Get tips and insights from health-care professionals and people with diabetes, share your thoughts, and ask questions on our blog.
Sign up for our weekly e-mail newsletter and receive a FREE GIFT! Enter your e-mail below.
Links to help you learn more about diabetes.
Ask a diabetes expert
Other diabetes resources
Browse article topics

I’ve only had diabetes for three years, but I’ve been around it all my life. My little brother Reeves was diagnosed when he was four. We discovered his diabetes after he went missing one day.
Everyone in our family and neighborhood was out looking for little Reeves, and it had been a few hours. The last place he'd been seen was in our yard and around our house playing. No one had any idea of where he could have gone without someone seeing him.
As it turns out, a few hours later a neighborhood friend found him passed out inside our house behind a fold-up Ping-Pong table. Who knows how he got there, but he fell asleep behind the Ping-Pong table and had been inside our house the whole time people were on the hunt.
As his 10-year-old brother at the time, I didn't know what to think. I remember that my parents took him to the hospital and we soon discovered that Reeves had diabetes. As a kid I can only remember hearing the first syllable of the word diabetes: When they said diabetes, all I heard was "Die." I immediately assumed that my brother was going to die and that his days were numbered. I was young and had no idea what the disease was, but I knew what die meant.
After I realized that it was just a lifestyle change, our whole family became more aware of what we put into our bodies. I remember baby-sitting for Reeves years later, checking his blood glucose levels on urine strips and making sure that he ate the right amount to cover his insulin doses. Diabetes was in our family's life, but it wasn't in my personal life, yet.
My pancreas gave me a solid 28 years before it decided to start misbehaving. And now that I'm completely absorbed in the diabetes lifestyle, I've realized that I'm constantly in search of substitutions. Especially when it comes to food. When I want to relive the comfort of Sunday dinners of southern mashed potatoes and fried chicken but feel like I should be a little healthier, I eat cauliflower and chickpea "potatoes" with a boneless, skinless breast of chicken. It doesn't quite take me down memory lane, but that's not always such a bad thing. The "potatoes"—or as I call them "Faux-ta-toes"—are made very easily. Boil some cauliflower, drain it, add a can of chickpeas and a little butter, milk, and sour cream, and whip them until they're smooth. Enjoy your diabetes-friendly Faux-ta-toes.
Diabetes is all about substitutions. I often substitute exercise for insulin. My recent morning routines have been to take my morning insulin glargine (brand name Lantus) injection and then eat breakfast. While I'd normally take a couple of units of insulin aspart (NovoLog) as well for oatmeal/grits, I don't take any if I'm going to go work out in 20 minutes.
I'm always on the search for substitutions to break up the constant hassle of diabetes. If you've got any, send them my way.
POST A COMMENT
E-MAIL A FRIEND
Great post. I also use cauliflower instead of potatoes. But I don't add the chickpeas. I add a little skim milk and whipped cream cheese, sour cream and chives. Mmmmmmmm
I was recently diagnosed (last week) and I am learning. But I was doing a low carb diet before so I have alot of great recipes already. You are right substitution is a way of life.
Posted by: Viki Anderson | Sep 21, 2006 01:06 PM
I have been substituting low glycemic index foods for high glycemic index foods to see what effect they have on my post prandial blood sugars.I use pumpernickel bread for all lunch sandwiches along with sweet potato chips. I also use sweet potatoes at dinner time in place of white potatoes. I choose low GI fresh fruits for dessert. My aftermeal blood sugars are now in the range of 140 to 160. My insulin regimen consists of Lantus at bedtime and Novolog with meals and as needed. My last A1C was 5.9% so things seem to be under control.
I think that there are a lot of people who have been newly diagnosed with diabetes and only hear the first syllable "DI" You need to check out the Glucose Goddess who says,
"Don't DIabetes......LIV-abetes."
(www.livabetes.com)
Posted by: Florian | Sep 21, 2006 09:48 PM
Diabetes Blog as Time-Saver (09/04/08)
Knocking Out Prediabetes (07/25/08)
"National Diabetes Goal" Set (05/09/08)
The Stigmata of Diabetes (12/04/08)
The Great Thanksgiving Buffet Disaster (12/03/08)
Confessions of a Thanksgiving Weekend Survivor (12/01/08)
Disclaimer of Medical Advice: You understand that the blog posts and comments to such blog posts (whether posted by us, our agents or bloggers, or by users) do not constitute medical advice or recommendation of any kind, and you should not rely on any information contained in such posts or comments to replace consultations with your qualified health care professionals to meet your individual needs. The opinions and other information contained in the blog posts and comments do not reflect the opinions or positions of the Site Proprietor.
Read up on the latest meters, pumps, and other tools for managing diabetes.
This article suggests strategies to change your attitude toward exercise.
This common fungal disease can happen to anyone, not just athletes.
Complete table of contents
Get a FREE ISSUE
Subscription questions
Soups & Stews
Creamy potato–broccoli soup
Fish & Shellfish
Tuna salad with couscous
Beverages
Cranberry sparkler
Vegetables
Balsamic-basil sliced tomatoes
Desserts
Vanilla soufflé cakes with molten chocolate