Complications of diabetes in 30s
#diabetes #diabetescomplications
Complications of diabetes in 30s
#diabetes #diabetescomplications
ššš“ššš š¶š šš®šššæš¼š½š®šæš²šš¶š ššš®šæš²š»š²šš š š¼š»ššµ, a time to increase understanding of this digestive disorder that slows or stops the normal movement of food from the stomach to the small intestine. Gastroparesis can cause symptoms like nausea, vomiting, bloating, and feeling full quickly after eating, which often leads to weight loss and malnutrition. The condition is linked to nerve damage, especially to the vagus nerve, and can be triggered by diseases such as diabetes, surgeries, or certain medications. Early diagnosis and management are crucial to improve quality of life and prevent complications.
Living with gastroparesis can be challenging due to its unpredictable symptoms and impact on daily activities. It is important to debunk myths that label it as an eating disorder or laziness since the condition physically limits digestion and energy levels. Treatment focuses on managing symptoms through dietary changes, medications, and addressing underlying causes like diabetes. If you experience persistent digestive issues or unexplained weight loss, consult your healthcare provider promptly for proper evaluation and care.
Raising awareness during this month helps support research and education on gastroparesis, encouraging patients and families to seek help and reduce stigma. Together, we can improve understanding, promote early diagnosis, and advocate for better treatments. Stay informed, share knowledge, and show support for those affected by this complex condition.
#GastroparesisAwareness #DigestiveHealth #ChronicIllnessSupport #GutHealthMatters #NerveDamage #DiabetesComplications #StomachHealth #KnowTheSymptoms #FightTheStigma #HealthEducation #SCABPharmacy
Discover the hidden dangers of Type 2 Diabetes as it silently damages your vital organs. Learn about prevention, symptoms, and protecting your health.
https://whoosmind.com/read-blog/54380_the-shocking-effects-of-type-2-diabetes-on-your-organs.html
#Type2Diabetes #OrganDamage #DiabetesComplications #HealthAlert #DiabeticHealth
Beyond Blood Sugar: Could incretins shield against diabetes complications?
Could incretins therapy effectively reduce the effects and thus risk of diabetes complications amongst all those with diabetes? A discussion of the mechanisms and actions that might lead t
https://www.diabettech.com/complications/beyond-blood-sugar-could-incretins-shield-against-diabetes-complications-2/
#complications #Incretins #DiabetesComplications #GLP1RA #Incretins #Mounjaro #Semaglutide #Tirzepatide #WeGovy
Sin, Scripture, and the Smell of Rot.
1,848 words, 10 minutes read time.
I donāt expect you to believe me. Not really. People like Jamesāmen who carry their brokenness like a badge and a burdenāweāre more warning sign than testimony. The kind of story folks scroll past on Facebook between a political rant and a cat video, pausing just long enough to click ālikeā on a Bible verse they wonāt live by. I know because I take care of him. Every week. Iām his nurse. My name is Clara Jensen.
Iāve seen a lot in my years of home care, but James stuck with me. Not because heās kind or cruel, but because something about him lingers. His presence, his silenceāitās heavy, like regret that never got named. Itās in the air when you walk through the door: mildew, cigarette smoke, painkillers, and something deeper that clings like old shame.
Heās missing a leg, and the otherās not doing well either. Diabetes, infections, surgeriesādoctors have tried everything. But the real rot runs deeper, past the bloodstream and into the soul. His medical file tells a hard-enough story, but itās the part thatās not in the file that matters. A past he doesnāt talk about. The kind people whisper around. He was involved in things that left scarsāon others and on himself. Some of it petty, some of it cruel. Not infamous, just a man who made too many wrong turns and burned too many bridges.
Heās kept much of that life hidden from his family. Covered it up with silence, selective memory, even a few bold-faced lies. But the truth always finds a way through, like mold breaking through drywall. People in the community know more than he thinks. They remember the fights, the broken trust, the way he vanished when responsibility came knocking. Still, James acts like no one sees. Like if he reposts enough scripture, the past might blur around the edges.
His house is a cluttered echo chamber of old tools, stacked books, flea-market leftovers, and framed sayings about strength and faith. His Bible sits on a table nearby, dusty and closed. He shares Christian memes like theyāre armorāloud declarations about sin and truth and justice, almost always aimed outward. Rarely about grace. Never about himself.
He never talks about it when Iām there, but I see them when I change his dressings. One day Pastor Micah finally addressed it. Calmly, without accusation. Just a question, light as a scalpel:
āYou think sharing those posts helps anyone?ā
James blinked, caught off guard. āJust sharing truth.ā
āWhose truth?ā Micah asked. āGodās truth calls everyone out. Not just the people you donāt like.ā
James didnāt answer. Just stared past Micah, toward the wall where a cracked mirror hungāone of the few things in the house that could still reflect anything clearly.
I remember the first time Pastor Micah Reynolds came by. James acted like it was nothing. But I could tell it rattled him. Micah walked through that house with quiet dignity, stepping over stacks of junk and ignoring the smell. He didnāt flinch at the sight of the bandages or the pills scattered on the end table. He just sat down and opened his Bible.
āYou ever get tired of posting verses you donāt live?ā Micah asked, cool as a spring breeze.
James chuckled and took a drag off a cigarette. āTheyāre not for me. Theyāre for the people watching.ā
āIs that what you think God is? A spectator?ā
James didnāt answer. He just shook a couple pills into his handāone labeled, one notāand swallowed them dry.
Micah read from Psalm 49. He talked about people who trust in their wealth, who name lands after themselves but still go to the grave with nothing. āTheir graves are their homes forever,ā he read. James rolled his eyes.
Then Micah told a story about Herod Agrippa. Iād heard it before, but not like that. Herod Agrippa was a king of Judea, a man who craved power and applause more than anything. He was the grandson of Herod the Greatāthe same tyrant who ordered the massacre of innocent children. Agrippa ruled with an iron fist, crushing anyone who opposed him, including the early Christians. But his greatest flaw was his pride. During a public speech, the crowd hailed him as a god, praising his words as if he were divine. Instead of humbly rejecting their worship, Agrippa accepted it, soaking in their adulation like a man drunk on his own glory.
That moment sealed his fate. Suddenly, without warning, his body began to betray him in the most gruesome way imaginable. According to the Bible, he was struck down by Godās judgment and āeaten by worms.ā The wormsāparasitic and mercilessādevoured him from the inside out, turning his flesh into a rotting, festering ruin. It was a slow, agonizing death that stripped away every bit of his false pride. The man who sought to be worshipped as a god ended his life consumed by decay, a horrifying warning about the price of arrogance.
James called it dramatic. Micah called it justice.
āYou saying Iām Herod now?ā James asked.
āNo,ā Micah replied. āI think Herod had more humility.ā
I kept quiet in the corner, checking vitals, replacing a bandage. But even I felt the sting of those wordsāand the heavy, sour smell of rot that seemed to cling to the room, like a silent echo of Herod Agrippaās fate. James didnāt argue. Not really. He lit another cigarette and stared into the smoke like it held secrets.
After Micah left, James didnāt say a word. He reached down and pulled out an old, faded family photo buried under piles of junkāa snapshot of better days, smiling faces frozen in time before lifeās hardships took hold. He didnāt speak of who was in it. I saw him wipe the dust from the frame with his sleeve before setting it gently beside his Bible, its dusty cover closed and untouched.
James isnāt the only one Pastor Micah visits. There are others in similar medical straitsāshut-ins with amputations, oxygen tanks, and chronic pain. But their homes feel different. Quieter, cleaner. The air smells of ointment and lavender, not stale smoke and regret. They speak with kindness, gratitude, humility. Their pasts arenāt perfect, but they donāt wear denial like armor. They ask for prayer, not applause. You can tell theyāve made peace with what was, and theyāre trying to make peace with whatās left.
The rot hasnāt stopped. Jamesās legās still going bad. The infectionās still spreading, and the rot in his good leg is beginning to bloom, like mold thatās found new flesh. The pills are still thereāsome from doctors, some not.
I donāt know how this story ends. Not yet. Maybe thatās the whole pointāthe uncertainty, the unfinished business that makes it real. Because the last chaptersāhis repentance, his healing, his truthāhavenāt been written. Not yet. And as long as those pages remain blank, thereās still room for change, for grace, for something different to take hold. Maybe thatās hope. Maybe thatās what keeps us coming back to stories like Jamesās. Because if a story isnāt finished, it means itās still alive. And if itās still alive, then maybe it can still be changed.
Authorās Note:
This story is a work of fiction. James, Clara, Pastor Micah, and the events within these pages are not based on any real individuals, though they are inspired by the struggles and complexities Iāve witnessed in many lives. The characters and situations are crafted to explore themes of pride, regret, grace, and redemption, not to portray any actual person or event.
The story of James is unfinished, and intentionally so. As the writer, I didnāt want to close the book on himābecause real people rarely get neat endings. His journey is still unfolding. Redemption, if it comes, will come in small, unglamorous ways. Maybe he finds peace. Maybe he doesnāt. But the choice to change, to confess, to finally live what he sharesāthat choice remains. And as long as that choice exists, the story isnāt over. Not for James. And maybe not for you, either.
Your story is unfinished as well. No matter what you have done, no matter the mistakes youāve made or the pain youāve caused or endured, how you finish your story is up to you. There is a powerful truth in the saying: you may not have caused the problem, but the problem is yours to fix. That responsibility can feel heavy, but it is also where hope begins. The chapters ahead can be written with courage, honesty, and grace.
So take this story as a mirror and a challenge. Like James, you carry the power of choice within you. The past does not have to define the future, and the weight of regret can be lifted, step by step. The story isnāt finishedānot really. And that means it can still be changed.
D. Bryan King
Sources
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
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Unraveling the Complexities of Muscle Repair in Diabetes: A Call for Targeted Research and Therapies
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