Then you have no idea what you are talking about. If they can't get insulin, they die. |
This. Please don’t misuse this phrase. My child was diagnosed with a fatal defect that was incompatible with life. He died. Quickly. |
Also, when they tell you your kid is going to die, they don’t say that. They say “your child’s condition is incompatible with life.” That is what it means. |
Me again. Sorry for the 3 posts, this really jolted me when I saw it. When something is deadly but not definitely, they talk in terms of “survival rate” (with treatment of course.). When something can be managed, they talk in terms of “reduced life expectancy.” Type 1 is in category 3. It is not incompatible with life because it is treatable medically. Incompatible with life basically is a way of saying “no chance” without saying it. If you press them, they will say things like “there are experimental treatments but your child doesn’t qualify” and things like that. Just so you know. |
| Travel being rescheduled to JFK with a transit in Spain (like what?!) then to original destination in US. United World of Earth |
Who is “they”.? There are thousands of colleges. The daughter is mentally stable. Kids write about overcoming adversity all the time and some of them are really stupid. I think the fact that she does so well despite having a father in jail is admirable. |
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The ideal place for something like Type 1 to be mentioned is in an independent teacher or counselor rec. Students with T1, particularly athletes, show incredible grit and determination managing their disease and colleges are looking for gritty kids.
Type 1 kids are also performing a public service each and every day, since their friends and classmates witness what management looks like. |
That is not what the term incompatible with life means and doctors do not use it in this context. What could be said might be: without your insulin, checking your blood sugar, etc., you could die. I don’t think a kid should mention something he has zero knowledge of (being sick or low income, let’s say) as several people mentioned unless it relates to something ongoing the kid may remember. |
That’s not a public service. |
I think this is good advice, OP. Sometimes I think competitive parents here give “advice” that is actually aimed at lowering other people’s chances. |
| Privileged was misspelled. |