I
 was 12 when I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes in 2005. I did the best I 
could to hide it throughout high school because it made me feel 
different. I would skip testing my blood before lunch because I wanted 
to sit with my friends. I had already spent my whole life around 
diabetes because my mom was 8 when she was diagnosed. I was diabetesed 
out. 
I
 didn’t want to talk about it. I rolled my eyes when I got nagged about 
it. I think I did what most T1D teenagers do.  I had no interest in any 
technology and kind of just wanted to pretend it wasn’t there. 
All
 of this might sound like your kid. Do they just not want to acknowledge
 their diabetes most of the time? Are they completely uninterested and 
put off by it? Well I put together a little list of advice from someone 
who was there not too too long ago. 
1-
 You can try and talk about it with them over and over again, but it 
will just push them further away. Let them come to you. When they’re 
ready. As overwhelming as it is for you, it is for them. Make sure that 
even though you’re worrying, you’re giving them breathing room.
2-
 On the contrary, let them know that you’re there to help whenever. Ask 
what they want help with versus what they want you to back off from and 
wait for them to ask for help if they need it.
3-
 Know that it’s natural and human to worry. They still feel like your 
baby. There’s already enough to worry about as your teen starts slowly 
growing into a young adult, but when you add diabetes to the picture 
it’s a whole other layer of worry as you’re forced to give them some 
trust to take care of themselves on their own.
4-
 You may have read about Friends for Life, a conference put on by 
Children With Diabetes every summer. The conference center is filled 
with Type 1 families. I remember sitting down at a big round table with breakfast from our carb-counted buffet with my young adult friends.
 We ended up chatting with the ladies sharing our table, who were moms 
of T1D teens, and they wanted our advice. They told us their teens had 
no interest at all at looking into pumps, and that they just didn’t want
 to talk about diabetes at all. The first thing that came to my mind was
 to offer up myself. I gave her my info and told her that I’d be her 
daughters penpal, and that maybe it would be nice talking to someone 
just a tiny bit older who gets it. Find your teen a “big T1D sister or 
big T1D brother”, or set them up to find their own. Which brings me to 
my next point. 
5-
 There are many ways to go about this. A) Try attending a fun conference
 like Friends for Life. There’s camp for the teens and they go to Disney
 and have socials and it’s tons of fun. The teens all either have 
Diabetes or have a sibling with T1D. I happen to know some of the Teen 
staff and they’re so much fun and great mentors. B) Try to let your teen
 know about the Diabetes Online Community. They can find a bunch of 
other people their age with T1D, with common interests, and most 
importantly, common frustrations. One thing I’d recommend would be 
joining the Beyond Type 1 app. This is app is for anyone with T1D, and 
loved ones of T1Ds. If you’d rather go on yourself and ask for advice 
from fellow parents, there are always people willing to help. If they 
want to sign up themselves, even better, there are plenty of awesome 
teens on there that would love to befriend them! And they can vent when 
they feel like the need, to a bunch of people who get it and who they 
can even laugh about diabetes with. C) Another option is signing up for 
Beyond Type 1’s Snail Mail Club. They will set you up with a penpal 
around their age, and they’ll get sent a little package with stationary 
and stickers. It’s a fun old school way to connect with people who can 
relate. 
I
 hope something in here is helpful to a T1D mom or dad somewhere. Know 
that the teen years are the hardest, for the parents and the kids, but 
that it gets easier. Your teen will come to terms with their defective 
pancreas, no matter how long it takes. There will be bad days and good 
days. And once you make it through those teen years, while you let them 
know every once in a while that you’re there whenever they need you, 
they will blossom into young adults who want to spread awareness and 
fund for a cure just like you. 


Awesome article!
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