I love seeing all the greens emerging on your spreadsheet. Try not to worry too much about the rise at the end of the cycle. He'll settle down as he gets more and more used to those healthy, healing numbers. Keeping him in those greens and low blues as long as possible during the cycle gives his pancreas a chance to heal.
Mouse isn't showing the tendency to dive out of the blue. So you should be fine to leave him and trust that he'll be safe. I know those Sticky posts about hypoglycemia are scary, but you have enough data now on Mouse to make reasonable predictions about his safety.
While you can't look at anyone else's spreadsheet and copy their dosing (because every cat is different), you can look at other spreadsheets to start to see how kitty's do in lower numbers. It might help to look at some of them and notice that a) kitties can and do hit lime green numbers sometimes and survive and b) they don't hit dangerously low lime green numbers out of the blue. Most of the time they stay in the 40's, and just dip down for a minute.
The dangerous lows happen when people are overdosing their cats without monitoring enough to know they are overdosing, when they are feeding a poor diet, or when a secondary health issue interferes with "typical" responses.
Hypoglycemia isn't something to be casual about, but it also shouldn't be something that keeps you glued to your house in a state of constant worry. You're doing a great job of monitoring Mouse, and you're giving very reasonable, careful dosing. Please go out and enjoy yourself! The more you get out, and come home and see that he's fine, the more you'll be able to relax.
When I first started I was terrified every time I left that I would come home to a dead cat. When I finally forced myself to do it more, the worry began to ease.


