TuDiabetes Talks: DOColors Where Diabetes Advocacy and Racial Equality Intersect 5pm PT/8pm ET

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Alexis Newell is one of the founders of DOColors and will be the guest as we talk about where diabetes advocacy and racial equality intersect. DOColors started as a Tumblr blog that aims to help the diabetes online community recognize and celebrate diversity.


The Big Blue Test 2016! TuDiabetes Talks 8pm ET, 5pm PT

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Join in the conversation as Cynthia chats with Mike Lawson about Diabetes Hands Foundation’s very own Big Blue Test!  Laugh as both Cynthia and Mike share their own exercise clips as they log their Big Blue Test blood sugars!

What is The Big Blue Test?

Between October 14, 2016, and November 14, 2016, participants perform 14-20 minutes of physical activity and then report their results at BigBlueTest.org or by using the iPhone or Android smartphone app. Each entry will result in $1 donated to three US-based initiatives ($3 total; up to $5,000).

“The Big Blue Test rallies communities to experience the impact that small changes can have on their health,” said Gene Kunde, CEO of Diabetes Hands Foundation. “The grants generated by Big Blue Test participants will impact thousands of people with diabetes who have been traditionally underserved.”

Three US-based initiatives will receive $5,000 in funding.

DiabetesSisters [www.diabetessisters.org] With this grant funding, DiabetesSisters will grow the newly launched Minority Initiative which is focused on bringing resources and education to African American and Hispanic women with diabetes and pre-diabetes.

We Are Diabetes [www.wearediabetes.org] We Are Diabetes has created a Recovery Toolkit that will be available digitally for health care providers. With the Big Blue Test grant funding, they will be able to distribute physical copies to clinics across the country.

Riverside Community Diabetes Collaborative [www.rchf.org] The Riverside Community Diabetes Collaborative will be using Big Blue Test funds to purchase equipment for their annual “Together We Can!” event which is a free seminar that includes health screenings and education on healthy living with diabetes, and addresses the emotional aspect of living with diabetes.

The goal for the 2016 Big Blue Test campaign is to collect 45,000 entries (resulting in $5,000 for each nonprofit organization).

 


TuDiabetes Talks with Daniele Hargenrader, Founder of Diabetes Dominator Coaching 8pm ET, 5pm PT

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Welcome Daniele Hargenrader,  founder of Diabetes Dominator Coaching and the bestselling author of Unleash Your Inner Diabetes Dominator.

Daniele is a nutritionist with her Bachelor’s degree in Nutrition Science, a Certified Health Coach and Personal Trainer.

Daniele hosts a diabetes-empowerment focused interview series on YouTube, is an international speaker, has presented at Fortune 500 companies and top ranked hospitals, and has dedicated herself to teaching people how to live the life they imagined through our powers of choice and self-love.

Daniele was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at the age of 9, and lost her father to heart disease 3 years later. After battling for over 7 years with a binge eating addiction, obesity, clinical depression, and out of control blood sugars, she has taken herself from obese and suffering with diabetes, to fit, happy, and healthy with diabetes. Her passion and career focus on teaching others how to make that same transition sustainably.

She serves as the Community Ambassador for Diabetes Daily, as well as a contributing blogger for Diabetes Daily, Insulin Nation, Beyond Type 1, Diabetic Connect, and more. She also serves on the board or directors for The Betes Organization and We Are Diabetes.


Navigating Adolescence and Puberty: How to maintain your sanity with a teen faced with diabetes and hormones! MasterChat on TuDiabetes Talks Live 8pm ET 5pm PT

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It’s that time of the year again: Master Chats! The Master Chat Series is an annual collaboration between TuDiabetes and Columbia University’s Master of Science in Diabetes Education and Management program. This master’s program is offered to clinicians who are currently in or interested in the diabetes field.

As part of a course requirement, students present ‘Master Chats’ on a variety of diabetes related health topics. They will be featured this October and November on TuDiabetes Talks

All of the topics this year have been generated based on TuDiabetes community member feedback!

http://www.tudiabetes.org/forum/t/what-diabetes-topics-would-you-like-to-hear-learn-more-about-master-chat-series-2016/55185

 


Jane Dickinson Discusses MasterChat and the Online Graduate Program in Diabetes Education and Management at Teachers College Columbia University! TuDiabetes Talks 5pm PT, 8pm ET

Jane Dickinson Discusses MasterChat and the Online Graduate Program in Diabetes Education and Management at Teachers College Columbia University

MasterChat is a series featuring TuDiabetes community generated topics led by students in the Master of Science in Diabetes program at Columbia University

TuDiabetes Talks 5pm PT, 8pm ET

Jane K. Dickinson is a nurse and certified diabetes educator. She has been living with type 1 diabetes since 1975 and helping others live well with diabetes since 1995. Jane is the Program Director for the Master of Science in Diabetes Education and Management Program at Teachers College Columbia University. She has been with Teachers College since they launched the program in 2011. Jane also provides diabetes education in Northwest Colorado, and consults for various diabetes-related organizations and projects. Jane lives in Colorado with her husband and two teen-age kids. She loves to walk, hike, and snowshoe, and in her spare time she blogs at www.janekdickinson.com.


Asha Brown Talks Diabetes and Eating Disorders, Diabulimia and Recovery. 5pm PT, 8pm ET

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Asha Brown, Founder & Executive Director

Asha was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when she was 5 years old. Throughout her childhood, diabetes was simply a way of life because her father had type 1 most of his life as well. She didn’t mind being a little different than her friends and never had a problem explaining type 1 diabetes to anyone who had questions. In fact, diabetes never created an obstacle in Asha’s life until she was old enough to understand that her weight and body size were not completely under her own control. As a dancer, actress and a fitness instructor by the time she was 17, Asha lived for movement and her body’s ability to feel good in its own skin. After reading many articles and books that gave a daunting account of weight gain associated with insulin resistance and diabetes, Asha felt the first stirring of resentment towards a disease she felt was dooming her to an inability to have the physical strength and shape that she knew she deserved and could achieve. And so she started to omit insulin occasionally when it was “necessary” to get things done.

The obsession with maintaining a healthy size and weight while coping with multiple autoimmune disorders (hypothyroidism, polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as type 1 diabetes) became a full-time job for Asha during high school and college. The lack of support for type 1 diabetics was also disheartening as most of the information discussed in the media dealt with type 2 diabetes. Asha began to omit insulin for the purpose of weight control. She also started to rely on the numbing effect of ommission to drown out the daily anxieties that people with chronic illness often battle against. She felt it was a cruel joke to have such a passion for dance and performing and to have to constantly “take it easy” due to her low blood sugars, or worry that she would have one when she was on stage. Skipping her insulin shots, or taking less than required to cover a meal, became second nature to her, and for years she struggled with the cycles of omitting insulin, binging, restricting and swearing never to do it again.

Asha wrestled, off and on, with symptoms of diabulimia beginning in her sophomore year of high school, but it began to truly take over her life in her freshman year of college. By then, it dramatically affected every single choice she made in her life, her relationships and her daily routines. The effort to keep her eating disorder a secret became all-encompassing. It wasn’t until she met the love of her life and was married that she began to consider the idea of seeking treatment for her eating disorder. For years, Asha continued to tell herself that she would stop her dangerous secretive behaviors once she was at her perfect weight. The problem with that, of course, is that there’s no such thing as a perfect weight or a perfect body — and, therefore, no end in sight. Asha soon realized she had no idea how to live without her eating disorder. And she knew she could never be the wife and life partner to her wonderful husband or truly follow her dreams of performing until she let go of her destructive behaviors.

Asha took her first step towards living fully in her life again when she had an initial assessment made at the Park Nicollet Melrose Center in 2009. She was strongly encouraged to check into the inpatient treatment program that very day due to the severity and danger of her out-of-control diabetes. And with that, she surrendered. She went through a year of treatment, starting with two weeks of inpatient care and then moving to weekly outpatient appointments, and finally monthly. Along with the wonderful support she received from the staff at the Melrose Center, she realized how supportive her family and friends could be once she finally shared her difficulties with them. Her life began to churn once again with passion, discovery and joy.

Asha’s life today is new and very different after finally coming to terms with her disorder. She is no longer imprisoned by the numbers on the scale or the fear of food. After receiving treatment, she returned to teaching yoga, a passion she had enjoyed years ago before her diabulimia took top priority. She performs often in theaters in the Minneapolis area, and delights in exploring and cooking new recipes and foods. She lives very happily with her beloved husband who has been her grounding source of support and continues to give her the courage to fight the odds associated with her type 1 diabetes, her recovery, and reminds her of so many reasons to never give up.

Asha works with families, patients, and health professionals across the USA. She uses her personal experiences with ED-DMT1 to offer hope and support to those still struggling. She also establishes relationships with eating disorder facilities and diabetes organizations across the county to help connect people to appropriate care. Asha has presented at NEDA, AADE, and JDRF, among others. She writes for Diabetes Health, Diabetes Daily, Glu, Insulin Nation, dlife, DiabetesMine, and other websites. She was a member of the ADA Woman and Diabetes Subcommittee and is a member of Diabetes Advocates and BEDA.


TuDiabetes Talks Live with Chris and Jewels from #dcde 5pm PT, 8pm ET

Hello Hello! Welcome and thanks for joining us for a sure to be great chat with our wonderful guests this evening….

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The diabetes online community is gathering on Twitter every week, and there’s someone missing — you! This week on TuDiabetes Talks, we get to chat with hosts Jewels and Chris all about the power of the diabetes online community and their inspirational Tuesday night Twitter conversations at #dcde

If you haven’t already succumbed to the temptation of Twitter, we hope that this candid conversation about the #DCDE Twitter community will inspire and engage!  The chat is every Tuesday evening at 9:00 pm EST.

 


The “D” word! Are you “Diabetic” or are you a “Person With Diabetes”? 5pm PT!

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What are your thoughts on the word “DIABETIC” to describe people living with diabetes? Join us this Wednesday at 8pm Eastern/5pm Pacific (the hour leading into #DSMA) for a community conversation about the word “diabetic.” All opinions are welcome. To join us, head over to TuDiabetes.org/Live


Depression, Anxiety and Anger Management with Bernard Golden, PhD Live! 5pm PT

Overcoming Destructive Anger and Diabetes

Bernard Golden, PhD. 

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RELEVANCE

DIABETES

A diagnosis of chronic illness often triggers anger, as do the many challenges that face us in managing our conditions. People with diabetes are often especially prone to experiencing anger, because of fluctuating blood glucose levels that can contribute to mood swings and make them vulnerable. Anger can harm our relationships, and human connection is critical for our health and well-being. Cultivating “healthy anger” involves learning to pause and reflect on what we’re experiencing, rather than react to them. “Healthy anger” has been shown to enhance our resilience and overall well-being. And it empowers us, because it fuels assertive (rather than aggressive) communication, which improves our success at achieving our goals and satisfying our wants and needs.

 

TAKE AWAY

Anger is an emotion provoked when we perceive threat, and it originates in the part of the “old brain” (limbic cortex) that generates the fight-or-flight response. How each of us reacts to our anger, depends upon the habits of mind we’ve developed throughout our lives. But good news lies in the brain’s neuroplasticity; we can strengthen our prefrontal cortex, our “rational brains,” to overwrite established neural pathways and form new patterns of behavior. Drawing on neuroscience, psychology (cognitive behavior therapy) and Eastern philosophy (mindfulness, meditation, and practices in compassion and self-compassion), Dr. Bernard Golden has developed a breakthrough method to unite mind and body in the critical achievement of “healthy anger” and self-control.

 

TOPICS

Dr. Golden’s innovative framework for cultivating “healthy anger” includes:

  • Exercises in mindfulness, visualization, and reflection without judgment to make us aware of our physical & emotional triggers and help us cultivate our compassionate selves
  •  His “anger log” for charting the internal experiences that precipitate anger: our needs, desires, expectations, and negative feelings
  • Practical steps for how to:
    • Overcome a critical mind
    • Override emotional reactivity
    • Diffuse another person’s anger during a conflict
    • Let go of expectations
    • Let go of power
    • Forgive (ourselves and others)
    • Show self-compassion and empathy for others
    • Communicate assertively (rather than aggress

Mike Lawson and Mariana Gomez Talk Live about the American Association of Diabetes Educators Conference 2016. TuDiabetes Talks! 5pm PT

AADE

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So what’s all the buzz about this wonderful Annual American Association of Diabetes Educators (AADE) conference each year? We are going to spend the hour sharing what #AADE is, who attends AADE, the mission and vision, what the big shares and take aways were for 2016 and of course…how Diabetes Hands Foundation is involved and some of the great community partners and friends we made!

Join as live Wednesday August 17th! 5pm PT