Thanks for the congrats,
TauCygna
Making changes to one's lifestyle and habits is hard and not everyone is willing to do that. My uncle refuses his chemo therapy (he has bone cancer). My dad refuses cathegorically to get a hearing aid (which he needs really really urgently! But if there's something he's not supposed to hear, you can bet on him getting it instantly).
I had to quit soft drinks, fruit juice and pizza, and had to cut down on cookies and chocolate. The juice was (and still is) the biggest challenge for me. I love lychee juice
*sigh*
Marynator, I hope your dad will be fine with medication. Can he be treated with tablets or must he inject Insulin?
Type 2 diabetics often are very plump but that's not necessarily because they eat unreasonably. In my own case it was an Insulin resistance. There is sugar galore in my blood but the cells can't take it in. After a while the liver gives a shrug and says "ok, if you don't want it I'll store it for emergencies". This way people with an Insulin resistance get obese while at the same time their muscles and nerves starve to death.
I was diagnosed in September and must take tablets that enable the cells to take up the glucosis. Within these 9 months I lost 13 kg (approx. 28.5 lbs) =) My calory intake has not changed - it was and still is at an average of about 1800 kcal per day.
In medical journals one reads all the time that obese people have a higher risk of getting Diabetes. I rather think it's the other way round: an Insulin resistance usually gets overlooked for a very long time. It leads to obesity and only when the patient gets a full Diabetes (when the pancreas starts to fail) he or she finally gets diagnosed. Indubitably, obesity is an alarm sign but it's imo rather a symptom, not a cause.
And to avoid misunderstandings: In this context I mean only that sort of obesity that is definitely not caused by too high a calory uptake / overeating. I'm refering exclusively to those people who are obese and keep gaining weight in spite of having a perfectly normal diet.