Your Best T1D Year

Fear of Going Low: The Real Reason You Don't Pre-Bolus

5 min · 6 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Fear of Going Low: The Real Reason You Don't Pre-Bolus

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SHOW NOTES: Here’s the quiet part said out loud: the reason you don’t pre-bolus is not that you’re lazy or that you don’t care. It’s that it scares you. Neil names the specific fear at the center of the whole challenge, the fear of going low before the food arrives, and tells you the truth, 34 years in, it still scares him too. This is the episode nobody put in the pamphlet. The pamphlet says “pre-bolus 15 minutes before your meal” and leaves you alone with the little spike of panic when the arrow turns down and the food isn’t ready. Neil validates that fear completely, because it’s not a character flaw, it’s your survival brain doing its job. And then he promises what’s coming: not pretending the fear away, but out-preparing it. In this episode: * The fear of hypoglycemia and why it stops us from pre-bolusing * Why that fear is normal, rational, and not a personal weakness * What the pamphlets never tell you about insulin timing * How we’re going to face the fear instead of ignoring it This Week’s Challenge: The next few times you decide NOT to pre-bolus, catch yourself and notice what you’re feeling. Fear? Forgetting? No time? Just get honest about it. Helpful resources and newsletter [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] | Instagram [https://instagram.com/thebetes] | Facebook [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] | LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] | Website [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] | Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

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episode Fear of Going Low: The Real Reason You Don't Pre-Bolus artwork

Fear of Going Low: The Real Reason You Don't Pre-Bolus

SHOW NOTES: Here’s the quiet part said out loud: the reason you don’t pre-bolus is not that you’re lazy or that you don’t care. It’s that it scares you. Neil names the specific fear at the center of the whole challenge, the fear of going low before the food arrives, and tells you the truth, 34 years in, it still scares him too. This is the episode nobody put in the pamphlet. The pamphlet says “pre-bolus 15 minutes before your meal” and leaves you alone with the little spike of panic when the arrow turns down and the food isn’t ready. Neil validates that fear completely, because it’s not a character flaw, it’s your survival brain doing its job. And then he promises what’s coming: not pretending the fear away, but out-preparing it. In this episode: * The fear of hypoglycemia and why it stops us from pre-bolusing * Why that fear is normal, rational, and not a personal weakness * What the pamphlets never tell you about insulin timing * How we’re going to face the fear instead of ignoring it This Week’s Challenge: The next few times you decide NOT to pre-bolus, catch yourself and notice what you’re feeling. Fear? Forgetting? No time? Just get honest about it. Helpful resources and newsletter [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] | Instagram [https://instagram.com/thebetes] | Facebook [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] | LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] | Website [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] | Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

6 de jul de 20265 min
episode The After-Dinner Blood Sugar Spike, Explained | T1D Pre-Bolus Challenge artwork

The After-Dinner Blood Sugar Spike, Explained | T1D Pre-Bolus Challenge

SHOW NOTES: You counted the carbs. You took the right dose. Two hours later you’re 240, and you have no idea why. If that number breaks your heart a little, this episode is for you. Neil sits in the problem of the post-meal spike, the one that feels like a personal failing but almost never is. This is the roller coaster every person with type 1 diabetes knows: spike, correct, drift low, snack, climb again, and it’s 9pm and you’re stacking insulin and snacks in the dark. Neil makes the case that this whole loop usually traces back to one thing, the food got a head start and your insulin spent the first hour catching up. It’s not your discipline. It’s your timing. And timing is the most fixable variable in type 1. In this episode: * Why the after-dinner spike feels like your fault but usually isn’t * The correction-and-crash loop that wrecks your evening * Why the timing of your dinner bolus is the most fixable variable in T1D * What this challenge is really trying to give you back This Week’s Challenge: Keep noticing your blood sugar two hours after dinner. Peek at your number right before you eat, too. Two snapshots. Change nothing yet. Helpful resources and newsletter [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] | Instagram [https://instagram.com/thebetes] | Facebook [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] | LinkedIn [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] | Website [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] | Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

3 de jul de 20265 min
episode Why You Don't Pre-Bolus (you know you should) artwork

Why You Don't Pre-Bolus (you know you should)

SHOW NOTES: You already know you should pre-bolus. Your endocrinologist has told you. Every diabetes educator has told you. And you still dose with your first bite, same as the rest of us. Neil Greathouse, who has lived with type 1 diabetes since 1992, kicks off The Head Start, an eight-week challenge all about pre-bolusing your insulin, by admitting he doesn't do it perfectly either. Here is the reframe that changes everything: pre-bolusing is not a knowledge problem. Almost nobody with type 1 needs it explained. It's a fear problem, a forgetting problem, and a "the food came late one time" problem. Over the next eight weeks, we fix it gently, using dinner as our meal, with about 1,500 people doing this challenge worldwide. In this episode: * Why pre-bolusing is the most-ignored advice in type 1 diabetes * The real reason we don't do it, and why it isn't discipline * The one stat that proves you're not the only one (more than 1 in 4 meals gets a late or missed bolus) * Why we're building the whole challenge around dinner This Week's Challenge: Change nothing. Just notice your blood sugar two hours after dinner. We're taking a "before" picture before we change a thing. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

1 de jul de 20266 min
episode While You Were Sleeping Challenge Finale artwork

While You Were Sleeping Challenge Finale

SHOW NOTES: Eight weeks ago, Neil asked you to do one thing: write down how many hours you slept last night. That was the whole challenge. That was where it started. One number. And here we are. This is the finale of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge -- 24 episodes, 8 weeks, and the most thorough look at sleep and type 1 diabetes that Your Best T1D Year has ever done. Neil closes with the full arc: from mystery blood sugars and 3am wake-ups, to the 21% insulin sensitivity finding, to the dawn phenomenon, the sleep-blood sugar feedback loop, cortisol, Fear of Hypoglycemia, sleep stages, alarm calibration, pre-sleep routines, and the one habit that ties all of it together. Then he makes the case that should change how you think about sleep permanently. Sleep is not a passive rest state for people with type 1 diabetes. It is a metabolic tool. And now you have it. In this episode: * The full While You Were Sleeping Challenge recap -- all 8 weeks, all the mechanisms * Why sleep is a metabolic variable, not just a wellness recommendation, for T1D people * What "managing T1D while you sleep" actually means biologically * The one thing to carry forward from all 24 episodes * What's coming next for Your Best T1D Year Final Challenge: Share one thing you learned in the last eight weeks. Tag @thebetes on Instagram, or tell one person -- someone with T1D, or who loves someone with T1D. One ripple. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

29 de jun de 20266 min
episode The One Sleep Habit That Improves T1D Time in Range artwork

The One Sleep Habit That Improves T1D Time in Range

SHOW NOTES: Eight weeks. Twenty-four episodes. The dawn phenomenon, cortisol, alarm fatigue, sleep stages, Fear of Hypoglycemia, CGM as a proactive tool. If Neil had to give you one thing to keep from all of it -- just one habit -- here it is: go to bed at the same time every night. This is not a joke, and it's not oversimplified. It's the finding from the 2023 T1D sleep study with 76 participants that Neil has been referencing throughout this challenge. Bedtime consistency was the dominant sleep variable associated with time in range -- not total hours, not sleep efficiency, not how many times you woke up. Consistent bedtime. Every extra hour of bedtime variability was associated with roughly 10% less time in range. And the effect runs both directions: more consistency, better glucose outcomes. We're in Week 8 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. Three days from the finish line. In this episode: * Why consistent bedtime is the single most impactful sleep habit for T1D time in range * What the 2023 research actually says -- and why it's the clearest finding in the whole challenge * Why your body doesn't know it's Saturday (and what that costs you weekly) * The Jerry Seinfeld productivity method applied to your bedtime * How to pick your time, commit to the 60-minute window, and start the streak This Week's Challenge: Pick your bedtime. Say it out loud. Write it down. Commit to it through the end of the challenge -- including this weekend. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

22 de jun de 20266 min