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Fun farm fact: Our little Maggie has doggy diabetes. She was diagnosed when she was pulled from the shelter. It’s probably what landed her there. I volunteered through the rescue who pulled her, to work with her getting her bg#s regulated and to help train her with the lifestyle changes (lots of needle pricks 😖). She is doing amazing y’all! After getting so close with her, I could never give her up!! Despite the fact I SWORE I’d NEVER own a doodle (sry nostr:nprofile1qqsyzjgg89a0yejqy3cy9knljshujvvr0jxe6vs8ufcuktajh0v6fmgprfmhxue69uhhw6r9v96zu6rpwpc8jarpwejhym3wvdhsz9mhwden5te0wfjkccte9ekkzar50938xtnvdakqhjc5wk 🤣🥲🫣🤭). I assume, based on her behavior, she was likely the tiny accomplice of some old soul who just indulged her in too much “human” food? We live the type of lifestyle that she can really thrive in, but I could easily see how this diagnosis would be debilitating in some households. My heart really goes out to the humans this diagnosis affects. That’s just considering the schedule commitment (strict 12hr test/feed/inject, everyday, forever). We are able keep her on a strict test, feed, & insulin regulation. Turns out I also thrive on that strict schedule. We can also easily control what treats she has access to. And we keep her moving. Moral of the story is though; if you’ve contributed to your diagnosis turns out you can just do stuff & turn that sh*t around… Here’s your invitation: Put good in, get good out. You are what you eat. Use it or lose it. image nostr:nevent1qqs2rmwsn0r0v5y8942x9zzfc3aa4dtqmzy86n9q9rn4f95gp9gywxgpzemhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuurjd9kkzmpwdejhgp382a2
2025-11-15 03:28:23 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent 1 replies ↓ Reply