Diabetes
 Awareness is an interesting conundrum for a unique reason. Everyone 
knows what Diabetes is. We don't need to tell the world it exists. They 
know. It just happens to be one of those well known diseases. Like 
Cancer, Alzheimer's, Arthritis.
My
 point is that the need to spread awareness about Diabetes isn't because
 people don't know about it. We need to spread awareness about it 
because TOO MANY people know about it, but have the completely wrong 
perception of it.  
Diabetes
 somehow became a very common punchline, and in the end, for thousands 
of people who don't know the details about diabetes, that's all they 
know. 
Although
 there have been more incidents of Type 1 being portrayed in movies and 
television, I've seen a meme floating around that says, "The kind of 
Diabetes I have isn't the kind you saw on TV." Because when society 
thinks of diabetes, they don't think about forcing yourself up in the 
middle of the night to treat a low as you're shaking. They don't think 
about the thousands of needle pokes accumulated. They don't think about 
the constant math we have to do in our head, when the wrong calculations
 can land us in the hospital, or even worse, dead. They don't think 
about the parents of the children who literally have to be their child's
 pancreas and stay up all night worrying. Because their bodies do it 
automatically, like they're supposed to. 
Sometimes
 I wonder what they picture in their mind. Do they picture an elderly 
person? Do they picture someone obese? Do they just have images of 
desserts and gluttony in their head? 
This
 misconception is the reason so many teenagers hide their diabetes in 
high school. Even though they did nothing to cause it, and even though 
they know that their body attacked the cells in their pancreas, they 
feel the need to hide because they worry about what others around them 
who know nothing about Type 1 Diabetes will think about them. 
By
 spreading awareness, we show the world that Type 1 Diabetes is an 
autoimmune disease. Just like Lupus, Crohns, Multiple Sclerosis, and 
more. The difference? Their diseases aren't a punchline. When people 
think about their diseases maybe they have sympathy. Maybe they picture a
 fight and treatments. Maybe they picture a strong person. But with us, a
 huge group of people think about candy. Cake. Chocolate. Gluttony. 
Obesity. 
With
 awareness, I hope this picture in people's minds can change. I hope 
they can see the little 2 year old who couldn't have done a thing to 
cause this to themselves. I hope they picture the 5 year old who is giving
 their injection by themselves for the first time. I hope they picture 
the teenager who feels different from her friends, because she's 
always having to go off to do things to take care of herself. I want 
them to picture the college kid who is busy with school and rationing his insulin because he can’t afford it, so he ends up in DKA and dies. 
If this reaches one person and changes their perception, I've done my job. 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment