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Diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at the age of 11, Jessye Ane learned early on that the consequences of the disease can be serious. In addition to dietary restrictions and insulin addiction, she faced depression and then anorexia. For five years, she was not able to discover one of the city's favorite places: the Lake Indigenous Nations Park
. Today, with a slight smile. With the face and serene expression of her face, Jessie does not realize that at age 23, she carries remarkable experiences that could have turned her life into a tragedy.
Jessye recounts that she discovered the disease when her grandmother found constant fatigue, a lack of appetite and unusual weight loss for her age, and decided to take it. in a pharmacy for a blood glucose test, which indicated diabetes. She claims that despite her early diagnosis, misinformation was by far a shadow around her.
For her, it was a time of many prohibitions, in which the idea chronic relationship meant never having a normal life again. Sugar was completely removed from the diet and insulin addiction became a source of bullying at school .
"My colleagues treated me as diabetic as" it was a curse, "he says. The result was depression and short time after anorexia, Fibromyalgia – a disease that causes long pains in the body – kidney and intestines problems. Graphic design, Jessye says she has not acted in the area since long shortly after taking the course in 2012 as a result of a cataract she lost sight. years without being able to see until the operation that brought back the sharpness of contours and essential colors in the profession and also to make the joy of living, which today has become the will of & # 39; To help others in the same conditions.
Returning to the Nations' Park, Jessye presents the "Picnic of the Good", an afternoon devoted to discussions about diabetes and interviews with nutritionists and volunteer doctors, near the lake that was already the theater of tears and is today the stage of the awareness campaign. featured by her. "I came here with my family and I could not see the lake, I looked at the water and I saw only a brown spot, no movement, no life. and I cried
Twice a year, last Sunday (2) was even more special, and in addition to celebrating the first anniversary of the project, Jessye returned to see him a year ago. [19659002] At the free picnic, nutritionists have come up with a special menu with fruits, breads and cakes to show that it is possible to eat with quality without losing the pleasure of the meal .. taste of food. yoga, zumba and conversations with psychologists and endocrinologists were also part of the program.
"Today is the realization of a dream, so it helps others that I feel useful and risen. I decided to give people the information I did not have so that they did not have to go through what I experienced. Having a normal life, even with a chronic illness, is possible, yes, we are different from anyone. Everything is a question of balance.
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