Marianne Rice writes contemporary romances set in small New
England towns. When she’s not writing, Marianne spends her time buying shoes,
eating chocolate, chauffeuring her herd of children to their varying sporting
events, and when there’s time, relaxing with fancy drinks and romance books.
Learn more about Marianne and her books at her website.
I love to exercise. Okay, I
may be stretching the truth a tad. I love how I feel after I exercise. I’ve done the Tough Mudder. Twice. I’ve run the
Rugged Maniac and a handful of other obstacle races over the past few years. My
husband and I are faithful to the p90x routines and encourage our three
children to play in sports throughout the year. Granted, it makes for a crazy,
hectic, life, but we’re a healthy family.
I’m a girl who loves, loves,
loves to cook and always adds my own little healthy flair to a recipe (the kids
have finally discovered that the homemade mac and cheese is actually butternut
squash and chicken stock…barely any cheese or milk in the gooey deliciousness).
I have an insane sweet tooth but use applesauce, coconut oil, whole wheat flour,
flax seed and other ingredients to compensate my weakness.
So on July 28, 2008 when my
then seven-year-old was rushed to the emergency room after her routine physical
and diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes, I was like…what?
“Her blood sugar is over 700,”
the nurse said.
“Oh, is that bad?” I asked.
I knew nothing about the disease, but from that day on our family’s life had
changed. No, we didn’t need to alter our eating habits—Type 1 and Type 2
diabetes are COMPLETELY different. One way to piss off a mother of a T1D is to
ask if her child is allowed to have a cookie. Ugh. Our life became a whirlwind
of carb counting, middle of the night blood sugar testing, constant emails and
phone calls with school, pharmacy trips, reorganizing the fridge to make room for
the vials of insulin. The two younger siblings learned about carb counting and
quickly grew accustomed to needles and shots.
It’s been seven years of ups
and downs—literally and figuratively. My daughter still doesn’t like the world
to know about her disease as she feels it weakens her. I want her to know it
actually makes her stronger. Her close group of friends who know about her
diabetes are in awe that she can prick her own finger and change her pump
without a nurse (or medical team) to help her. It was only two months into her
diagnosis that she started doing her own shots and wouldn’t let me help. Her
fingertips are dotted, scarred and calloused and she’s only fourteen. She must
always wear her pump the size of a flip-phone on her belly or arm or she’ll
die. We must count every carb—apple or cupcake. It makes no difference. Insulin
needs to be delivered. We’re constantly nagging her, reminding her,
reprimanding her for not testing her blood sugar as often, or giving herself
the insulin when needed.
Type 1 Diabetes is a
lifestyle changer. And it can happen to anyone. But I am grateful that it’s just diabetes. Seven years ago when I
paced the halls of the Barbara Bush wing at Maine Medical Center in Portland,
Maine, I was reminded how fortunate I was to have a child who could walk out of
the hospital in a few days. There were other children who were going through
radiation, chemotherapy, saying good-bye to their parents forever.
I’m thankful my child is
active and healthy, despite her diagnosis. Granted, her perspective is very
different than mine, but as an adult, I can appreciate what we do have, and try
not to dwell on what we don’t. But my heart breaks every time I drop her off at
a friend’s house. I allot time to meet with the parents and explain diabetes,
give them a list of emergency numbers, a cheat sheet to monitoring my child’s
health, and then I text my daughter every few hours reminding her to cover her
popcorn and chips and snacks she’s having with her friends. I’m the nagging
mother. My daughter’s life depends on it.
We all need our outlets. I’m
a romance writer. I write to escape the craziness of my regular day job, the
hectic life of being a mom to three active kids, and to create romantic heroes
(my husband is awesome and loyal and reliable…but he ain’t no romantic!). In my
second book, False Hope, the heroine
is diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. I wrote this book shortly after my daughter
was diagnosed. I thought about writing a women’s fiction novel about a mother
whose daughter struggles with the disease and started that novel, but it became
too personal. Instead, I incorporated diabetes into my contemporary romance
series. Emma Fulton leads a healthy, active lifestyle but faces many obstacles
in her life and her new diagnosis is only a small part. Just one more thing to
add to her already full plate.
What I love about Emma is
that the disease doesn’t own her. It is a part of her, one she may try to
forget about, but it follows her around and weaves its way into her life. We
can’t escape from our problems, but need to learn how to face them, live with
them, or change them.
Eating well-balanced meals,
drinking lots of water, and exercising are all important and can help maintain
a healthy life, but there are no guarantees. Live life to the fullest and brace
all life has to offer.
And read. Read to learn, to
escape, to dream.
False Hope
Mason
Tucker prefers solitude and the company of his laptop, but when vivacious Emma
Fulton begs for his computer expertise in tracking down family secrets, he
agrees in order to keep an eye on the feisty brunette, as trouble seems to
follow her wherever she goes.
Thanks for having me, Lois.
ReplyDeleteFantastic post! I didn't know anything at all about type 1 diabetes before today - your daughter sounds like a real warrior! I love that you were able to use this experience in your books, and I'm very much looking forward to reading False Hope. :-)
ReplyDeleteWell, now I feel like a shameless slacker, in even more admiration for you and your juggling act. I hope you and your beautiful daughter have nothing but ups ahead. And people, Marianne wears really cute shoes.
ReplyDeleteJessica,
ReplyDeleteShe is! She has some major OCD which has actually helped with her diabetes care. I'm totally needle-phobic (ah, the irony!!) so when she took over her own care, doing her own shots just two months into her diagnosis--yes, only 7 years old--this mama was sighing with relief.
Maggie,
You? Slacker? You're as go-go-go as they get!
And thanks for the shoe compliment. I'd like to say it's my only vice but, yeah, I have many.
Great post, Marianne. Like I didn't think you were Superwoman already! ;) Your daughter is amazing and so strong! You're right, having people know doesn't show weakness, it shows how strong she is.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your story. And I agree with Maggie, you have the cutest shoes!
I have a nephew and a BIL with Type-1 diabetes. Meeting these two men, you'd never know. They are both active and healthy. But I know it's something that is always on their mind.
ReplyDeleteI love that you've incorporated diabetes in your story. It may have been therapeutic for you to write, but it will no doubt give readers another perspective of the disease.
I don't know how you manage that busy life of yours and still squeeze in time for writing. You're amazing!
Thanks, Brenna :-)
ReplyDeleteNina, it was really hard to write about it back when Teenage Princess was first diagnosed. At the time we felt like it was the end of the world. But we've learned to function. It's hard to remember what life was like before the diagnosis.
I'm no more amazing than the rest of you. We all have our battles, schedules, families, work life, but manage to keep moving and keep at it. One. Day. At. A. Time.
Hi, Marianne. Thanks for such an enlightening post. We never truly know what challenges other people face until we read something like this. And I like that you've written what you know, which makes the story even more authentic. Bless you for being such a devoted mom. Teenage princess knows how lucky she is, I'm sure, but she probably won't truly appreciate it until she's older. Best of luck to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteSo much important information. Thanks. Best wishes to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteAnnette, so true. So true. And I tell Teenage Princess how lucky she is all the time...some day she'll believe what her mother says is actually true. (Most of the time. Okay, some of the time).
ReplyDeleteAngela,
ReplyDeleteThank you!
They're so lucky to have you as a Mom, you've set such a great example of a woman who can do it all...and then some. Great post!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Stephanie! :-)
ReplyDelete