Hi Hellen!
I just caught up on yesterday's post. I'm SO glad Maggie is feeling better after her vomiting episodes--that was super worrisome. You received some excellent advice yesterday about shooting lower numbers. I wanted to mention a couple of things that helped me when I first began. As others mentioned yesterday, you are going to eventually get into lower numbers with Maggie; that's the ultimate goal. When/if you get a lower than normal preshot number, there is a protocol that we typically follow for both SLGS and TR, and it's on this sticky:
Sticky - Dosing Methods: Start Low, Go Slow (SLGS) & Tight Regulation (TR). Of course, you can (and should) always pop onto the board if you are concerned, and someone will be here to guide you. I bookmark these posts so that I can refer back to them when I find myself in the situation where I need them (though I used to get so nervous, that I couldn't make heads or tails of the posts without some guidance from the forum--I'm better on that now).
When you have a lower than normal preshot number and you post on the forum, the first thing someone will ask is this: can you monitor and do you have enough supplies (testing strips and medium/high carb food on hand) to monitor. I also wanted to mention why the food is important. When I first started with Jude's FD, I was SO AFRAID of lower numbers, but then someone helped me to understand that the tool we use to bring up a cat's blood glucose is food. If Jude has a lower than normal preshot number OR if he drops low during a cycle, I begin boosting his bg with small serving (1-2 tsp) of medium/high carb food (carb value depending on the bg number). Then I monitor to ensure the food is bringing up his bg number into a safe range. Here is a discussion about this concept, which is called feeding the curve:
8/10 TASHIE pmps=HIGH! +Questions***. It takes some time to get comfortable with this, but, for me, knowing that Jude wasn't going to fall off the edge of the world with his numbers because I had some control over boosting them with food helped me to feel more comfortable with shooting lower numbers and with encountering lower numbers in the cycle. I'm not going to lie; it still makes me nervous to shoot numbers in the 50s/60s, and it's always important to
know thy cat (we get to know them by gathering data), knowing their proclivities related to insulin, but it's a little easier knowing I have some control over those bg drops by giving him food.