This patient support community is for questions related to juvenile diabetes including
Celiac disease,
depression, diabetic complications, hyperglycemia /
diabetic keto-acidosis,
hypoglycemia, islet cell transplantation,
nutrition, parenting a diabetic child, pregnancy, pump therapy, school issues, and teens with
diabetes.
I think that before you get depressed, you should make some phone calls. Call your local military recruiter and ASK; and also call your local police HR person and ask if there is any way that a type 1 diabetic person could be hired. I suspect that the answer will be "no", but a phone call is the only way to find out for sure. Part of what you are dealing with is the uncertainty of not knowing for sure.
If the answer is indeed "no" as we think it will be, then grieve over it for a while. That's OK -- you have lost a dream. But the beauty of human nature is that we are able to adjust to ANYTHING. Let yourself be sad about it for a while, and then put your energy into researching other possibilities. This sounds trite, but it is not meant to be. A healthy emotional response to disappointment is to allow it to sadden us for a period of time, and then we rally and find other goals to reach for. Humans are amazingly good at adapting, and those of us who have type 1 diabetes, and have had it since childhood already know a lot about adapting emotionally.
I would suggest that you spend some time talking with your high school guidance counselor NOW. Don't wait until you are a senior and are about to graduate. High school guidance counselors usually are very well trained at helping people to identify career interests -- there are tests that you can take that show where your strengths and weaknesses are and how they fit into various career paths. Many jobs do not have any kind of physical limitations. And most jobs that offer health insurance offer it without any problems for type 1 diabetic people. There may be some other type of security job that you can pursue as a type 1 diabetic, and your energy needs to move towards researching other jobs that deal with security, since this seems to be the basic thing you are interested in. Check out FBI or CIA — they are government employees who work in security in other areas and I don't know what kinds of rules they have about health before being hired. Check out also the Secret Service. There may be openings, even if not in the actual combat areas, that may be just as interesting to you. Again, the way to do this is to contact their Human Resources departments. I think you can do this by Google searching the main organization and then contacting them.
You may be able to find security work in the computer arena or in some other more "office" type of job that is just as important and that is open to you. I do hope you find out some good information. Your guidance counselor may be willing to do some of this research for you, and starting now is a smart idea so you can start to make plans. I wish you the very best in both setting and in achieving your goals.
But other than that, thank you for responding (was just messing about the whole "I hate my life" thing :D.
Actually, secret service or FBI does sound very interesting to me, problem is, is that I can't consult my high school counselor for a bit, but oh well.
But in all seriousness, thank you, I really appreciate this information.
Peace,
Amo2007
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