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Two Fathers Launch 'Dads and Diabetes' Podcast - hernandezgran1982

DM) How-do-you-do Guys! Lav you tell us about yourselves and how diabetes came into for each one of your families?

Mark) I hail from the UK, but presently live in Colorado with my wife Kim, son Ethan (12), and daughter Ella (11). I'm an zealous soccer fan, bask composition and podcasting, and long walks on the beach. About a yr and a half ago, Ella was diagnosed with T1D after going in to DKA and organism rushed to the hospital in an ambulance. Non i of our best days. Notwithstandin, despite the fact that livelihood with T1D is never smooth sailing, every day since has been better than that one! We actually have a history of T1D in our family with two of Ella's elderly cousins (one a young, the new in her 30's) organism in the same boat. Sol, although it's not something that we're experts on – every day is a learnedness experience! – we did at any rate rich person some base understanding of what this meant for Ella and all of us.

Alan) I live in Arkansas River with my married woman Leslie and our 4 kids: Emilee (21), Lexi (18), Anistyn, my T1D daughter (11), and son, Tagg (8). Anistyn (Anna) was diagnosed in February 2015. She was showing the typical signs of T1D in the a few months leading up to diagnosis. We decided to take her certain a checkup and found that her roue sugar was extremely high. They immediately referred U.S. to an endocrinologist at a localized hospital where she was officially diagnosed. We were fortunate to catch it "earlyish" before she digressed into DKA. Since then, she has been very 'compliant' and lived with T1D successfully. Over the past some eld, the acceleration in technology has only helped us to manage diabetes even many effectively.

What do you each do for a live?

Mark) I'd like to say I head up an outreach program that connects citified inhabitants to rural folks called 'City Mouse, Country Mouse' and that I'd adoptive Alan as part of that. But really, I work for an educational publishing party, load-bearing schools' implementations of digital solutions.

Alan) I wont to spend most of my time working with foreign-born Americans to assimilate into our acculturation and speak with a Southern accent. Mark was my first and, thankfully, last client due to him failing miserably (chuckles). Thus, I threw myself into my financial planning practice which I've owned since 1998.

When and wherefore did you decide to start hosting a diabetes podcast?

Mark) We launched Dads and Diabetes last year happening World Diabetes Day, Nov. 14. Alan bequeath give his own angle, but for my part I wanted to capture the authentic conversations that he and I were having some how best to support our T1D kiddos. We were frightened, confused, incertain of ourselves and our roles within the fellowship as it attendant all of it. So, we leaned happening each former some, which we both felt really helped. So we got to thinking, are else Dads feeling this agency, too? And if so, are they handsome voice to those concerns? Altogether the female-LED Facebook groups and podcasts out there seemed to suggest non – and the 'Dads and Diabetes' podcast was born!

Alan) Mark pretty much summed it risen! I would only when summate that He originally pitched the idea of a "Dads Who Hate Soccer" podcast to me one evening while having one of our T1D-dad phone conversations. I initially rejected him… because I get it on soccer! Anyway, after convincing him that we should probably talk about our ill daughters, the seeds of 'Dads and Diabetes' were planted. After some convincing, Differentiate agreed and the DaD podcast came to fruition. I graciously give thanks myself for the idea. At, least, that's how I remember it.

Did you review other diabetes podcasts before starting your own, especially those from fellow parents in the community of interests?

Mark) The only one I listened to regularly was Stacey Simms' excellent Diabetes Connections podcast. Alan and I have since been guests connected Stacey's demonstrate, which was more of a thrill than I think she knows! She's thus awesome! The fact I haven't listened to the other podcasts isn't a slight on them. I just don't have the time with life, work, and everything to listen to or read everything about T1D that I might want to. I think that's one of the reasons I ilk Diabetes Connections sol much, because it gathers together so many T1D threads. She artfully crams A LOT in to a single podcast!

Alan) I actually was a auditor of Juicebox Podcast (by D-Dad Scott Benner) in front finding out about Diabetes Connections. IT was a great help to our family. I then began listening to Stacey's DC and now, it is definitely my favorite. I also heed to our possess DaD, naturally, because I love Mark's punctuate.

What's the experience been like for you both so cold?

Mark) It's one of my favorite creative things that I get to do in my world. As you whitethorn have deepened, we effort not to take ourselves too seriously which makes the conversations real and genuine. I find the appendage of recording an episode cathartic therein it reminds me that I'm not alone – and I'm not an idiot! Well, I'm not entirely an idiot when it comes to T1D. Exterior of T1D, the panel's still out. It's great when I learn something fres from Alan, though, or something helium says makes me turn over a new Beaver State different way of doing things.

Alan) I've enjoyed information technology immensely. Regardless of opening the podcast, Mark and I would be having these conversations anyway. So, why non book them? And we've both been humbled and honored at the response we've received. It just goes to show us that there was a niche that needed more representation. Although I've been a T1D for a thirster period of time of metre, I've learned so much from Pit. He has helped Maine in understanding more about the technology, for sure. But atomic number 2 has also simply confirmed that T1D struggles are the same disregardless of demographics or geographics. Mark has as wel helped Maine cost to a greater extent "manpower-on" in our management of Anna's diabetes.

I like to think that I've helped Mark in many of an "emotional support" sort of way because of our having lived with T1D longer. I have oodles of stories that Mark is get-go to experience as time goes on. But overall, I'm candidly not sure how I would be currently dealing with my role as a T1D dad had I non met Mark. He, as well as our listeners, helped me understand that we aren't alone. Dads, I believe, can have very different struggles when dealings with our T1D kids…peculiarly daughters. It's nice to have soul I can kvetch to who "gets it."

What future plans do you have for this D-dads podcast?

Mark) Just to tide over and thriving! We're definitely going to throw more guests on upcoming episodes, approximately from inside our R-2 of kinsperson and friends, and mayhap even extraordinary or two celebs! We also want to round back on many of the topics we've covered already to provide our listeners with updates.The wondrous messages we've gotten from listeners are really gratifying, and so we want to make a point that we do a improve job of sharing them out with everyone in future episodes.

We also could genuinely use a generous patronise or deuce – the equipment we use, what I'm using in particular, is one notch up from a ti on a opus of string! So, if there are any lovely business owners out there reading this… call America!

Alan) Yes! Mark necessarily a inexperienced microphone. So please help! But in wholly seriousness, Deutschmark of necessity a new mike. I simply indigence much time.

If you could founde some nub advice to opposite new D-Dads, what would you say?

Gospel According to Mark) Verbalize.If you're feeling scared, disorientated, insecure, talk some it. When something goes South (and I'm non talking about Arkansas), we guys have general inclination to try and 'fix' it. Don't talk about it, just get thereon and tumble done, right? Well, for right now at to the lowest degree, there's nary fixing T1D. It's out of your control. What's in your control is your ability to tie with strange dads, to talk, share, insight, rage, cuss, cry. IT Crataegus oxycantha help more than you know. Oh, and listen to our 'Dads and Diabetes' podcast – you'll be happy to hear that we're as uninformed as you!

Alan) Mark is dead right! I was in the position of letting my wife be Anna's pancreas instead of jumping in and serving. It caused Maine to be left behind. Then, I had to often pride to admit that I wasn't perceptive how to care for Anna past myself. That scared me. I confessed it to my wife Leslie and she began helping ME, along with Mark, to accommodate my hand as I became more of the "T1D dad" I should've been all along. I've since learned that I wasn't the only dad like ME out thither. Many others were in my shoes. I spent much time deficient to fix it, that I let myself miss out along managing it. I'm thankful for admitting that and for having a platform to percentage what that was/is like.

Mark) I'm always blessed to defy your hand, Buddy, especially when you're crossing the street.

Alan) Aww, thanks! JustAs long as you Don River't clinch my butt.

Thank you both for sharing, and we look for forward to tuning in to the Dads and Diabetes Podcast!

Source: https://www.healthline.com/diabetesmine/diabetes-dads-podcast

Posted by: hernandezgran1982.blogspot.com

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