bureaucratic feeling like that idea of like, you know, there's what you need to get through the test. And then there's what you could actually help people with. And these two things do not have to exactly correspond with each other.

Vikki 38:51
Yeah. But but I get it, I mean, it's not going to work for everyone. And not everyone has the time or inclination to manage it that closely. And they don't have two separate tests for type one and type two. So I kind of understand how it's set up the

Scott Benner 39:09
way it is. So then what happens? Do people get to people get through the examination, become an educator, and then either become like a buy the book, this is my job. And this is what I'm supposed to say to you person? Or there are some CDs who take the time to explain the intricacies is it just does that then become personal preference or personnel? I

Vikki 39:33
think so. And you got to do what your employer allows you to do. So.

Scott Benner 39:38
You can't say too much even if you want to in certain situations. Gotcha. So you can be looking at somebody and the answer might be, hey, just Pre-Bolus but the person you work for doesn't let you say that and then you're stuck and you can't say,

Vikki 39:53
Oh, well that one I I would push but the whole concept of bumping and dodging that I've learned from your I don't know there's no way, but most of them are type two. And really I'm like, I Another thing I always say is exercise is magic. It makes such a big difference, particularly with the type twos who are so insensitive to insulin. When you just get up and get a couple 1000 steps a day, everything works the way it's supposed to.

Scott Benner 40:19
You know, it's funny, when you hear people say that, first of all, you're 100,000,000%. Correct. But think of the first thing that you can think of that you can't get people to do generally. It's exercise. And then right, we're like, oh, now you have diabetes. You know what your answer is? I would just exercise visors. You'd be like, yeah, I haven't done it the first 37 years, but that's probably how I'm gonna handle it tomorrow. Thanks a lot. It's like, it's like, it's like saying that the answer to racism is telling people not to be racist. It's a very like, it's you know, you mean like,

Vikki 40:46
it's so simple that it would never work well, and

Scott Benner 40:49
you can't change the nature of people is what I'm saying is like, right? It's it's like, it's like when it's like, it's like, if you were to meet somebody who was grossly overweight, and you said to them, all you really need to do is eat better. Like, thanks. I didn't know that I really thought these Cheetos were good for me. I got you've really strike me up. I appreciate your time. Like, it's one of those weird things that your people do things the way they do them the answer to making it better can't be don't do the thing you do. I know that's, I mean, it's the obvious answer is the right thing to be told. It's an unreasonable thing to expect somebody to just magically pop up and do one day.

Vikki 41:28
Exactly. Yeah, well, I tried to create small goals with them just, you know, add little five minute walks, get up during commercials,

Scott Benner 41:37
you're actually giving them little ideas that might trick them into doing things that are better for them because the truth is, they're not just going to get up and be like, I'm going to walk two miles every day.

Vikki 41:48
Right? We'll just walk to the mailbox today.

Scott Benner 41:51
Well, it is it is like that at some for some people like that

Vikki 41:55
it is unfortunately especially I've worked with Medicare patients and most of them are older and a lot of them had you know, knee problems hip problems. So you work with what you got, I was like even if you're just lifting soup cans, some amount of activity. And then for the type twos, usually they tell you 30 to 50 grams of carbs per meal, you know, lower end if you're female, higher end if you're male and or you know, particularly active so it's different with type ones. We're, you know, doing carb ratios for type twos, you mostly they have a fixed amount of insulin. And we just tried to eat the same amount of carbs basically. So

Scott Benner 42:38
my mom's in her like mid to late 70s and she was very active like going to the gym, right? Right up till COVID and then as soon as COVID hit and she became more sedentary hurry once he started to go up. Oh, yeah, yeah, that activity and so then I just saw I think she was kind of staving off or rising or a one see just by being incredibly active, like she'd get up in the morning, go to the gym, you know what I mean? And then I finally said to her, I was like, Alright, well look, you're gonna end up on medication. You know, if this rolls around again and another quarter when he tests your blood sugar again, I said I would just go low carb if I was you. And she's waiting now to go back in here. But it's she lost weight with a low carb and I think it's gonna work for but it's specific. She lives in a small place. You don't mean like you just said like, lifting soup cans. Like there's part of me that's like, Oh, that's brilliant. And there's part of me that thinks like, trying to put myself in a 75 year old person's mind. And I'm trapped in a small apartment doing curls with some chunky soup. Would you not sit there thinking like, Oh my god, like what has become of my life? My life? Yeah, like yeah, I would just be like, oh, maybe I'm done. You know, like what am I doing? I've already seen the prices right? I'm doing curls with soup cans, it might be time to go. And you know, I just what I'm being serious though, is I'm saying like, it must be difficult to hear things like just walk to the mailbox because they're not. They're still people and they they're not stupid. They're like, Oh my God, that's my life. Like, that's gonna be exercise my knee, you know, and like you said, some people have real problems, hips, knees, stuff like that. Really is it's, I mean, it's obviously the progression of life. And it's not sad. I mean, like, I guess I'd rather have a bum knee at 78 and not make it to 78 but it's just it's the fact of all this. I feel like it gets overlooked sometimes. Like we're also quick. You know, people listen to the podcast or even people who you know online who were very specifically managing, you don't realize like you're, you're the small percentage of people. Like most people are not bumping a 130 blood sugar. You know, most people are like, my blood sugar only went to 190 day I had such a great day. You know, that's how, how it works for most people. Most people don't have glucose sensing technology, you know, they can't afford it. If they had it, they might not know how to use it. And, and the idea there is that you're looking for ways to help those people and then somebody like you or me rolls in and I'm like, hey, my kids Hey, one says five, nine, I really would like it to be five, five. Can you help me the CDs? Probably like what? you doing? Great. Shut up.

Vikki 45:22
Why don't you want to change anything?

Scott Benner 45:24
Leave me alone. You're my easy one.

Vikki 45:27
Yeah, I got told that today, the doctor was like, no, no. I've seen real problems. And I mean, I still feel like our control is nowhere near where I want it to be. But you know, I have three kids, I work full time. I do the best I can. And my kid, he will ignore every single alarm. So if I'm not like sitting in front of the phone, like he could be high for who knows how long and he won't tell me he's low until he's like in the 50s. So anyway,

Scott Benner 45:57
I there are times I've walked into orange room, and I go, you must hear the alarm should go real, and shall go. My phone's not making any noise. And I'm like, don't hear as I hear it from your room into my room. And you know, and so, then you're standing there looking at her, she's looking back, and then her phone beeps and she goes, Oh, it's starting to work now. And I was like, Uh huh. But I don't think she's ignoring it. I don't think she hears. Yeah, I really don't. And I think she's 16. And you know what I mean, like, all that other stuff. But you're right, like, people need help, and help. You know, when, when I say people need help, like, when kids need help, what they really need is a person who is willing to exercise some part of their life out of their life and fill it back in with helping you with your diabetes. Like that has to be part of my job. Once it's part of my job, then I look and I pay attention. Like, you know, Arden grabbed a snack this morning during school. And she like, didn't do a great job with the Bolus. And so I went in, and I was like, hey, that's not working. And she's like, I did everything I was supposed to. And I was like, Well, you didn't, are just waiting to happen. You know, and, and so, but she doesn't see it that way. And she will eventually like, eventually, she'll be through it enough and she'll care enough to see it. But for now, she's a kid and she's like, Look, man, I did I count the cars, and I put the insulin in, and I waited, and this is what happened. And, and now, but now the point is now she's sort of like, so what are you going to do about it? Because she's not 100% sure what to do after that sometimes? Yeah, you know, like the recurrent thing, I think, I think I think left on her own ardens a one c would probably be more like, six, seven. I'd be guessing 6567 on our own. You know what I mean? I'm the other point and a quarter. Basically, that's where you come in. Yeah, I'm like them. I'm like the guard that you know, I don't really score much, but I play a little defense. So anyway. I don't want to I don't know how to ask you this question. Okay, is it a valuable endeavor doing what you do? Or does it feel fruitless?

Vikki 48:11
No, I think it's very valuable. I I feel like I was in the position to help a lot of people have a better understanding of the importance of exercise of how insulin works in their bodies, the importance of nutrition. I mean, it fell on deaf ears a lot there are still people plenty of patients that would just stop answering my calls I think they felt like I was judging them if I if I didn't like their blood sugar's and I tried to be just you know, this is a number it's not a reflection of your character. It just gives me you know, it's a point in time it gives me an idea because I'm not there with you. And I thought it was it's been my favorite job it's been the most rewarding job that I've had and I think I've touched the most number of lives I don't think I've saved everyone but healthfully you know, all those studies they've done about Tiger control gives you you know, five more years of vision and however many more years of good kidney function so I think it did make a big difference and it had the potential for doing even more for a lot more people so

Scott Benner 49:28
I'm certain It was definitely rewarding. I'm certain it has I just wanted you to tell people I to be perfectly honest, if you would have said no, I've wasted my time and I shouldn't have done this I would have thought not expected to say that. I wanted you to tell people because this podcast makes CDs sometimes. So it is not uncommon for me to get a couple of notes a year from people who become CDs because of the podcast.

Vikki 49:51
That's awesome. And yeah, if you're able to and can get those that experience I mean, don't do it to be rich, because that's not gonna happen, but that's not the reason you will you have have the potential to help a lot of people it's and it's, you know, most people that you will touch has type two diabetes, but you know what? They're the ones that are suffering the most.

Scott Benner 50:14
And you could go to, like you could go to a children's hospital that and work in their division just for like type one if you I mean, if you could find a way into that that exists for some people, right where you don't actually talk. They have diabetes educators there of course, yeah. Right. But if you're just going to be one out in the wild, you're going to see people mostly with type two,

Vikki 50:32
yes, right? Yes. Because that's what most are? Yes.

Scott Benner 50:38
If If I said, How many out of 10 CDs? would be? What's my question? How many out of 10 CDs? If I type one diabetes? How many out of a random sampling of CDs would be valuable for me to have? And how many? How many of them? And how do I know the difference? If I'm the Gosh,

Vikki 50:59
well, I asked them really leading questions. So honestly, it depends on what room you're in, I think, but very few. We switch into practices, because nobody wants to try anything. Nobody was open to discussion. And they didn't seem like they wanted to learn they. And this was the doctor. And then the nurse practitioner we saw they just we don't we don't have any experience with that I wanted to try the iPod for my son. We don't have any experience with that. And I'm like, Well, can I find someone to come talk to you about it? No, no, we're not going to do that. And then finally, we went to the pump earlier than I thought we were going to because I just I wasn't satisfied with the control we have with MDI. And so I don't know one or two, it really, um, and all of them will have valuable things to say, but some more helpful than others. Because they are taught by the book, and the book tells us, you know, X, Y and Z, but we know in actuality unless this person has used insulin or cared for someone who uses it has to use inject insulin, they just they don't really understand how it works.

Scott Benner 52:15
Have you ever heard me say if a doctor says no, you ask why?

Vikki 52:20
I haven't. But that makes perfect sense. And it's why I left my last practice.

Scott Benner 52:24
So when people say no, what they're really saying is, I don't want to be involved in that. Or I don't understand it. Or we don't sell that pump here. Or whatever it ends up not sell. But we don't back that pump here. We don't we have no, you know, experience with iport. For example, like who would care it's important to like, inject through. Well, how much experience would you have almost cursed Vicki? How much experience? How much experience would you need with it to figure it out? Like could a YouTube video not do the same thing for me? You know, like, yeah, like, that's really some chicken stuff to say I don't have experience with iport. Exactly.

Vikki 53:01
Yeah. And How hard would it be? Yeah. So it was not the answer I wanted. And I, my ex wanted to give them like, I think we gave him like two more appointments. And I was like, I'm done.

Scott Benner 53:12
What Not only that, but two more appointments to six more months. Exactly. Right. It's not like you can email him a day later and go, Hey, you sure about what you said about the iPod. Give you another chance to change it. I'll tell you, I sometimes send like I can send Arden's ci, CD or or endo an email it says, Hey, I want to try fiasco. Send me a prescription. And they just go what pharmacy? Oh, that's amazing. It's that easy. And so, but I've built a rapport with them. And for those of you listening are like Oh, yeah, well, you're the guy from the podcast. I don't think they know me as the guy from the podcast. No, I don't think so. Like I they're aware of it, but I don't know that. I don't know that they're aware of the scope of it. Like I might just seem like a nice guy with a podcast. Do you know what I mean? And so which is fine I'm not looking for them to think of me any differently. I'm saying that I've proven to them enough times that the things I've said or asked or desired to do have made sense to them and and borne fruit so they're like, Oh, he's usually right about this stuff. Like what do we care? Let him have it. Even when we're dealing with Arden's like thyroid stuff or something. I'll send an email and I'll be like, I think we need to do a blood test for this and they'll be like okay, and that's it like Arden got an iron infusion yesterday that I'm telling you that if I would have waited for doctors, she'd never would have gotten like I got her that iron if you

Vikki 54:38
and for you for advocating that that's really important

Scott Benner 54:40
it and it's a need, you need to do it because it just no one's going to think outside of the box. Like those of you who are like oh my God, my endo is amazing. They have diabetes, and they know everything and they told me about the podcast like that is not most people. Yeah. Yeah. So you have to Everybody can't just change their endo is the other thing you don't mean,

Vikki 55:04
right? Sometimes you only have one choice, just gotta, you gotta go,

Scott Benner 55:09
you got it you at some point, you have to say, look, this is your, you have this job and you're agreeing with me. So this is good. Sometimes you need to, the way I think of it is sometimes you need to look at your doctor and go, that's the nice person with the prescription pad. And they give me the stuff I need. And I do a little smiling and waving while I'm there. And then I go figure things out for myself. So I guess. So there's a lot of value in your being on and I appreciate it very much. And I guess what I'm trying to get across to people is that there are different I hate to just be so blunt about it. But there are different levels of patience. As far as understanding and ability goes. And there are different levels of doctors as far as understanding and ability and desire goes I guess desire fits on both sides. Right? Right. You need to know who you are. And you need to know who you're dealing with. Right? And then you need to adjust and get what you need. That's how I think of it. I don't know how I would think of it if I didn't understand this stuff as well. Or if I would just be in there and feeling lost. And just hoping to God that somebody was going to help me or tell me to do the thing. I needed them to tell me. But right that is not how the world works, whether it's medicine or something else, honestly. So at some point you have to be what's the word I want? I think at some point, you have to be pragmatic about how things really are versus how you wish they were. Right. Okay. Yeah. Does that make sense? Because it does. Okay, so what are some? Can you give me any helpful tips for people listening? Like, how can they deal? Like, with an endo that's not on board, but they can't switch through? Switch?

Vikki 57:00
You just got to keep asking and reframing it. I mean, it always helps to be polite, and you know, come with evidence. And ultimately, I did have the flexibility where I could switch. I did give them several chances. But you just got to keep trying, I guess. My new boss says no, just means not today.

Scott Benner 57:27
Just keep asking. Yeah, basically, I have to admit, I've never once been told no about anything and thought, well, that means that I guess that's over. Always.

Vikki 57:38
And that's the attitude you have to have, especially in this world of diabetes. You can't. Yeah, you have to be very flexible

Scott Benner 57:47
to ever see that terrible movie called Fred Claus with Vince Vaughn. Right? And now for all of you. For everyone listening who's always been like, I thought Scott sounded like somebody and they're like, it's Vince one. I hear that a lot. So you don't you're not the first person to think. But um, so there's this part in the movie where his girlfriend has broken up with him, and she's hanging out a window. And she's like, we're done. He's like, I'm not done. It's the the idea of it always made me giggle. Like the idea of like, I'm not done, I still want to try like, and she's like, I don't want to try. And he's like I do and like, I know it's not a perfect apples to apples. You're talking about personal relationships when women tell you no, it's it's No. But I'm saying when you're when your endo tells you No, it's how can I get around this?

Vikki 58:33
Yeah, how can we reframe it come back to it? Because I mean, because there's no reason why they do want to help patients. And if you can kind of pry a little bit more and find out Oh, they just don't feel like learning

Scott Benner 58:49
where they don't want to be on the hook suddenly exposed. How much of it is that they don't want to be on the hook if something goes wrong.

Vikki 58:56
Oh, well, there's a liability factor as well. That's true,

Scott Benner 58:59
okay. So if you want to switch insulins, or anything like that, because it really doesn't matter, like you could give me every kind of insulin and I could, I could figure out how to use it. Like it's not a big deal like that. That's not a big deal. If you want to change meters, or pumps or stuff like that, there's nothing that your doctor should know or not know that would stop you. Like, if you don't like on the pod and you want to get something else. And your doctor is like no, no, you know, stay with the Omnipod you should be like, No, I don't want to I'm trying to switch or vice versa, or whatever I wouldn't want. I want to try and get an algorithm you don't they don't get just to tell you know, like, I don't know how else to frame it for people. They're not your parents, and you're not alive. You know what I mean? Like you're paying them and you'll want an insulin pump, get an insulin pump. You know, if you want to change insulin, I had people tell me all the time, my doctor said that wasn't a good idea. And I was like you're a one sees eight and a half your doctor doesn't know what a good idea around diabetes or you're a one c wouldn't be eight and a half like if you could try Then you wouldn't be talking to me. I'm a stranger, with no medical degree. Like imagine like how poorly things are going that you have sought me out is sometimes how I feel about it. You know, like, no one should make it to me, but yet, so many. Yeah, great, thanks. Well, thank you. That's your very kind. That was nice. Thank you. Let's just let that soak in for a second. He said, I appreciate that. I just think that it's important for people to know it's it's good to hear that a person like you who's already the parent of a child with Type One Diabetes still works for somebody who has guidelines, and there are certain things you can and can't say, and that you're going to run into doctors who are going to say no to things for reasons that have that are not based in any reality whatsoever. Just we don't do that here. And you know, I always try to joke through it on the show and say that, you know, usually, you know, the insulin your your practice uses has a lot to do with how pretty the salesgirl is for the insulin company you're practicing.

Vikki 1:01:02
I'm finding that Yeah, and that's

Scott Benner 1:01:04
not me trying to be funny. That's, you know, the most, you know the truth. Yeah, yeah. If If fiapf sends in a guy who's like six, four, and has steel blue eyes, and looks like he just lifts things all day long. Your doctor might be like, you know, what really handsome man told me to try fiasco. And here it is, give it a whirl. It's not that far off from how people like it's not. It's not like dirty, it's not um, it's not. It's not unseemly. It's just how people's minds

Vikki 1:01:34
work. And, you know, associate it with

Scott Benner 1:01:38
somebody pleasing to look at wanders in and tries to say to me, Hey, I try this meter, you're like, Alright, well, okay, I'll try it, like, you know, and if somebody you don't jive with says something that's really makes a ton of sense. You might ignore it. You know what I mean? Like he, right? It's just my favorite. My favorite reviews of the shows are from people were like, I hate that guy. But that podcast is so good. Like, I love that, because that means that the contents so good, that they're little, they're literally willing to overlook, they're

Vikki 1:02:08
willing to put up with your person, don't like me, I'm like that.

Scott Benner 1:02:12
But to me, that's a great, that's a great review. That's the content of this podcast is so good. I'm gonna listen to it, even though I don't particularly like the guy. And that's amazing, like, and so but I'm just saying most of the times people don't have the ability to do that if you know,

Vikki 1:02:29
right? That's not typically how things work, right?

Scott Benner 1:02:33
It's just like, you have to be a little realistic about how the world works. So be persistent, knows not no, nose, nose just means not today, that's very funny.

Vikki 1:02:43
Be kind Be patient. If that's your only option, then you just got to keep working it but yelling and screaming, and it's not gonna end well.

Scott Benner 1:02:53
It makes me wonder why, like, Jenny works at a place, right? That's very progressive. I'm sure. I wonder why more doctor's offices don't take that tactic. It's because they can't control the patient who the patients are.

Vikki 1:03:08
Right? I mean, they're not home with them. And they, yeah, they're just trying to be err on the side of caution for everybody. And so that just means that they're a whole lot more conservative. They will over Basal everybody. And anyway,

Scott Benner 1:03:24
so it's mass market. Its mass market. Yes, yes.

Vikki 1:03:27
They weren't good. I don't I don't know where I'm going with that.

Scott Benner 1:03:32
Let me let me see if what I'm thinking is right, then there are so many different kinds of people, and so little time to speak with them and interact with them, that we are just going to give them enough information that they're not going to drop dead today.

Vikki 1:03:47
Yeah, I mean, that's what they're trying to do. What's best for the most amount of people and that's what I tried to have my type twos understand is, this is supposed to work for your average day. But if you're, you know, not feeling well, or it's raining, and you're just sitting on the couch, or if you're running a marathon today, it's not going to, you're not going to get the same result. So your doctor can only treat your average day so that's what they're doing is trying to figure out what's going to be safest for the most amount of people

Scott Benner 1:04:19
knowing full well that that could mean that you might have a Thursday and a Friday where your blood sugar's in the four hundreds you can't get out of bed and you're knocked over and that's just the cost of doing business because I don't feel like we can do a better job and help as many people the same time

Vikki 1:04:34
unfortunately, but if that person I don't know every situation is different. But I mean we do encourage everyone to report those sorts of things. And so then hopefully they are paired with somebody that can talk to them and find more information and find out what led to that and

Scott Benner 1:04:53
you know, you just said that everybody listening is like yeah, I tried that once they call me back seven days later. By the way, you who were told come back in December when your kid was diagnosed or come back in December when you were diagnosed in September like yeah, so is there is there a sentence that gets you out of it? Like is there like again ardens 504 plan right? There's all these like, you know rules from the doctor's office and then at the bottom of it there's one sentence that says that the parents can override the 504 plan whenever they want

Vikki 1:05:31
Yeah, I think it we have with this medical management plan I have to look more closely at it all the nurses have been really helpful and flexible with me and they'll all call me before they do anything they don't like follow it to the letter or anything because every day is different and so honestly if we have the time for conversation we're going to have a conversation and think about because they keep changing when PE is and changing when recesses and what if they danced in music class and like every day is different

Scott Benner 1:06:05
and they're willing to stay flexible with you? Yes, so yeah, so my point is is that that sentence you know, the parents can override anything in this order that gives the nurse the freedom to think outside the block the outside of the box with me right even though I haven't spoken to a school nurse I quite literally since the end of second grade so I'm just using as an example but I'm saying as a as an educator as an endo isn't there a sentence that you could give people permission to think outside of the box instead of trapping them in the idea of I follow the rules that didn't work that's just diabetes I have to sit here and feel crappy.

Vikki 1:06:45
Gosh, there should be and they should have that in the in the office note and then when I read the office note I can go by that but it's not

Scott Benner 1:06:58
so there's there's no simple fix for this then.

Vikki 1:07:02
Oh, no. Okay. No, but and because then that could be used to someone could take it the wrong way and think oh, that means like I have all these patients that would hold their insulin my blood sugar was only 120 this morning, so I just didn't take my basil and anyway,

Scott Benner 1:07:23
so there are people who don't understand that enough and then they get fooled by something and make the wrong decision. Yeah, so

Vikki 1:07:28
yes, it's like you know, stopping your antibiotics when you feel better like they just think oh, well today I don't need it. Like well that's not how it works.

Scott Benner 1:07:36
Why this conversation is so interesting to me is because it mimics government in my mind the idea that you know, it's easy to sit back and look at a figurehead and say Oh, they made the wrong decision again, they made the wrong decision for you. And they might not be trying to make your life perfect or anyone's life perfect. They're just trying to keep everybody alive. And then if that really is what we're talking about here is that Yeah, when you're overseeing so many people there's no way to make them all happy or in our case all healthy or as healthy as they can be. So you're just going for keep the lights on keep the water running keep the heat on let the food show up at the stores some people are going to experience terrible crime some people are going to get sick and die some people are going to fall through the cracks that's the nice way of saying it in government right some people fall through

Vikki 1:08:27
most people

Scott Benner 1:08:28
and most people will be okay so that's why the podcast is valuable for people who want and have more better Yeah, better Yes, because it's a ecosystem where that's what's spoken about I go Okay, this was great. Oh, by the way, how do you become a CD?

Vikki 1:08:53
I saw the documentation Yeah, so

Scott Benner 1:08:55
you you get the hours and then

Vikki 1:08:57
you have an hour's anything then you apply for the test you have to be approved to apply for the test and then you go and take the test and it was oh gosh, how many questions was it? Now I can't remember I think I looked it up but then my computer just went to sleep on me. But it was one of those time tests and was better than I thought it was going to be.

Scott Benner 1:09:25
What's

Vikki 1:09:26
your score like right away even though they they still have to like officially recognize it so that takes a couple of days and then they send us a certificate to you a little bit later but you'll get the score right away?

Scott Benner 1:09:38
Well, is it expensive to take the test?

Vikki 1:09:41
My company paid for it but it was I want to say 175 so not cheap now so it's certainly not something you want to keep retaking.

Scott Benner 1:09:50
Somebody's got to get me a stolen copy that test I want to take it

Vikki 1:09:56
well they have in the study materials are so expensive. Because there's so little few resources, I guess, yeah, like the book, they'll tell you, you have this 500 page book you can study from. And it's like $250. And I didn't buy the

Scott Benner 1:10:11
book. I don't, I wouldn't have read it anyway, I know how to use manual

Vikki 1:10:14
for some from somebody. And then there's some apps you can use. Those are kind of helpful. The APA guidelines are always important. And so they tweak the test every year because the ADA updates their recommendations every year.

Scott Benner 1:10:28
Okay. I just want to take it cold turkey and see how I do on it. Well, if anybody's got one, Senator, that's all I'm saying. All right.

Vikki 1:10:37
Well, I mean, it's all computerized. So if they did, they did some wrong.

Scott Benner 1:10:41
A lot of people listen, if anybody's got that test on me. Okay. And so what? I want to give it a try and see how I do. But No, but seriously, it's this has been enlightening. You've been really honest. Are you okay, with your name being in this? Are you sure? Yeah, I

Vikki 1:10:57
didn't give you my last name, right. I was told just to not mention the current company I work for, and Otherwise, I'll be fine. I, I hope everything I said was,

Scott Benner 1:11:07
it was very honest. And it was your opinion, I appreciate it. And I and I, and here's why I think it's important to say, because people listening need to understand, not that not that doctors aren't on their side, right. And I don't want it to come off that way. Or that your endo doesn't care about you. But that there is a bigger game at play here. And this is overall the best most people can do. And I'll say it right now to your ask for people who do find and those who are willing to tell them more, you know, more secrets and tricks and stuff like that. That means that endo over time has sniffed you out as a person who's not going to screw up, right and hurt yourself. And so they're willing now they're going out on a limb by saying, Hey, listen, Jeff, or think about a Temp Basal right here. You know what I mean? Like, that's them. That's them going out on a limb. And they're not just they can't protect themselves by saying nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical, or otherwise, please always consult a physician to your doctor, can you imagine if they are the physician? Yeah. Can you imagine? You go to Dr. Smith, he could sit down and go, Hey, how are you? And you go, good. Dr. Smith, how are you? And he goes, Well, before we get started, I just want to let you know that nothing I say in this room should be considered medical advice. Now Pre-Bolus dammit, you're killing yourself. Like Yeah, like it just, they don't live in the same world. And it's just, it's too much. And you know, you can't, I just I'm trying to figure out how to mass reach people, and give them better, a better chance. And that's why this conversation I think, has been really valuable. And I think it's very valuable for people listening. So they understand that it's not in competence. Sometimes it this is designed, and it's it's not going to change. So you can sit around and hope and beg and yell at people if you want to. But this is not going to change. And it's not just in diabetes, it's in every form of healthcare. Yeah. So everybody just, you know, stop acting like you're 12 years old, and a unicorn is gonna fly in with, you know, balloons for you. It's not gonna happen. You got to take care.

Vikki 1:13:17
Yeah, I think they're doing the best they can with what they have. And most people do ultimately want to help people and improve their outcomes.

Scott Benner 1:13:27
But you got to help yourself to at some point.

Vikki 1:13:29
You really well, you got to make sure that you have a job.

Scott Benner 1:13:33
Well, no, yeah, I'm saying here to practice. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Not you. I mean, the other people, the people coming in, like, you've got to help yourself, like thinking about it as a patient. Like, at some point, if you're not seeing the outcomes, or living the life that you think is possible. It is not because it's not afforded to you and it's afforded to somebody else's, you don't know what to do, and you need to find out what to do. And if your doctors not going to tell you, or if anyone's not going to tell you go to somebody who will share that stuff with you. That's all Do you have you been through the pro tip episodes?

Vikki 1:14:07
And most of them I haven't been able to listen in a while but I know it's the I used to listen to them on walks when I work from home for a year. That's when I walked my dog I would always listen one gotcha. I'm gonna re listen to them and then I want my son to listen. I'm gonna try to anyway I might have to bribe them. But

Scott Benner 1:14:23
you know what? I'm seeing a lot of people doing that now and I gotta be honest with you. It's alright with me. Like I don't see like I see people are paying their kids to listen to the pro tip episodes.

Vikki 1:14:32
What's your currency? What do you want today? anyway?

Scott Benner 1:14:34
Exactly. Yeah. Is it Legos? Is it cash? Let's just talk turkey here.

Vikki 1:14:41
What does it take?

Scott Benner 1:14:42
What what I'll tell you there's gonna be a teenager on I probably won't record till the summer with him. You might not hear this for anyway you. It's gonna be a while, but the mom reaches out to me. I have a long conversation with the kid back when I think he's 16 or 17 I I feel like I straighten everything. He understands what's going on. I just got a text from him yesterday. And he said he finally pulled it all together. And he was texting to say thank you and all this stuff. I said, Do you want to come on the show and tell people about this? And he said, Yes. So you're going to get a real, really good conversation from a kid who is thoughtful and caring and loving and worried and worried about himself, but still just kind of couldn't pull it all together. And you know, and it was hard on him and his parents and everything. And he's gonna talk about what what Finally, you know, made it peak for him and got him over the hump, but that sounds great. Yeah, look forward to that. It's very cool. It really is. And I genuinely appreciate you doing this. taking the time out. Oh, it's been my pleasure. Seriously, you were you had a good time?

Vikki 1:15:47
I did. It was less scary than I thought it was gonna be. Are you nervous? I'm okay, now you're okay.

Scott Benner 1:15:53
Now, how long did it take you? I usually think it's about 15 minutes. Yeah, probably right in there. I can feel people changing around 20 minutes. At least send it up. Just so you know that around that same time, a voice in my head says I'll bleep this out, Vicki. Okay. So I start the episode and I pick through and I get enough information, I think, okay, these are the things I'm going to get through over the next hour. And then I can hear a voice in my head to say this up, make this good. And then I feel an incredible amount of pressure to put together a good show together, off the top of my head, cuz I don't have any notes about you here. I just, I just when we started, I was like, Oh, this is Vicki, she became a CD, she's going to talk to you about how to become a CD. And I was like, that's cool. And then that's how we started. So then I feel this immense pressure not to like waste your time or wasted people's time who are listening or anything like that. I might be more nervous than you are.

Vikki 1:16:45
But you did a great job coming up with questions because I was like, did he send me something initially that I forgot or lost or what?

Scott Benner 1:16:52
Now there's no prep, it's all whatever falls out of my head. That's all well, that's awesome. You have a gift. Well, everyone's gonna walk us wrong. Just Say No. Well, not today. But you hear me like really shucking and jiving and talking fast. I've lost the thread. I'm just trying to be entertaining at that point. Whether I fail or not, I'm not certain.

Well, a huge thanks to Vicki for coming on the show, and sharing everything that she shared with us, which was a lot as you can tell, because you heard it. Thanks also to the Contour Next One blood glucose meter, please head over to Contour Next one.com forward slash juice box. And you can learn more about touched by type one by finding them on Instagram, Facebook, or it touched by type one.org. Remember, if you're in the Orlando area, and you want to see a shindig and extravaganza dance party, right there in front of you on stage, go get some tickets touch by type one.org. Hit the program's tab, you're almost done. If you're enjoying the Juicebox Podcast, please do two things. First thing, tell someone else about the Juicebox Podcast. That's simple. I mean, I mean, it'd be nice if you open up their app and show them how to listen to a podcast to if they need help, because some people don't understand podcasts, but just telling them big deal for me. And I appreciate it. Second thing, go where you're listening and leave a beautiful five star rating and review write a beautiful rating. Like if they say your app allows three stars then get all three stars. If there's five stars, you get all five of them. And then after you do that you say something really thoughtful about the podcast that will help someone else decide to listen. That's pretty much it. The show grows because you tell people about it. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of the Juicebox Podcast.


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#565 Crazy Mom from Texas

Scott Benner

Shannon has a child with type 1 diabetes.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


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.

coming soon


Please support the sponsors

The Juicebox Podcast is a free show, but if you'd like to support the podcast directly, you can make a gift here. Recent donations were used to pay for podcast hosting fees. Thank you to all who have sent 5, 10 and 20 dollars!

Donate

#563 English Mum

Scott Benner

Heather is the mother of a boy living with type 1 diabetes.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


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, and welcome to Episode 563 of the Juicebox Podcast.

Today's show is with Heather Heather is the mother of a child with Type One Diabetes. She has an amazing accent. She's a ton of fun to talk to. That is all I need to tell you. Please remember while you're listening 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 healthcare plan or becoming bold with insulin. Are you a US resident who has type one diabetes or a US resident who is the caregiver of a child with type one? If so, please go to T one d exchange.org. forward slash juice box and take a few minutes to fill out their survey. When you do you will be helping people living with Type One Diabetes and supporting the Juicebox Podcast. It's it's super simple to do. It's completely HIPAA compliant. 100% anonymous, the questions are not difficult. It would be a big deal if you could do that P one d exchange.org. forward slash juicebox. Okay, thank you very much sadolin and listeners Heather and I have a right proper chat.

This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Contour Next One blood glucose meter, please go to Contour Next one.com forward slash juice box. When you get there you will learn all about Arden's blood glucose meter, which in my opinion is the greatest one that I've ever held used or counted on Contour Next one.com forward slash Juicebox Podcast is also sponsored today by trial net trial net offers free T one D Risk Screening trial net.org forward slash juicebox free p one D Risk Screening later during the ad I'll fill you in on why that might be interesting to you. Alright, let's get started. Here comes Heather.

Heather 2:17
Okay, so my name is Heather and I am an English mom of Oscar who is my type one son, he's 12 and we actually live in Spain. We live in the south of Spain. I've got two other boys and I'm married to my my Spanish husband, Alejandro

Scott Benner 2:36
That sounds very much like a romance novel. Alejandro really does

Heather 2:42
20 years it's not so much of a romance novel anymore but it was at the beginning

Scott Benner 2:47
20 years in one pandemic later and you're like very

Heather 2:52
not definitely not romantic anymore.

Scott Benner 2:54
I'm I'm starting to get that like I'll start talking and I can see Kelly and Arno look up at me and they're like oh god look he's talking Yeah, like

Heather 3:03
it's just it's not natural is it just to be sitting you know around with each other all day every day?

Scott Benner 3:09
Yeah. Now you don't have whatever that thing is. I mean I'm talking for I guess I'm speaking for myself not all men but I'm irritated by the women in my life but I don't tell them about it. But the girls seem to have no trouble letting me know just like

Heather 3:27
sounds familiar. Sounds familiar thing is I'm like totally outnumbered in my house because it's me plus three boys. So I've like you know, I've got to state my rights.

Scott Benner 3:36
I I've always found the most interesting part of being married to be like you're in some sort of a disagreement. And someone is running down a list that appears to have been started the day you mad about what's wrong with you and you're just like, I love you sweetie. I don't know what the problem is. I just love you And she's like, it doesn't matter like okay, because in 1998 oh my god

Heather 3:58
to list all Oh, yeah, I

Scott Benner 3:59
feel like she had anyway I might not be right. But I feel like the whatever the first thing was that I ever did to wrong her she's aware of it. And has it written down somewhere. I think

Heather 4:10
the thing is, you know, I've learned like after 20 years, I've learned something about myself that sometimes I just need to think for three seconds before I say what I'm going to say. And that really helps it as I just talked to I talked too much usually. So I've started trying to do that now.

Scott Benner 4:26
I find myself. I work out my thoughts out loud, which probably doesn't come to a surprise to people who listen, but I don't think that's as pleasurable in real life as it is on a podcast. Yeah.

Heather 4:40
People are not gonna find that so amusing.

Scott Benner 4:43
When I'm like, I'm thinking like, I need a new car. And I'm like, well, so I've got it down to these two and my thought process is arduous. And I like to run it around people. I'm like, What do you think of this? I can just see everybody's like, I don't care. But at one point, my wife's like, I don't drive your cars ever. Like Far like yeah I don't have multiple cars but she's like I never drive any of the cars that you own she's like I don't care it's not mine It's yours it's like yeah, I just want your opinion she's like I don't have an opinion.

Heather 5:10
You need to develop your inner voice Scott that's what it is. Yeah, well,

Scott Benner 5:13
I just got to I think what I really have to do is I actually had this problem I think my entire life I just sort of kind of expect that other people feel or think about things similar to me. And I

Heather 5:26
also like people think you're going to be interesting that's what i think i think you know, surely what I'm going to say is interesting I know and I realize it maybe isn't always

Scott Benner 5:34
look right three well at least you don't have a podcast so that you're that nobody can come back at you ever and go I know that people listen to your podcast like you but at the moment I'm not interested in what you're saying you know, I go

Heather 5:45
as quiet like a quite a big audience for kind of getting into waffling mode.

Scott Benner 5:50
Anyway, I'm sorry, your son who has type one is how old he's 12 and was diagnosed.

Heather 5:56
So he was diagnosed when he just turned 10 it was quite a kind of interesting story because so so we live here in Spain, and he goes to an international school, and he had just gone off on a on a sports trip to Dubai. To an international like World Sports championship. It was like this really, really amazing trip of a lifetime. He was so young he was only nine and he'd gone with his school my husband had gone with him because obviously it's quite young to travel but I was like really feeling that distance like I was just I didn't know what it was but I was just feeling so nervous about him being that far away. And my husband kept kind of sending me messages saying you know, Oscars really like not himself I can't quite put my finger on what it is you know, obviously he was in a Hot Country and he was doing like athletics and football and these different sports so we didn't quite know we didn't know if he was just not kind of adjusting to the to the climate out there but obviously it's hot where we live as well. And I just felt something was wrong, you know, like a mother's kind of instinct. And he's normally like really just you know, doesn't get stressed and upset about things he's really resilient but he was sending me these kind of homesick messages and you know telling me how much he missed me and just seemed off and when he got back we were so lucky because we picked up on what was going on really quickly so you know he got back and I'd say the second night he got back he got up twice to go to the toilet in the middle of the night. And I didn't know you know I'd heard about symptoms I can't even remember where but I just kind of knew what they were and I said to him the next morning like Oscar you have you been like thirsty lately and he said god I'm so thirsty all the time mom and I went right we're going straight to the hospital and he obviously was you know diagnosed straight away sent we had to go in an ambulance to the hospital in a bigger city close by but they said you caught it so early that he wasn't even that like unwell you know he seemed fine he played like a football match you know the day before and I'm so grateful that he didn't get really sick when he was that far away from me like half you know hours and hours away in Dubai so he got home and we got it you know sorted quickly but it was just it was just that instinct I just knew there was something not right

Scott Benner 8:27
quick question and you don't have to be super specific but I feel like everyone listening is going to wonder if I don't ask you guys want a diamond mine or like your gunrunners when you just you just said you just said that your son went to play a sport in Dubai and I was like that doesn't sound like it's close to Spain but I don't then again I might be 100% wrong I just feel like you're right about that yeah, so anyway I found a bag of money one day like I don't know is it none of my business I don't care I just well

Heather 9:00
yeah no I mean it wasn't it was like I said it was a trip of a lifetime so it's not we're not like sending our kids you know all over the world all the time it was this big opportunity you know we had to save up for it and we were like Should we do it should we not like we knew a year in advance that you was going to have this opportunity this is one of these going to an international school like here is it's such a great way to live for them because they get so many opportunities to travel with the school that's the like mentality you know, they want them to see the world and all three of my boys are quite, they're really sporty so they get to travel with sports, which is really cool. So we're very grateful for that.

Scott Benner 9:40
I imagine as a mom to three boys you knew when you were getting sappy text messages that there was something wrong is that when it hits you

Heather 9:47
totally, totally normally it's just like you know they're just going out and doing their thing but that's and that's what I said is you just know when there's something off and it was like I love you I miss you and all this kind of stuff. And yeah, of course you know, they say That kind of thing behind closed doors but like, you know, not on messages every day and it because he'd actually been to Italy the year before when he was eight. And I was really young and was actually fine, right? No problem.

Scott Benner 10:11
Yeah. I find myself any any decent father of sons, you always have to be like, as you pass your kid your sons by like, send mom attack Say hi to Mom, don't forget to say goodnight to Mom, don't forget because they love you to death, but their boys and they're not fully formed yet. You know and all you married ladies know guys don't really turn into humans till they're like in their 40s anyway, so

Heather 10:33
I know, I know or beyond But yeah, I mean, boys do are is how, you know you shouldn't generalize, but they can be very, like close to their moms like, you know, we, we have a very I have a very close relationship with all three of them, but they are all, you know, resilient. And actually, particularly Oscar funnily enough, you know, and I've heard before other mums say, it sounds terrible. But if, if any of the three of them could cope with getting something like this, it was definitely this one. You know, he is he is a real, you know, he's independent and brave and resilient. And he's he was the one I think best equipped to deal with all of this. Yeah,

Scott Benner 11:10
I have to say, I understand both sides of that conversation. Like I get how weird it is to say that to somebody. And yet I understand when you're a parent of multiple children thinking, you know, if something happens to one of these people, that one can handle it better than they should be him. It's

Heather 11:25
like, I think Jesus, this has happened to my oldest kid like we could have been screwed. I mean, he gets completely hysterical. If he gets a splinter, like, you know, we practically have to lock him in the room for a day, whereas Oscar will remember once Oscar had to have a tooth removed, and the dentist said, you know, it's really bad. We're gonna have to book you in for an extraction. And this is how it's going to work and Barbara and he went to the center that goes to the dentist. I'll just take it out. Now. Give me the shot and pull it out. He was like, seven at the time of the dentist like great, no problem. Just got the pliers out and pull it out.

Scott Benner 11:59
I don't want to have to come back. Just bang on it. Yeah. I have to tell you, I don't know if I've ever told this here before, but I grew up so broke. And my wisdom teeth had to come out obviously, at some point. I didn't have any insurance. Oh, no, this is gonna sound bad. I was I was at the regular dentist office. And the guy's like, Hey, you gotta you know, I'm gonna give you a card for the person I do. You know, I work with for surgery. And I said, what's that gonna cost? And I think at that point, they were like, it's $2,000. I said, Well, I'm glad I'm doing that, you know, so I don't have insurance and I don't have $2,000. And I said, What's it cost to have a tooth pulled? And he goes, What do you mean? I said, if you were to pull out a tooth right now, what would you charge me, he's like 50 bucks. I said, Well, I have $200 go ahead and pull them out. And he shot me awful of novocaine. And had I had an assistant stand behind my head, both hands on my forehead, leaning into my head to hold my head down while he was yanking out the wisdom teeth. That's pretty impressive. You got to be really you got to got to be broke to appreciate it really. But there was just no other options. I was like, Alright, well, I'll do this then.

Heather 13:04
But you know what, like, We are so lucky here in Spain. It's the same as England with our there's a free healthcare system here. You know, it's the same as the NHS in England. And we just never have to worry about any of that stuff. And it's like, I just can't tell you how much I appreciate that. Because Oscar gets as well as you know, all of his insulin, everything. He also gets his Dexcom and his tandem. All three. Wow. On the on the system here, right? No, quite, you know, obviously we go for our checkups, but it is all free is amazing.

Scott Benner 13:34
Hey, Spain. That's pretty great. Amazing. Yeah, well, okay, so you How did you know? Why did the ping tip you off?

Heather 13:43
Just because I knew you know, I knew the symptoms were frequent urination and thirst. I can't even remember how I knew. But also it was it was so weird. There was this photo that was taken. I took him on his on my phone a couple of days before and I again, I thought other moms say this. And I looked at the photo, and he had lost weight. And I still look at that photo. Now I hate looking at it. And I was like, This is not a photo of what my son should look like, you know, and it was like, just looking at something and knowing that he was ill. It's such a horrible feeling. And, and luckily, you know, they saw us. It was only two days later that we went to the hospital. And but I kind of knew what they were going to say.

Scott Benner 14:30
Okay, so you just picked it up somewhere along the lines, you have absolutely no idea.

Heather 14:34
Yeah, you know, I mean, maybe I'd have a friend who'd had it or something. But yeah, I was very clear. And I said to my husband that day, I said, You know what, I think our son's got diabetes, I'm taking him in and he was like, Don't be ridiculous, you know? And, and it was obviously we were right.

Scott Benner 14:51
Okay, well, well, what do you do next then, if you're I've never really asked anybody this before. I guess I am I don't know why I haven't I'm thinking about it like Jesus should have said the sinner. But what do you do? He's got diabetes. You get sent home, I always asked like, what kind of stuff that you get sent home with. But how do you go about figuring out what to do?

Heather 15:16
Yeah, well, it was, this was not an easy part of it. So like, the easy part of it was getting in there and getting him diagnosed. But the my main problem is that I'm in a, I'm in a different country. So you know, I'm an expat living in a different country, and I speak Spanish, but I'm not bilingual, like I've learned Spanish. And suddenly, you know, and you know, how unbelievably overwhelmed you feel. In those first couple of weeks, I was just like, and people were just talking at me in Spanish, you know, and my husband obviously was there with me. But I felt like not only am I not taking any of this in, but I'm trying to take it all in in a different language. And even though the healthcare system is amazing here, they're really behind on technology. So the general awareness of technologies is only two years ago, and my personality is just like, you know, go home, read everything, you can get all their information, you can talk to the doctor about it, and we were seeing this specialist. And I said to her, this is on like, the third or fourth day Oscar was in hospital for a week, I said, What about this Dexcom that I'm reading about? And she was like, No, no, it's, you know, it's new technology, it really shouldn't be relied on. And I was really putting me off in saying, our children don't react very well with. I don't know how, and I thank goodness, I didn't listen to her because I was like, this is ridiculous, and, and did all of my own, you know, research on all of it. So we were given all of this education in terms of the basics, which I was really struggling to take on board. So I kind of just educated myself at home. And that was how I kind of found sanity, basically, because I'm particularly like, the carb counting, and all this kind of thing. And then, after a few days, for some reason, my husband's a chef. And for some reason, they decided that we were a family, who would be absolutely fine. And we weren't going to have any problems, because my husband was a chef, and we were going to know all about food and off you go go home, and didn't really get much support after that, you know, we go for our checkups every three months, I'd still not understand what they were talking to me about. And so we've just kind of found our own way. And I don't because I know you don't i don't carb count at all, a lot of it's just kind of experience now and just realizing what what kind of food will do what to him. And I sometimes I feel like I'm doing that wrong, but I just feel like it's it's more kind of mentally is less mentally taxing that way

Scott Benner 17:47
I agree with you. I think it's interesting. Also the the idea that the Dexcom was new to the, to the medical person. And so they just said, Well, that's a new thing. That, you know, it had been around for many, many years, and then through a number of different iterations, but it was new to her, I guess. So therefore new and then that's easy, and she's had a bad experience with it. And that's how easily you could have been dissuaded if you wouldn't have thought

Heather 18:16
I was more impressionable, like, you know, I just think on what planet does someone does someone a diabetes doctor say that to somebody, you know, it's just like, it is absolutely, the most important thing that has happened to us as a family on so many different levels is the Dexcom being I mean, I just

Scott Benner 18:36
yeah, just that says being able to save the data. Yeah. All right,

Heather 18:40
and what it's meant for us in terms of, you know, being able to sleep at night, being able to have peace of mind, you know, in the beginning and then analyze everything. I just, it's it's like 90% of the whole thing for us is that Dexcom

Scott Benner 18:53
Yeah, no, that's that's incredibly interesting. I wonder if it I'm gonna be a conspiracy theorist for a second. I wonder if because they're free. They don't like to give them to people.

Heather 19:01
I know. And I do, like sometimes I so often think back to her, and you know, what's really weird is that Oscar so we've had efest and we've now got a much better doctor, but Oscar and I always like listen to you know, when your kids have a really like strong reaction to an adult, and they can't quite put their finger on it. But he hated he hated her. We'd have to go and see her every day for more education. And every time he walked into that room, his blood sugar shot up to like 285 minutes it's it was really interesting. And, and I still I still think back on her she had a really annoying receding hairline. And I've got this like nightmare vision of her with Oscar shaking in the corner and her telling me how terrible Dexcom were and just she was like a witch. And I now think should I like send her an email and say, I hope you're not saying this still to newly diagnosed families, because you're really It's a disservice is Yeah, but I don't know whether she would take that it's super

Scott Benner 20:05
funny because I have a great relationship with like the, the people I I talked with through Dexcom about the advertisements ago on the show. And you know, they're like, you know, understandably, when we first started doing this there said, like, you know, we'll we'll write some ads and go over them. And it's like, I really don't think that's a good idea. I'm like, I can just talk about it like from, you know, my experience. I think that's a great advertisement for it. And they were finally they were finally like, Yeah, Yeah, go ahead. And that was lovely of them. And, and so I've been doing that for years. But there are times when I'm saying it, where I think, like, is this even like, I hope this is believable. But you know what I mean, like, I know, it's in an advertisement. So it might be not, but I think everything you just said, it's the greatest thing that's ever happened to me, in regards to my daughter's type one. And even being able to help other people. It's, you know, there's so much, there's so much feedback. I know, I call it data, but there's so much feedback. And it's just, it's become super simple for me to look at the graph and think, alright, well, this is what happened here, you know, and it's just, it's makes it all visual, and very understandable.

Heather 21:12
I mean, that and that's when and that's the more kind of advanced age, because you know, you've been dealing for it for so long. But like, also, for me, the first thing was, I can send him to school, and not be having a heart attack every day, like, you know, when I remember we we had our week or hospital, then we had a week back at home. And we didn't have the Dexcom. And I was just saying to myself, how am I going to send him to school, like, I just won't be able to relax at all, you know, and we were having to get up and do fingerprick three times a night with the alarm on and oh my god, I mean, how you would think that this is a better way of doing things. I just have no idea. So now whenever I meet anyone who's going through the same thing, and then that what advice would you give, you know, it's just number one, get Dexcom. And then everything else is less important.

Scott Benner 21:58
It's so it's just very true. I, I feel like I run out of ways to say it. Like, there's times where I the music pops on, I want to say to people just just go buy it. If you can, like if you can afford it, get it, there's no reason that you wouldn't want to. And I think

Heather 22:13
I reacted so strongly because I was told not to get it by someone who was in a position of power. Yeah, just you know, it's kind of

Scott Benner 22:21
happened. That happened to us with Arden's Omni pod when we were we were pod shopping, basically. And a nurse told me very similarly to you like you don't want that to actually use those words. You don't want that one. I said, why not? Then she just rattled off a bunch of stuff, that none of it ended up being true. And then they apologize to me.

Heather 22:42
You don't know you don't know why or where it comes from. And then, you know, there's no point analyzing it. Like we've had really good experiences ever since. And like I say, I'm so grateful to that to the Spanish healthcare system. But it was just this one woman and, and I, you know, I just I hope she doesn't keep doing it.

Scott Benner 22:56
Yeah, no, you have to see the difference between an anecdotal. You know, somebody's speaking to you anecdotally, and somebody's speaking to you, factually. And I don't think that that's hard to discern, really, because if somebody has a bad experience with anything, it doesn't mean you're going to, and it doesn't mean they use that right, you can ask all kinds of questions, you know, people love to put online. It's a picture of their meter and a picture of their CGM. And they're 35 points off of each other like why don't understand which one to believe. And I sometimes say to myself, well, if I was you, I would believe the Dexcom over the 11th ranked blood sugar meter from 2000 and you know, 15

Heather 23:35
and also like, look at the last 15 minutes in your Dexcom which you're not going to be able to see and you can see what what angle the lines going out what you know, I mean, for me as well, he might ask, he does a lot of sports. And I just I feel like I can sit on the sidelines of a football match and just completely enjoy it because like there's so many times where he said so we have his alarm, his low alarm at about, I don't know 85 or something when he's doing a match because we know that he can just stop and have a banana or something like that. And it means that the biggest thing in his life which is sport has carried on and we haven't had to worry about it.

Scott Benner 24:15
Okay, during this ad, I'm going to talk to you about trialnet and the Contour Next One blood glucose meter, but I'm gonna start with the glucose meter. The Contour Next One blood glucose meter is easily the greatest blood glucose meter that I've ever used. That's no kidding. I'm holding up my right hand, as I'm saying that it is incredibly easy to hold your hand. It is small enough to transport simply but not so small that you can't use it well. It has an incredibly it has an incredibly bright light for nighttime viewing. And the screen is super simple to see. It also has Second Chance test strips so that if you don't get quite enough blood the first time even though it doesn't need a lot. If you just don't get quite enough you can put more Without wasting the strip or impacting adversely the quality of the test. It also has an app if you so desire. And it can send all of its information over to the app, so you can look at it later. Now, if you don't want an app doesn't matter meter works just as well without the app, great app, if you want it, don't want it, no bother. Contour Next One blood glucose meter, I'm gonna keep saying this. We don't pay enough attention to the quality of the blood glucose meter that we have in our pockets, or purses or bags, and hidden around our house. There's no reason for you to be using an old busted up janky meter that's giving you inaccurate testing. Get yourself a Contour. Next One. They're very affordable. And in fact, maybe less cash than you're even paying now for your blood glucose meter through insurance. Check it out. That's all I'm asking you to do go to Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox is an incredibly comprehensive website that will answer all of your questions. There's links in the show notes of this podcast player, and links at Juicebox Podcast comm in case you can't remember Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox. It's a great meter, no, no BS. Here's something else. That's great trial that trial net offers free type one diabetes risk screening, okay. All you do is go to trial net.org forward slash juice box to get started. Now, this is a little bit of an explanation, but I'm going to give it to you trial that is available at no cost to relatives of people with type one diabetes. Trial net Risk Screening identifies T one D in its earliest stages, often years before symptoms appear. Early detection allows you to take steps to try to change the course of the disease. There are prevention studies that are testing ways to slow or stop the disease's progression, and you could be eligible for those clinical trials. For people who take part in those clinical trials, the risk of diabetic ketoacidosis, or decay, which is a serious and potentially life threatening condition drops from 30% to less than 3%. Here's who's eligible, you qualify for free Risk Screening if you are between the ages of two and a half and 45 years old and have a parent, brother, sister or child with type one. You also qualify if you're between the ages of two and a half and 20 years old. If you have an uncle, aunt, cousin, grandparent niece, nephew, half brother, half sister, who has type one diabetes, and you also qualify if you've tested positive for auto antibodies outside of trial net. All you have to do is visit trial net.org forward slash juicebox. answer a few quick questions to see if you're eligible. And then you will join the 1000s of T 1d families who are on the pathway to prevention. When the website asks you how you found out make sure you say Juicebox Podcast. Okay, so now you're wondering how you get screened, right there's a couple of different ways you can have delivered right to your door for free and in home test kit. That kit provides everything you need to collect a fingerstick blood sample from the safety of your own home, and then you can just ship it back using the free FedEx contactless home pickup. Or if you'd like trial that will send you a lab test kit that you can take to a quest diagnostics or lab core location and get a blood draw right there that of course is also absolutely free and in some places there are trial net locations that you can visit so those are the three ways you can do it. You will receive your screening results in four to six weeks if the results show that you are in early stages of Type One Diabetes trial net will schedule a follow up visit to see if you are eligible for a prevention study trial net.org forward slash juicebox make sure you tell them I sent you

know I agree so you went online for this information

Heather 28:57
yeah oh god I just and this is like this is my personality like I will always try and find like I feel like I can find the truth about things you know and I I originally that was a journalist so I was trained to research things you know and that's like ironically come in so useful now. So I did my research but you know, I was researching legitimate places you know, so I knew I was getting the right information and an inch and what happened with us is that I got all the information we got him set up but then after you know a year and a half of having the pump and having the Dexcom we were definitely hitting a wall and I know you love hearing these stories and then I found your podcast and in fact I found it on a Dexcom like Facebook group. They kept kind of popping up the you know the name of the of the podcast, and that the problem is where I live here you know the worst thing about this situation is Lonely it is, you know, it's lonely for Oscar and it's lonely for me and my husband, because we don't know anyone who is going through the same thing. And yes, you know you if there are kind of support groups and stuff, but we never really found anyone we could really connect to and I found it really lonely as a mom. And even though we felt we had the information that we needed, we were just, you know, he was only like 60% time and range and his a one c could be could be a bit better. And then I hit the podcast, and it just, it just gave me that extra step that I was missing, to kind of really understand what was going on. And it was brilliant, because the English system has the different like blood sugar system. So so I can always understand everything everyone's talking about in the American system, because it's the same in Spanish. And it just gave us that last little step, you know, in terms of Pre-Bolus saying and big, a bit braver and because I didn't have anyone to really talk to about it, and all the anecdotal stuff and all the amazing Facebook, parents and everything that come in and help you is just, wow, what a life changer. It's been honestly,

Scott Benner 31:12
it's also very helpful when the people who you're hearing from know that the first time they see something doesn't make it a rule. And they'll wait until they have it. Like I say sometimes on here, like if I say something on this podcast, and it's not something that's just popped into my head at that moment, because if it does, I'll say, this just came to me. I've never thought about this before. But if it hasn't, if you hear me say something, it is a tried and true thing that we've done for months, if not years, like I don't just hop on here. And it's not a YouTube review of you know, of a vacuum cleaner. I don't I don't push it across the carpet three times ago. That sucks. Good. You'll love it. Like I really, you know, I really put a lot of pride in the fact that if I'm talking about something, I'm generally comfortable, it's going to work for most people.

Heather 31:57
Yeah, you know, but I think the reason why this works so well, like your podcast worked so well in the in the kind of social media community is that, you know, diabetes is something that you live and breathe 24 hours a day, and no one can understand unless they're living it. You know, like, however much you talk to relatives and friends about it, no one can understand that it's such a unique and slightly kind of relentless experience that finding a community that is living that 24 hour, you know, experience as well is such a kind of bonding thing. And there's just so many variables that that's why I like your podcast, you can just keep bringing our episodes because it's just endless things to talk about. It's fascinating. You said,

Scott Benner 32:43
relentless. I never I never thought of that word before. Relating to diabetes, but it fits so perfectly. Yeah, the other night. The other night around 11pm. I'm talking to Arden she's getting ready to go to sleep, and I'm getting ready to go to bed and everything. And this thing pops up on her phone. It says the Dexcom sensor is going to expire in six hours. And my brain just went that's five o'clock in the morning. And that was that's a good, a good example of that relentlessness. Like everything was going great. That sensor was working terrific. Her blood sugar was fantastic. We were going to bed. And now suddenly, it's something to think about now. For me. What I said was I looked at her and I went you want to do this now. Because if they do it now I'm like, I don't know that's gonna come on around 1am or so. And I don't love the sensor at the very beginning. So I'm not gonna I'm gonna warn her about it. I'm like, let's just get through five o'clock, and she looks at me and she goes, Okay, let's do it the morning. She goes, do not come in here at five o'clock and change that thing. And I was like, she was I will be up at seven. And I said, Okay, yeah, that makes sense to me. And and there's the difference, right? Because for me, I'm so confident in her settings. That I think that at five at when five o'clock comes and I lose the sensor. When she wakes up at seven she's gonna be okay. Yeah, and so I got up probably around quarter of seven. I tested her blood sugar. It was 89. And I thought yeah, okay. And then we changed her changed it out. And I said to her, Hey, if you think about it, test again, in like an hour or so. And you know, just in case your blood sugar starts to drift. And in my mind, it's going to drift up because of the time of day. And sure enough, she tested and she was like 130 and we put a Bolus in and then an hour later after that the CGM came on it actually was really great from the beginning. But I can see if that was can you imagine if that was two weeks in or a month in

Heather 34:48
and also like imagine how many thoughts and decisions and and you know, thought processes you have gone through in five minutes. You know, that most People just go to bed they have a glass of wine and they go to bed and that's it whereas you're thinking right well what happens in five hours Should I do that you know and this is like this is what your brain is going through 24 hours a day you just never like I have this weird thing where I go to sleep at night and I always wake up an hour after I go to sleep practically every night going What have I forgotten to do? touch yourself this like moment of panic or you know every every night because you know your brain is just in overdrive all the time and of course like the more time you do it, like we're two years into it now it becomes more part of life and more natural but it's definitely relentless.

Scott Benner 35:36
Well those thoughts too they're like you said they're, they're impactful, but they're impactful to different people. That whole like little story I just told took like 20 seconds in my real life like we were able to think it through we talked about it for two seconds and we were gone and I didn't think about it after that like I didn't worry about it you would think of it differently because you have two years into it then somebody would who's been doing it for six months that that moment could end up being a crippling event that lasts all night long. Yeah, you know and they could really they could really get stuck and like you said do and other people have you have other stuff going on in your life like diabetes isn't the only thing you're thinking about constantly when you

Heather 36:19
can't take your eye off the ball though you know this is it I mean ever like I can see how it how it can really be difficult for some families you know because I had this really nice conversation they once with with our specialist and she does a you know a diabetes camp here in Spain every summer and she said you know when I first started doing it I would be like really in a way kind of quite thankful that my own children her children aren't aren't diabetic, you know, didn't have to go through all of this that all these kids are having to go through and she goes and the more time I spent doing these diabetes camps, the more incredible I realize children with type one are because they are dealing with like 500 decisions more a day than than any other child of the same age and a lot of them are just completely taking it in their stride like you know if you can manage it and they can they can handle things well psychologically, mentally and everything you know it can be the making of kids that they can grow up into the world and becomes something incredible because of what they're dealing with every day without even having to think about it in the end.

Scott Benner 37:30
I can't tell if as artin texts me I know you're recording but when you're done you should make me french toast

Heather 37:40
she's she's got your wrap around your little fish that little fingers Scott.

Scott Benner 37:43
I told her I was like, um, you know, after this, I still have to like there's a couple things I've threw around the house. I'm getting my going to get our taxes prepared this afternoon. So, you know, my wife's telling me something she needs from the grocery store everybody's like, I don't know I'm just everyone's major Domo I realized I I went from being Kelly's boyfriend to the waiter. I don't know what happened. But But you

Heather 38:04
so you is is odd and going off to college soon. Are you? Are you still kind of looking out or she at home? Still?

Scott Benner 38:11
No, she's a junior in high school. So she's almost she's one. She's got one more year. Okay. And then she'll be going to college. She's looking at a couple places. Now. I think she's got her heart set on one in New York. And, and she's been, you know, doing her testing and trying to get everything lined up. She's trying to pull a portfolio together for where she for what she wants to do.

Heather 38:36
Does it feel like a big big thing, though? How moving out? Because you've been so involved in all her care and everything.

Scott Benner 38:42
Now, I feel okay about it. It's always been my goal to for her to be okay. And if she's not, and if I don't feel okay, then that means she's not okay. So I think she, I think she will be. And I think also these algorithms are getting more and more plentiful in the world through insulin pumps, which are going to help a lot for people who you know, who have the stuff. And we have it. So I think that will be valuable. I'm really excited to get on the pod five and try that. And there's still

Heather 39:12
one that's the one that's going to be like control IQ, right?

Scott Benner 39:15
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it'll be very similar to that, which should be out anytime now. And you and I are talking in April of 2021. So it's possible by the time this this comes out our conversation it will exist already. I think between that and what she knows, I have some fine tuning left, like management fine tuning in her head, like the other day she was wanna like, I'm gonna take care of this today. And I was like, all right. And I didn't say anything to her and I watched her blood sugar go from like, 80 to 140 to, you know, 90 to 130 like, you know, anything. She just and I said to her at the end of the day, I took a screenshot of her 24 hours. And I just showed it to her real quick. I said, Hey, I'm not breaking your balls or anything. I'm just looking at this for a second. You didn't Pre-Bolus one of these meals that Yeah. And she's like, how

Heather 40:01
does she react to that? Because you see, when I kind of tell Oscar off he gets so pissed off with me.

Scott Benner 40:06
Why didn't tell her off? I didn't I didn't I tell you say, yeah, just I just said to her, look, I'm not coming down on you, I just want you to understand that no matter how good our settings are, if you don't Pre-Bolus this food, this is what's always going to happen. And she didn't feel well. And I said, I think it's why you're not feeling well right now. You know, I was like, you're really accustomed to stability. And then I think, the day or so later, I said something kind of sarcastic about it to her. Just to kind of bring it back up again, like joked with her, I was like, seriously, just the just Pre-Bolus I think I said like, Hey, don't forget to Pre-Bolus this, or

Heather 40:45
in exactly the right way. Because, you know, I mean, Arden's obviously older, Oscar is really like hormone or, you know, kind of a bit bit kind of moody at the moment. And you have to, it's so important to, like, get the balance, right, where you're not constantly busting their balls, you are, like what we tried to do with him, and he is really, he's a really independent kid, you know, in general. And you know, he's only 12, he does it all himself. So he calculates, calculates his own boluses, he changes, obviously asks me first, but he'll say, Oh, I think I need to change my Basal rate, you know, to this amount, this time of day, he's really, really smart with this stuff. But it means that like, his time, and range is maybe five or 10%, less than it would be if I was doing it, but I prefer that I prefer to have that, like independence with him. So that as he gets older, he feels like more ownership over it all. And he but it because I but I also know that if I start going at him too much, I just worry that he'll rebel, you know, and he'll go into sight, kind of,

Scott Benner 41:55
I'm always walking on that line, like I don't, I am very, very cognizant about not starting arguments about things that aren't worth an argument. And I have a really clear idea of like, long range versus short range goals. Yeah, so I'm never trying to win today. skirmish, like I want to win the whole war. And and what that should look like, by the way is one day, my kids don't hate me. And they're doing okay. And they don't know that they're doing okay, because of what I help them with.

Heather 42:31
And also like, you'd be our you know, I think what if it wasn't this, I'd be arguing with them about something, you know, it's like, you can't I think sometimes you can kind of use diabetes as an excuse, you know, and sometimes they are high as being really moody. It must be his blood sugar. Now, I think we'll actually know he's 1213 is being moody. So it was my oldest son. But but like you say, you know, I don't want them, I don't want it to affect our relationship. I you know, I'm kind of like always analyzing I don't want, I just don't want diabetes to change his life. You know, that's what we try. And we want his life to have been as similar as it would be if he hadn't had,

Scott Benner 43:09
especially knowing that it's going to on some level, and you're just trying to not. And listen, I don't want to come off as like art. And I have never disagreed. Like we disagree, plenty. And sometimes I don't say something the way I mean to, you know, I mean, a great example is sometimes I'll go out and come back a half an hour later, her blood sugar will be 50 points higher. And you know, sometimes I'm very good about coming in and handling it. And there are other times I just walked in the house and go, Hey, everything can't go to hell because I left the house. I know I say that. And then I'll be like, and I'll be like,

Heather 43:42
because because you decided like me then so weird. Well, because it's not

Scott Benner 43:47
fair to me. Like you're basically telling me that your health and welfare depends on me not leaving your like your Yeah, I can't do that. You know. And by the way, it doesn't have to be like this. You could you could have paid attention to this. And then that's when it's like I didn't hear my phone beep. And I'll say I think you have it silence our I don't like I didn't want to hear my text messages and like,

Heather 44:09
but what will happen like say for instance, who does Arden wake up is what I worry about about college, even though it's much farther off for us? Does she wake up to alarms in the night? No, what would happen if her alarm went off?

Scott Benner 44:25
I feel like I've tried to help you with that. No, I mean, I don't I don't have the answer to that yet.

Heather 44:31
That's Yes, my one fixation, but

Scott Benner 44:33
the way I feel about it is and what my hope is I know her enough that I think that when it becomes necessary, she'll take care of it. Yeah, I think there's a comfort now knowing someone else has my back. And I don't have to hear that and wake up. Now if I'm wrong. Then I guess Arden's got a diabetes buddy. And it isn't gonna be me because I don't hear those alarms very well. Either. It's my wife

Heather 44:55
wrong, or she'll have to have a roommate. I guess who What if the roommate doesn't wake up

Scott Benner 45:00
It'll be like a bad, like rom com. I'll have to pay somebody to be your friend and never tell him. Yeah, I met Becky on the first day and she's amazing because I can't just bumped into her. That's great. No, I so I genuinely think that as she gets more mature, she'll just have to take care of it better. I also think the algorithm does a pretty good job. I mean, the I have to be honest, since looping, which I don't imagine is how Arden's going to manage things that far into the future, meaning for my money. It's funny, I think, ready. I think that Luke, that loop algorithm, is probably the best software that I've ever seen on the planet for managing insulin. And at the same time, I don't think that it's reasonable to think that my 18 being 19 being 20 year old daughter who's not really very good with their computer is going to want to use an insulin pump that requires her to be an apple developer and download software and a little under a phone. Like I don't think that's something she's going to do. So

Heather 46:10
yeah, that's one of the things that I've been so because so many people are just evangelical about looping and was terrific. It's interesting how you, you know it because you didn't it took you a while to net before you started looping. And

Scott Benner 46:26
sure somebody badgered me into it actually,

Heather 46:29
I just feel like we haven't even got control IQ here in Spain yet we already excited about getting it because Oscar tends to go too high too much, rather than too low. But I don't know whether it's going to change things that much because because of the how many variables they are I don't know what we'll see. But I'm much more excited about our lovely Spanish guy that you had Dr. Leon was Francisco Leon wasn't a lovely Yeah, he was lovely. You know, I emailed him after listening to the podcast I sent this email in Spanish and he was so lovely he said that because Oscar Oscar wants to do a project on on this stuff and he said Oh, he's gonna let us get interview him and but that that incredible. That's where I my kind of heart lies is that stuff that they're talking about? You know, I think cop control IQ great, but it's nothing compared to what we're hearing about. And the especially Oscar specialist who's who's very current experience, she's, she's in Malaga, here in Spain. She's really watching all of that stuff. And she said to me, by the time Oscar goes to university, he won't even know he's got diabetes, you know, she's really positive about it. So you know, all these fantastic things are happening in the meantime. But I think that's the big prize. That's

Scott Benner 47:42
the way I see the progression. First of all, here's how I i've never owned an electric car in my life. And I know that the next time I get a car, if I can't afford it, I want an electric car. Like I see the progress there, right? Yeah. And there's been a tipping point. And that's it. I think of diabetes the same way like in my mind, things you should be hoping for short term are algorithms that stop you from getting low and help you from spiking too much over, you know, 180 or 200. And then you can intervene to do better than that. You hope that insulin gets quicker and lasts less time, like hopefully, they can keep engineering insulin to come online faster, and not still be around four hours later, if you don't want to be I think you should hope that canula material gets better. And people work on adhesives and stuff like that.

Heather 48:37
equipment, they say there's gonna be a patch at some point that you'll just be able to slap on your arm and it will

Scott Benner 48:43
even imagine that that's true. I'm saying, like, I always am about, like, reach for the things that are attainable keep moving forward. And when when something gets that much better leap with it. And yeah, you know, and then things there.

Heather 48:58
For a long time, though, like, you know, I think that what I believe, sorry, I'm kind of interrupting myself. But the The interesting thing is, when I tell Oscar, everything that's going on, he isn't interested because he's like, well, man, that doesn't help me today. And actually, I understand that whereas I'm like, always, obsessively reading off what's happening in the future and everything. But and the sad thing is, so many people over the last 2030 years have been promised a cure, haven't they? And they've and people tend to say, you know, you don't you shouldn't think about this and it's just gonna drive you crazy and things. But, you know, the stem cell stuff now is such you know, science can go and kind of leaps You know, it can slow down and go fast and slow down and go fast. And I think that science now is in a massive acceleration phase. And I think that's what this is coming from stem cells. So I don't think it's unwise to get excited about this. Like maybe it would have been 20 years ago. You know,

Scott Benner 50:00
right now I listen, I stay in a very hopeful frame of mind. And I think to for a 12 year old up what is a macro view and tell for a 12 year old, like the last 10 days, you can't pull back far enough to see any of it. I just thought that with Dr. Leon was talking about seemed attainable. And with with technology that exists now, which I always think is important. And then it's scaling up to, you know, to being able to get it to people, that becomes the bigger problem. And I have talked about that with a number of, of people over the decades actually about the idea of like, Oh, you know, one time somebody told me if we figure out encapsulation today, it'll take 10 years to get it to market.

Heather 50:42
Like that's why Why does it take so long

Scott Benner 50:45
infrastructure and materials now they say the materials won't be as big of a deal. So that'll shorten it. But I loved what he was saying. Because what he was saying was, look, we could get those beta cells back in there as well that are working, but then your body's just going to kill them again. But we think we can stop your body from wanting to kill them and replace them. Well, hell, okay. Let's do that. You know, like, that seems right to me. And I don't know, I couldn't even tell you like if that came to fruition. And Arden was 30 she maybe she'd say to herself, I don't I'm not gonna do that. I'm okay. Like she might I've talked to people who have type one diabetes, who are adults who are just like, yeah, I mean, I'm okay with who I am. It's interesting, you never know who you're going to be. But for people who are really struggling, but that's how I feel about the algorithms right now, like, here, you're on here. And, you know, I'm talking about my daughter's a one C's and the fives. But imagine somebody who's a one sees, and then nines, who's going to just slap on a CGM and an Omnipod, and they're going to talk to each other, and that agency is going to drop by multiple points. That's a huge deal for them. That's a life changing life saving situation for them. Like, you know, if you've got it down pat, I somebody sent me a graph the other day, it's like stable between 90 and 110. For 24 hours, there was one little bike bump up in the afternoon, and they're like, how do I fix this? And I was like, This graph looks perfect to me. Like, you know, I don't want

Heather 52:06
to become like institutionalized you know, they've become so used to this this life in a way it's a shame, you know, because and the interesting thing is, because what, where's that what you're saying is that it's the people with diabetes themselves that are sometimes happier, just to get on with, and it's us as parents who are always like, desperately trying to think of a solution that we always offer our kids and we're always trying to, like, solve all their problems. And, and that's an I guess, it's such a different perspective than, than when you're going through it yourself, you know, and it's, you know, both has its has its difficulties, like being the parent or, or being the patient. But I just, I think that what I loved about Dr. Leon was that he was, he was talking about each obstacle, and then talking about the solution to that obstacle. So he was like, you know, first of all, the problem was, where are we going to get so many cells stem cells from? Well, now we've solved that, and then the next problem is, you know, and he, and it gives a lot of hope, when you see that they are now now finding the solution to all these big problems, and it seems it seems viable. Yeah.

Scott Benner 53:09
Now 100% I completely agree with you and it's, you know, different for every person, like if you had massive anxiety and type one diabetes, well, then, you know, making diabetes go away is a is a is a big thing for you, it you know, it's everybody's living with different stressors outside of diabetes, too. And, yeah, there's

Heather 53:29
two halves to it, there's the there's all of the technology and the management and all of that stuff that takes you know, so much of your time, but then there is the feelings around it, which is just as big and important and, and how to manage it. And you know, like, these days, we're always we're so aware of our children's mental health, and, gosh, does it like adds a whole extra level to your child's mental health when you think, okay, you know, he's, he's having to deal with all of this, as well as though it's like, it's double worry. And I, you know, I worry just as much about how Oscar feels as how, as his health,

Scott Benner 54:05
right, you also have to worry about things impeding you that you don't even know exists, like, like you said earlier, what if you just would have believed that Dexcom was a bad thing and just gone on your way and never thought about it again. And that and you know, what happens to people who fall into, you know, oh, you have to eat exactly this way or, you know, it's just it becomes it becomes incredible because the place where you can get good information you could also get bad information from and that's it

Heather 54:34
could be so it could be so kind of devastating. I mean, you know, luckily we live in an age where we can do our own research and we can go into social media and online and sometimes that's not a great thing that so many of you know, being being finding the support and the community that I've been able to find as a type one parent online, shows how incredible social media is and You know, it's made me feel part of a community like, you know, I've had some really difficult moments over the last few months with with Oscar where, you know, he had one like really bad low in the middle of the night, and I can't remember other things. And I put them those experiences on your Facebook group. And normally, I would have no one to talk to you about it, you know, I might speak to my mom about it, I might speak to my best friend, but they'd be like, Oh, that's terrible, they don't have a clue. And just being able to, you know, and you put, you put things up, and within half an hour, you've got 50 replies from people who know exactly, exactly what you're going through. And not only that, they're there for you, you know, they're rooting for you, like you're doing great. And it's that is just priceless. And that is social media, at its absolute, most incredible, you know, bringing community communities together like that,

Scott Benner 55:48
that that Facebook group for the podcast is specifically good at that, because it was built from a foundation of people who I think already listened to the podcast. So everybody had a similar idea of like, you know, you can actually do this, and here's a way to do it. And, you know, support is important. And then as the word got out that it was a valuable group, and people started to kind of pour into it, who didn't come through the show, there's enough of a mix there of the people before and the people after to keep acclimating everyone in.

Heather 56:25
Yeah, but you must feel frustrated sometimes. Because I obviously, by definition, all of these people are going to be people who really want to improve and really care, you know, and are willing to kind of commit their time and energy to, to the best outcome, you know, either for themselves or for their kids. But I guess you know, because you're so passionate about it, you must sometimes think, wow, I wish I could reach everyone because you know, there's so many out there who have given up or, you know, have, you know, rebelled or just don't want to, they want to get involved in all of it.

Scott Benner 56:58
It's funny, I thought you were gonna go a different way with that question. But you're right. But you if you're me, then you have to find a way to get past that, because that becomes crippling to Yeah, you know, and and kind of maddening, you the idea that, I mean, if I stop and get if I get solid and quiet, and I think about it inside, I can tell you that this week, I help two people with their kids, aside from here, and you'll never hear about them and that kind of stuff. And their graphs are crazy. And they're pulling their hair out. And then now they're not only took me probably a couple of hours for all of them. But I can't that's what you want to focus on. Yeah, but I can't do that for everybody. And and if I stopped and wondered about how many kids are living like that right now, I really, it would be overwhelming to me. And

Heather 57:50
it's like, you know, you can't save all the rescue dogs you can't know, you know, all these kinds of things. Yeah, exactly. You just can't reach

Scott Benner 57:55
everybody. And yet you have to understand that or it'll just like it fries your mind. Like Jenny and I will talk about it privately sometimes. And she's really passionate about helping people too. And I think the reason why Jenny continues to come on the podcast is because it allows her to reach more people. And

Heather 58:13
absolutely, and the ripple effect, you know, and this is the thing, it's not just the isn't like, for instance, you know, you're talking to me, like I'm an English person living in Spain, like, you know, you in the beginning, you probably wouldn't have thought you'd reach someone like me, but it's just the ripple effect. Again, the power of social media, and it is such an incredibly positive thing. You know, you've you've probably saved people's lives. I mean, it's it's an amazing thing to think about.

Scott Benner 58:36
It's weird for me to talk about it. But I am very happy that the show is is what it is. And I'll tell you the first month I had a blog in 2007. The first piece of correspondence I ever got from somebody was from somebody from England, who said that I read your blog, and it's helping my family. And I didn't even think I had a blog. Like I started a blog so early. I didn't know what a blog was. Right. And so it because blogs didn't have the connotation that they do now. And but so I saw the reach and that was amazing. The thing I worry about most is oversaturation in anything. I saw oversaturation ruin blogging, for people with type one diabetes to some level, there are just so many of them you couldn't keep up and then people just gave up on them in general. And this I and now you know as time moves on, people are like, oh, podcasts, those are a great idea. And some people see them as ways to launch businesses. Some people see them as ways to you know, make money. They don't realize that. I think there's I think the number is I want to say the numbers 1.5 million podcasts in existence. But there's real and it's coming closer to 2 million, but really the truth is only like 800,000 of them. are even active. Yeah. And then the truth of that is like, only 500,000 of them put up at least one episode a month. And then 80% of those only get 145 downloads, lifetime per episode. So,

Heather 1:00:16
like blogs, most, you know, 95% of blogs only do like three posts out there.

Scott Benner 1:00:21
But it's still there, and it gets counted as a blog. So the truth is, is that most podcasts fail. And the reason they fail is because somebody puts it out with this expectation, and oh, my God, like, someone's gonna find this, and it's gonna be great, and I'm gonna love it. And then nobody finds it, and they don't have it. They're like, Well, I'm not going to keep doing this, if nobody's listening to it. And then it just, it just dies off. You see, the same thing happened with like, YouTube channels, everybody thinks they're gonna make a YouTube channel, and then they do and most of them just go away.

Heather 1:00:54
You have done something really unique with this podcast, I felt like I love podcasts, I spent a lot of time in my car. And I listened to a lot of different types of podcasts. And like you said, so many people get it, like, get it wrong, or you just stop listening, or, you know, they don't succeed. But actually, it's, it's quite a kind of simple concept. You just have to have an eye No, this isn't a real word. But it has to have listener listening ability, well, how would you say, you know, just something that is easy, and keeps your attention, it's not very easy to keep someone's attention for like an hour or an hour and a half, you know, people read like newspaper articles, and they only have about three or four YouTube videos only have about six seconds to keep someone's attention. So it is an incredible skill that you've got to keep this this level of, of interaction and interest and everything. And I, I will happily sit and listen to the podcast for a couple of hours. I can't say that about hardly anything, I can barely watch a film all the way through, you know, so. So you, you have really done a great job. And I think also it's because there's a good mixture of things as well, you know, it's like, just people like me are just chatting about normal life. And then there's experts, and then there's, you know, people who are talking about the technology, and that's really good balance, but I it's the best podcast I've ever listened to

Scott Benner 1:02:12
why I appreciate that I try really hard to make it. listenable. And I also get lucky in a couple of places, right? I have a deeper voice. That is that helps.

Heather 1:02:22
But you have a very, like approachable voice, you know, like, it's just, it's just just really pleasant to listen to you. And it's very hard to like, you know, nail that.

Scott Benner 1:02:33
I'm not doing it on purpose. It's just how it works. If you want to thank somebody in being mostly honest about it, I guess. Thank howard stern. Yeah, because I've been listening to Howard Stern since I was in middle school. Yeah, and I've only

Heather 1:02:47
seen like his most shocking moments. That's how I know how it's

Scott Benner 1:02:51
done. But the way I think of him is a person who is incredibly interested in everyone's story, and gives them all equal weight. I've heard him interview with a stripper in the 90s with the same interest that I heard him interview Paul McCartney about being in the Beatles.

Heather 1:03:10
Exactly. And people pick up on that, you know, because like, people don't want to be lectured. So they don't want to be they don't want to sit and listen to someone just give them a whole bunch of instructions. And like these days is all about like authenticity, isn't it, you know, not the perfect things going on on Instagram, and they just want authenticity and they want to be able to relate to someone. And, like who better than someone who's lived and breathed this, you know, since their daughter she was very young wasn't Juilliard, and when she was diagnosed, and who cares about it, but listens to other people and shows you know, how many times have you sat around and tried to have a conversation with someone and they just talk about themselves for an hour and then they leave the conversation it just seems to happen all the time. And it's you know, it's nice,

Scott Benner 1:03:56
you know, I appreciate because it's a tough balance because I'm trying to be entertaining and informative at the same time. And so there are times where I have to pump out what I know about diabetes. And so sometimes I have to interject in the conversation to tell a story about Arden or something happened here so that the people listening will get the idea and sometimes the person telling the story is hitting all the right notes so I can let them go Yeah, I don't know if I

Heather 1:04:22
you know, I love it when you have people on who don't like you or haven't liked you and you and you're just kind of like being a bit self deprecating and not you know, you just hit a really good tone with them because they're fascinated by what I'm trying to win the round but I'm not going to be too obvious about it and you know still like defending yourself and that brilliant those ones.

Scott Benner 1:04:48
That guy that came on who had the bad reaction to when Jenny and I, I guess we kind of we talked about the Medtronic pump and Jenny didn't like it like Jenny would use it not liked it and he Took it so personally, I came and I was sick and he was really harsh to me in in a message. And like I got that message I don't know what most people would do when somebody is really harsh to you in a message but I immediately incident back I was like you should come on the podcast.

Heather 1:05:15
You know that especially like for me like the English sense of humor is really that like the English sense of humor is like self deprecating, and they like, you know, we like to kind of take the piss out of ourselves. And that's why it really appeals to me, because you just don't want to listen to people who take themselves too seriously. At

Scott Benner 1:05:30
the same time. By the way, I thought he has a real perspective here that I think would be interesting. Yeah, yeah,

Heather 1:05:37
you were you were really good with the law. I listened to one recently, the woman who is low carb, that was a recent one, wasn't she, Susan, and you put it Yeah. And you put it really well, you were like, I'm not here to like judge what people's perspectives and the way they're doing things I'm you know, I'm just here to kind of give a platform and I have my way of thinking about things and you have your way and like good for you. I mean, you were very respectful with her, which you could see during the podcast actually started turning her around to like, you know, your way of thinking. So it was really enjoyable to listen to,

Scott Benner 1:06:11
I appreciate that. And I really mean it to I think I hope that comes across, but I genuinely I'm interested in what she thinks. I don't, I don't care how she eats. I just want her to tell people so they can hear it. And if they they might think oh, that's for me. And then great. You know,

Heather 1:06:26
there's gonna be so many different ways of, you know, handling things. And there's no right way or wrong way. And I mean, I'm more your way I just say, you know, eat what you want, and take the insulin to deal with it. But lots of other people will be different. Well,

Scott Benner 1:06:40
I am starting to get more and more comfortable doing this. there's part of me who thinks that the best parts of this podcast are coming still, like I am getting really, really relaxed when I'm doing it.

Heather 1:06:52
Do you think you'll do it for a lot longer? Is it like a long term thing,

Scott Benner 1:06:55
I do not see why it would have to stop. As long as I see people being helped by it, I think it's a value to keep going. My my imagination tells me that a year. So I'm going to get Jenny on the phone and tell her look, I hate to put you through this, but I think we should listen to the pro tip episodes, and then jump on the microphone and, and update or redo them or add to them somehow, absolutely.

Heather 1:07:20
because things are gonna change so much and so fast over the next 510 years that you know is going to be more than ever, people are gonna want me maybe in five years, there'll be a new medium, or it might be that might be a slightly different way that it gets communicated. But people are going to be desperate for this information real easy, you know, easy to listen to really enjoyable way. That's the secret to it.

Scott Benner 1:07:45
Yeah, you have to keep innovating, to like, if you're just talking about just the podcast, you can't I think the biggest mistake that people make is they just do the same old, same old all the time. Like Basically, there are podcasts now that are just basically rehashing what they read on a blog 10 years ago, where you know, like when people when people do that thing, like it's the fourth of July, like here's a recipe for a red, white and blue cake that won't make your blood sugar go high. I'm like, Oh my god, that is literally the last thing I would ever think it's telling you guys, like I wish I couldn't. It's Father's Day, we've got a data on to talk about, like, oh, what was the local news, you know, like, it's just that stuff fascinates me. And, and at the same time, I can I can put out something on a topic that most people don't talk about. And then I can stand back and watch over the next three to four weeks, other podcasts lean into those topics, I'm like, they never would have thought to do that. If they didn't hear me do it. But but that's okay, so then other people will be helped, I can't reach everybody, they'll go reach somebody else. And I'm just gonna keep doing what I'm doing, which is breaking down what I think is living with diabetes in ways that are manageable, and easy and healthy. And I'm going to keep trying to find new ways to talk about it and I'll do that till I can't.

Heather 1:09:01
But you know, what you're doing is you're making people feel a part of something I you know, I think that's what the most important thing to all of this is you're making people feel that they're part of, you know, like a family like we're all in this together. And, and that that was the secret to me, you know, when when when I felt really like I was lost, like I didn't have anyone around me to understand me. And when you feel like you're a part of something, that's when things can really change. I'm glad

Scott Benner 1:09:28
if that's happening for people. I can you know, to not be high minded about it and be philosophical about what it means to make this podcast at a very basic level. What I'm the only thing I'm really doing is I'm saying the things that I think people should hear about about the topics I think they need to hear about, and it's my aesthetic and my, my vibe and if I'm wrong and I'm wrong and if I but I feel like I I must be doing okay, because it's growing the way it is. But like, you know what I mean? Like, if I were to start, I would have started this podcast and nobody listened to it. I would go Okay, well, whatever I was doing didn't, it didn't resonate with people. And that would be the end of it to me.

Heather 1:10:13
So I have a question for you, though. So how does for instance, Oscar Is he really doesn't like that, you know, I've said to him, oh, we should do an Instagram page and we should share you know, information stuff he does not like being kind of identified, you know, he's really private about it all causes much earlier. But how does odd and feel about all of it? Does she mind, you know, because obviously, she doesn't talk on the show. Just cheaper, you know, to be you and she kind of gets on with her own thing. While you I said

Scott Benner 1:10:43
this recently, and you'll probably hear me say this more than once, but I honestly don't think she gives us one way or the other. Like, I

Heather 1:10:50
just, you know, she'll and that's the best way for it to be

Scott Benner 1:10:53
Yeah, she would never, Arden would never in in my estimation, start a Instagram page that highlighted her diabetes. And at the same time, if you're following her on Instagram, I think you can see her pumping her CGM. If it's there, she doesn't do anything to hide it. You know, she leaves my house constantly with pods on her legs, you know, wearing shorts or skirts that are below or shorts or skirts. If you ask her about our CGM, she'll show you the side of her ass. You know, like, she has no trouble. She'll just be like, Look, it's like, this is so

Heather 1:11:27
cool. Yeah. But she went out of her way to tell them not with it.

Scott Benner 1:11:30
Yeah, yeah. Not it does not impact her like that. But she would I don't think in a million years. It's funny, because I think that people doing that on Instagram, as an example, are helping other people with type one diabetes a lot. And having said that, I don't think Arden wants to be involved with anything like that. Because like, she'll send me like, the gift on the pod asked me for a picture. She wouldn't want to be.

Heather 1:11:55
Exactly, yeah. I mean, that's what our school would be like. And that is absolutely fair, right? You know, because I kind of, you know, I have you have these like visions, that one day, he'll go out there, and he'll help others and let you know, and, and do and just be a mentor to younger kids. And he just doesn't want to, like, you know, he's just, I want to be like, my friends and I want to live my life. You know, you just you just get on doing all of your stuff, man. But I, you know, I just don't really want to get involved in all of it. Because whether again, it's the difference between a parent of a type one and being a type one.

Scott Benner 1:12:28
And whether he ever cared about that or not, I don't think matters one way or the other. And he could also end up helping people privately if he wanted to, and nobody would know. But honestly, when you really stop and think about what the podcast is, you don't recognize this. But you know, you get right now you're getting three episodes a week. But I used to talk to people all the time. Like a lot on the phone, like I'd walk people through. The reason I'm good at talking about is because I've talked about it with so many people. I used to do a thing on Fridays, where I would, I'd give my entire day over to talking to people on the phone, and I'd end up talking to like eight or 10 people on a Friday. Wow. And that is like and get them all straight. And then there was Oh, yeah, whether there was one day where I was like, blogging is kind of falling apart. And because people don't read, for some reason. Everybody's just like not done reading. And I thought, I thought I bet you people would love to hear these phone calls. And then wonder how I would do that. And then I went through my it was it and I just thought like, oh, that I had done an interview a number of years before with Katie Couric, and she said I was good at talking to people. So I was like, I could probably make a podcast. And that was it. Really. I just was like, Alright, I'll try this now. And then my first idea was horrible. I sat down and tried to read my most popular blog posts in total. Yeah,

Heather 1:13:49
I follow a podcast. It's like that Is this like woman who, who helps small businesses. And she's just reading her like Google slide presentations, and it's just unbearable, right?

Scott Benner 1:14:01
I did it for 15 minutes. I laughed, erased the file and thought I gotta figure out a different way to do this.

Heather 1:14:08
I never put it on podcast also it can be really samey. So like, you know, always the same format every week. So it's either just one person talking at you, or just one person always interviewing someone else. But in exactly the same way with the same questions at the beginning, same questions at the end. And most of that stuff I give up on in the

Scott Benner 1:14:24
end. I don't like that either. So it's just again, it's my aesthetic, I wouldn't want to hear somebody say, like, if you said to me, if you said to me, hey, there's a new feature on the podcast, I'd stop listening to you. But that's how most people do it. Like we're gonna, like when we're gonna do a new feature about how people eat I was like, and I was like, I would never say it that way. But I just get, you know, I might have like five or six episodes about how people eat. I just get people who are very much into how they eat and I just stay a little more in that lane when I'm talking to them. But even if you listen to those They're not strictly about eating. They're just, I mean, could you? I can't imagine listening to an hour about one idea. Yeah, just

Heather 1:15:08
that. The amazing thing is, though, is that like, you know, with the variety that you talk about, on the podcast, isn't it incredible that you see on the Facebook group and stuff, people whose kids have just been diagnosed like the week before. And they've already found the podcast, and they've already found the Facebook group, and they're just like, absorbing all this incredible amount of information. And that's where I feel most proud, I think, you know, because that first stage, I just look back on it as absolute hell, I mean, it was hell, and just like I was falling down a big coal, and I didn't know how to call my way back up. And if you've got this incredibly supportive, kind community there with you right from day one, what a massive achievement to have to have created that

Scott Benner 1:16:01
I am, I am very proud that of the fact that I think that people don't have as much of a lead time up to finding information as they used to, that people don't have to struggle for years before they figure something out. That's why I like some of the stories I love, or like, I started listening to the podcast in the hospital. And my son's a once he's never, like, stuff like that, that that stuff.

Heather 1:16:22
I haven't listened to all of the episodes. But I think one thing that would be good to hear more of, and you've done a bit of it is more the kind of psychological side, like the feelings and, and the, because I maybe you have done a podcast on this. But I remember being told that when he asked the first got diagnosed, we were basically going through like the stages of grief, you know, and you and you and you have to take it like that, you know, and it was so like that it was like whatever the stages are, you know, anger and acceptance and all of that. And that's something I'd like to hear more about, maybe from the experts, you know about how to kind of manage that and how to, to help you know, your child manage it, because, for instance, I'm very much accepting of it now. But I'd say Oscar is still going through a lot of the kind of acceptance stage, you know, and I don't really know how to help him or how to support him through all of that.

Scott Benner 1:17:16
Yeah, you're looking for, I can't, I can't think of the episode it's been up either at the very end of 2020, with a therapist, and her name is Oh, gosh, I'm so embarrassed.

Heather 1:17:31
So I I forget names all the time. If you can remember

Scott Benner 1:17:35
the funny Her name is Erica, she has been on twice so far, she'll be on again. And I have been thinking about that. But the truth is

Heather 1:17:43
like, like a journey. But for the feeling side is

Scott Benner 1:17:46
how I fit. This is how I feel about Erica, but it took me a long time to find Erica. So if you had actually listened through the entire podcast, and you were focused on this idea, you'd be able to say, Oh, he's tried to do this two or three times and couldn't find the right person. And I finally found Erica, and she's terrific. So

Heather 1:18:04
even if I can kind of pro tips type thing, you know, like, what to do if in having burnout, what to do? You know, because I like I said, I do think that the psychological side is just as profound and important as the just the physical management of all of

Scott Benner 1:18:19
it. Well, yeah, you're right. And I am working towards that. At the same time, you have to blend things together a little bit. Because if you want some secret backroom stuff, if you just put out an episode about one specific thing, you run the risk of people looking at it and going well, I don't have burnout. So I won't listen to that. Yeah, so then they don't get the information in there that they probably need or will need at some point in the future. And there are some topics and there are some topics that I feel so strongly about, that I put them up knowing not as many people are going to listen to them as if I would have put something else up at that same time. And very recently, just at the beginning of this week, I did an after dark with somebody who had been sexually assaulted and had PS PTSD from it. And when I put that up, I know there are going to be a certain segment of people who are going to be like, I do not want to hear about somebody's sexual assault.

Heather 1:19:06
And then just don't listen to it as long as you make it clear you know, that's what it's gonna be about 100%

Scott Benner 1:19:11
but what I'm saying is, is if it's a diabetes related thing that I know you need to know but you don't know you need to know I have to find a way to I got to find a way to like mix the peaches in with the green beans. You know what I mean? Like when you're feeding the baby. Hear this, let me just make this just palatable enough that you'll get the broccoli and mango puree. Yeah, so I sometimes there are some topics I use that way because people will skip them if they don't think they need them. That's why when you hear me talk about the pro tip episodes, I'm like, listen to them all the way through, don't just skip the one about MDI because you're on a pump. Like you need that that information to but how do you really talk people into believing that And just like that, I can tell you that of all the pro tip episodes the one about MDI has fewer downloads than the rest of them.

Heather 1:19:59
So what So what's the episode as the most downloads?

Scott Benner 1:20:03
The most? I got to go after this too. By the way, I'm getting up on my time here. Let me see if I can find out. The one that's been downloaded them most. I'm going to look for you. But I am not going to tell you which one it was to say no. Or how many? Oh, yes. Because I don't want other people podcast to cry. What do you think of that?

Heather 1:20:29
competition? Yeah, I don't want it to be Dexcom guys not gonna be happy when it's the Omnipod guy or it

Scott Benner 1:20:35
is the the launch episode of the pro tip series.

Heather 1:20:40
Number two, really, because so many people have gone back and listened to the first one, probably number

Scott Benner 1:20:44

  1. And then, actually the top five episodes six episodes 12345. The top five or pro tips, newly diagnosed or starting over setting Basal insulin all about insulin insulin pumping, and mastering your CGM, the sixth most popular one is about looping. And then the next one to more. Wow, then the next. Your next four or five are our management stuff. Now here's something super interesting. Then the next ones are after dark episodes. That because they've become more and more interesting as things and then it just turns into conversations. But the interesting thing about you talked so much recently about how much you like the Facebook group. The Facebook group is built on people who are super management focused, that's who's talking. And then I think there are people who lurk. But there are also people there are far more people listening to the podcast, who don't care as much about the management stuff. So if I were to go, like if I could somehow pull everybody that's listening right now and said, you know, would you rather hear an episode about management or a conversation with somebody overwhelmingly, taking an account all the people listening, a conversation just with a person would be what they'd want. But if you go in that Facebook page, because I did it to amuse myself the other day, I said, hey, you're going to get a new episode tonight? Do you want a management episode or a conversation episode? like four to one they wanted management?

Heather 1:22:25
That's such good research for you, isn't it? To be able to go in and ask that kind of thing?

Scott Benner 1:22:30
Yeah, but those people all think that their desires are the overwhelming desire of the people listening but it's not true. Mostly management's not the first thing people want. But the people who want it really really want it.

Heather 1:22:44
And what's happened to Jenny is she like now massively, you know, over subscribed popularity can't get an appointment with her because she's so fantastic.

Scott Benner 1:22:53
It's getting hard to get an appointment with me. Yes. Yeah, that's cool. Yeah, and but we've good reason to, because again, she could have been a different person, it wouldn't have come off the same way as Jenny who had no previous like, like Jenny didn't talk in front of people like this ever in her life, but she'd never been on podcasts before. I just talked to her and I was like, man, I not only agree with this person, but I love how she talks about it I love her like she's got an aesthetic that I really subscribe to she's nothing like me. You wouldn't think but if you listen to her and I talked about diabetes we sound like the same person.

Heather 1:23:27
Yeah, it's because she's that but that's what was the best way isn't it people who are not like really self like trying too hard and are just natural that's what I mean like people just want authenticity you know, they don't want anyone who's like trying too hard or or trying to be something they're not

Scott Benner 1:23:43
Yeah, if I sent if some ice somebody say something nice about Jenny and I send it to her. I can feel her blushing through a text message sweet Yeah, I can imagine that she's really she's just very delightful. So yeah, she's lovely. She's

Heather 1:23:55
She's a good kind of role model because obviously she's going through it herself as well. And it seems that so many of the of the people who are doing the kind of diabetes educators and stuff are off and the nurses you know, they often diabetics themselves, which just makes it so much more relatable.

Scott Benner 1:24:09
Well, you know, what Jenny has that I really appreciate is that she does not abide Bolus for managing diabetes, but she comes off like she would like she's, she's she's so sweet that you don't even hear her basically telling you shut up and Pre-Bolus Don't tell me you can't do that. You know what I mean? Like don't sit around and mismanage your Basal insulin for six weeks, fix it, like she's very direct. But in a way that is that says in a lovely way it doesn't feel like that. And it's funny because one of my favorite guests that I don't even know if people know is Chris Freeman. He's a, like a former Olympic cross country skier. But he talks so specifically about diabetes, he'll be like Americans want to pill they don't want help. And they don't want they don't want to work at anything and like he's been talking like that for years. And I always love talking to him because I really appreciate that perspective. But it comes off graph from him. And Jenny's basically telling you

Heather 1:25:03
that you can get off. The most random thing can be off putting

Scott Benner 1:25:08
Christmas I love. I've loved Chris, every time he's been on the show, I think I've had him on three times, and I don't ever have people back. And

Heather 1:25:15
one guy who was I think it was one of your medical expert guys who, I can't remember what it was. He kept saying the same word over and over again. That was really annoying. trying to work out which one it is. But yeah, the most just random little detail can just make you switch off a little bit.

Scott Benner 1:25:30
Yep. There's a person who one time spoke so slowly that I spent a day editing the gaps out of his conversation. Yeah, because I thought if I left it in like that people would turn off in five seconds. He just couldn't get it right. Oh, it was terrible. He just said it's

Heather 1:25:46
nice the dynamic between you and Jamie as well. It's really cute. He just he just got on really well. And so it's just nice to be involved in the conversation.

Scott Benner 1:25:53
Now I never thought I'd make like a real friend like do the podcast but I have. So yeah, so sweet. Have you ever met you have met haven't one time we've met one time in person.

Heather 1:26:02
I love it as well, when you have kids on because I try. I try and get Oscar to listen to the podcast. But again, he's a bit like that's your thing, Mom, you know, you get all that you learn the stuff. And then and then tell me about it kind of thing. And it's so brave when you get these little kids who come on and they're so earnest. And you know, and they're really articulate, and they want to talk about everything. And I think wow, that's impressive.

Scott Benner 1:26:24
Is there another example of those are more public service II things? Not that I don't really love them because I do. But they're listened to about 10 or 15%. Less than other episodes. Some people don't want to hear kids talk. But I think they're fans. I think they're I think that's a mistake for those people. It's an insight whether you're an adult with type one,

Heather 1:26:44
such an insight or a parent is so valuable. Yeah,

Scott Benner 1:26:47
I have one coming out soon with three, three teenage girls who live together on an island. And they met at school and they all have type one. I think if I'm not mistaken 1315 and 17 they're such good friends. And what kind of Island you know, make me remember where

Heather 1:27:12
they live? What like a random, like remote island somewhere

Scott Benner 1:27:17
down by Cuba somewhere. Hold on a second. Where do they live? Oh my god. How do I not remember this is such and they all decided to go live together? No, they lived there. And they met each other. Maybe it's Cayman Island? Yeah, it might be in the Cayman Islands.

Heather 1:27:35
One place Oh, cool. That's the place. It's

Scott Benner 1:27:37
a tax shelter. This is a great Grand Cayman. They live in Grand Cayman. Okay. So they all go to school together and they met each other and they support each other. And they contacted me like little like this, like 15 year old girl sent me an email and she's like, I want to come on the podcast with my two friends. Brave. Yeah. And it was I must have talked to them for like, an hour and a half or more. I was having such a good time talking to them. They

Heather 1:28:04
were they like all you know, interrupting each other and giggling and

Scott Benner 1:28:07
they were really great. And one of the girls was from somewhere. They all came from somewhere else like ones from America, ones from Poland maybe. And ones from I can't think of where else and it is the one girl I said get your data gunrunner and she's like, I don't think so. And I said, I said honestly, if he was what do you think he would tell you? What do you think he'd pretend to be a spell? Obviously the stuff you get away with she's like, She's like, I don't know. And I was like, cuz I think it's possibly a gunrunner What do you think of that? And you know, have you

Heather 1:28:40
ever had anyone who's just gotten really pissed off with you on a podcast and then just refuse to carry on?

Scott Benner 1:28:44
Nobody's ever refused to carry on I've had one person when it was over. Just say I did not enjoy that. please delete it. And I got Oh, no. And that person, in fairness to me, had a big reveal that was totally much different than the first half an hour. And it just got very it got awkward and it was the big reveal. I can't even tell you.

Heather 1:29:06
Oh no, tell me afterwards.

Scott Benner 1:29:09
I'll tell you what, let's say goodbye. And I'll tell you as soon as I push that up, okay, okay. I really had her seriously thank you for doing this. I did really good time chatting with you. And I don't know what the hell we talked about. So that's, that's the best guy man. Yeah, I think so. Alright, hold on one second.

Hey, here's thanks to Heather for coming on the show. I'd also like to thank the Contour Next One blood glucose meter, go to Contour Next one.com forward slash juicebox to learn more about the blood glucose meter that my daughter uses. And speaking of things that my family has done, trial net, trial net.org forward slash juicebox absolutely free T one D Risk Screening. Do it right from your home if you like trial, net.org forward slash juicebox. When they ask how you found out about trial net, tell them the Juicebox Podcast Thanks so much for listening. I'll be back soon with another episode of the Juicebox Podcast.


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