Redd_Kross wrote:
I've had T1D for 40 years.
I don't know if spaceflight stuff interests you or whether you might already know of this, but perhaps of interest,
http://www.nerdyapril.com/2020/02/how-t ... ntrol.htmlQuote:
How T1D is Like Mission Control: Competence
February 21, 2020
Today is another installment in my series "How T1D is like mission control" - an in-depth look at how living a life with type 1 diabetes bakes in the same characteristics flight controllers practice as instructed by the "Foundations of Flight Operations". You can also read my takes on "Responsibility" and "Toughness". A recent diabetes experience got me thinking a lot about one of the more sterile flight controller qualities 'competence'. I say sterile because competence is black and white - you either have it or you don't - it's not "squishy" like 'teamwork' or 'toughness'. In the arena of human spaceflight, some of these qualities can wax and wane. For instance, on quiet weekend nights, I may never even have a technical conversation with a teammate because it just isn't necessary. In these instances, I need to be able to "turn on" teamwork, but the shift itself doesn't really require it. Competence is different. It's critical, required, exercised.
And just as for human spaceflight, so too for a life with type 1 diabetes.
Quote:
Disclaimer
I'm a rocket scientist...I diagnose and treat rocket problems, not medical ones!! ! Sometimes I blog about my personal experiences as a person living with Type 1 Diabetes, however, this is not to be taken as medical advice.
Additionally, the opinions/views/crappy poems/poor photography are mine (and mine alone!), not my employer's or NASA's.
kthnxbye
_________________
"There are a thousand things that can happen when you go light a rocket engine, and only one of them is good."
Tom Mueller of SpaceX, in Air and Space, Jan. 2011