Take that diabetes!
Yesterday, somewhere above Antarctica I celebrated my diaversary, the day I was diagnosed with diabetes. 11 years ago my life took on new meaning. At the time I had no idea why or how. I was stunned, shocked and miserable. I can honestly say that 11 years later I am the happiest I've ever been.
My life didn't take a turn for the better just because of diabetes, at diagnosis my marriage was also undergoing serious strain. Diabetes forced me to get real about what was and wasn't working in my life. Anything that contributed to stress had to go.
I didn't heal all at once, rather it happened in stages. I started by changing my diet, eating more whole foods, ditching leftovers, eating more consistently. I added Ayurvedic regimes like daily self massage, herbal tonics, sipping hot water throughout the day and making sure I was heading to bed before 10 pm. I added daily meditation and pranayama to my yoga practice, activities, like flower mandala creation, long morning walks and time to reflect. I had a space in my house where I built an altar. A place to remind myself to be grateful each and every day for life and all its gifts.
Eventually my marriage ended and my son moved to Melbourne and it was time to sell our family home. That's when I packed up and moved to Goa. At that point just two years post diagnosis I didn't know that I was living with type 1 diabetes, I still thought it was type 2, or some sort of mistake. All the health practitioners I went to see insisted it couldn't be diabetes. So I went to India hoping for respite, or even a cure.
The cure came after I met my husband, John and as I mentioned in a previous post when I discovered the profound teachings of Atma Vidya, Self-Knowledge. Being given the gift of seeing beyond my condition and circumstances as an individual changed my life permanently. It was the turning point for every single moment in my life where I had tried to lay blame. Like the idea that I had brought diabetes on myself, that there was something that I had done wrong to 'get' this disease either real or imagined.
I learned that taking responsibility for every action and reaction isn't some sort of cosmic destiny, it's being a grown up. There is no reason 'why' I live with diabetes. It is what it is. It's up to me how I live with it moving forward.
So here I am 11 years later living a life I could only have dreamed of. So to celebrate this momentous day I say thank you. Thank you to diabetes, for my life.
See you tomorrow #NDAM #DiabetesAwarenessMonth
with great respect...