My vet DID NOT inform me this either, so don't feel bad about it at all. All I was told to do was test at home. Nothing about when or how often, or even what numbers were good. I had to look that up on my own. All I was told was just the type of monitor to use, which I've since changed. I'd be soooooo lost without this forum.
This happened with me and Mouse, especially in the beginning when I didn't know anything about Lantus. You really have to plan for it. Set yourself multiple warning alarms so that you don't have to rush. My process is to test, feed, shoot at 7 am, which means I'm up at 6:30. I test, let her eat, and draw up the shot while she's eating.
We all know it doesn't work like that. My other cats actually wake me up at 5:30 demanding food. Mouse still gets her shot at 7 though. She gets a test at 5:30. I see where she's at. She gets a token spoon full of food. She glares at me, she sees the other cats full food bowl. I get more glares. I chase her off the other cat's food for the next 30 minutes. I wish I was still asleep. I curse the other cats, cause they're the ones that woke me up. I have coffee. I pick up the food the other cats didn't eat. Mouse is still on the counter, glaring at her empty food bowl and me. I glare back. She knocks something off while making eye contact. It wasn't coffee, so I don't care. It's finally 7 am, so I test her again. She can finally eat a good meal. she loves me again. I give her the shot. She doesn't notice.
Do your best to maintain the 12 hour window between shots. It's incredibly important. Take a look at Mouse's SS, she didn't start getting good numbers until I started maintaining that. You really see her turn around as soon as I joined this forum, and took the team's advice to heart.
Mouse has started to feel so much better after her shots that she now runs to my lap after eating to get her shot, or waits on the counter for it. She gets confused when I tell her I already gave it to her when she was eating. You'll get there. Cat's know when we're trying to help them and tend to come around.
You can do this! It's a lot of work when you first start out, but you've got this. It really does become part of your routine. The more you do it, the easier it gets. It took me about 2 weeks to get the ear prick down. I was already familiar with subq shots, since I did home fluids previously, but that took me a bit when I first started those too. Just remember, it's ok to feel overwhelmed. Keep breathing through it. You and Squeaky are going to get through this together
