A medical diagnosis is a snapshot of your body's current state under specific conditions, not a permanent identity or life sentence; it describes what's happening in your body right now but doesn't define your future, and by reframing your mindset from 'I am a diabetic' to 'my blood sugar is high right now and I'm working on it,' you can take control of your health outcomes through holistic lifestyle changes including diet, sleep, stress management, and movement.
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Deep Dive
The One Thing Your Doctor Didn't Tell You After Your DiagnosisAdded:
There's a moment that happens to a whole lot of people, and if you've ever been there, you don't forget it. You go to the doctor, they run some tests, they sit down across from you and say something like, "You have type 2 diabetes. Your cholesterol is elevated.
You've got insulin resistance." Or like me, your blood pressure is dangerously high. And just like that, it's like somebody took a branding iron out of the fire and stamped that label on you and it's there forever. You're a diabetic.
You're somebody with high blood pressure. You're a case. You're a number. You're a condition. And if you're not careful, that label doesn't stay on your medical charts, it moves into your head. And once it gets in your head, it starts trying to move into your identity. That's the real danger, because the diagnosis is supposed to describe what's going on, but a lot of people end up letting it define who they are. And those are two very different things. A diagnosis is real. It matters.
It can be serious, but it is not your name. It's not your future written in stone. It's a snapshot. It's not a prophecy. It's not a tattoo. It's not a life sentence. It's a snapshot. And if you can wrap your head around that one idea, you can completely change how the whole thing plays out. Stick around.
>> [music] >> Let's just be honest. Being diagnosed with something hits you right here. Even if you saw it coming. Even if your numbers have been creeping up. Even if part of you already knew. Hearing it out loud is different, cuz now it has a name. It feels a lot bigger. That's why your brain starts spinning up stories.
Well, this just runs in my family. I guess this is just how it is now. Well, I'm just getting older. I'll probably be on medications forever. I'm not going to be able to eat anything that I like anymore. My body is just broken. And just like that, the story is written before you even have a chance to question it. Now, you're not just dealing with blood sugar or blood pressure, you're dealing with fear, stress, frustration, and this little voice in the background saying, "This is it." And this is where this ties into something that most people completely underestimate. Health is not just physical. If it were, this would be easy. Health is physical, yes, but it's also mental. It's emotional. It's behavioral. And the mental side might just be the steering wheel. Cuz you can go a long time without food. People fast for days, sometimes weeks. But chronic stress, chronic bad sleep, chronic thoughts of, "I'm stuck like this."
That'll wreck you faster than a bad diet ever will. It's like termites in a house. You don't notice it all at once, but it's eating it away from the inside.
And here's the kicker, the stress is not just in your head. It shows up in your body. Cortisol goes up. Sleep goes down.
Cravings go up. Blood sugar gets harder to control. Blood pressure can rise. And now the label doesn't just scare you.
It's actually helping to create physiology that you're trying to fix.
That's the trap, and most people don't even realize they're in it. A diagnosis is supposed to describe a condition, but a lot of people accidentally turn it into an identity. And once that happens, everything changes. There's a big difference between, "I have high blood sugar right now." and, "I'm a diabetic."
See how much different those sound? One is a situation. The other is just a sentence. Same thing with blood pressure. "My numbers are high right now." versus, "I have high blood pressure." One leaves the door open, one locks it and throws away the key, and it becomes an identity. That's how sneaky this is. Once your brain accepts an identity, it starts defending it. If you believe you're broken, you start acting like somebody that's broken. If you believe nothing will work, you stop trying stuff that might work. If you believe it's permanent, you stop looking for a way out. It's like being stuck in a room where you think the door is locked, but if you just tried the handle, it would open right up, cuz it was never locked in the first place.
That's what I want people to wake up to.
A diagnosis can be serious without being permanent. It can be real without being your identity. Here's the shift. Here's where things start to change. A diagnosis is a snapshot. That's it. It's a picture of what's happening in your body at that moment, under those habits, under those levels of stress, under that sleep pattern, under that lifestyle.
That's what it is. It's just information. It's not a destiny. Think about a snapshot. It captures one frame at a particular moment in time. One second. One angle. One version of you.
Might not even be the good side. It doesn't show what happened before, and it sure doesn't show what's happening next. If somebody pulled one bad picture of me from years ago, it would tell a completely different story than if they look at my picture now. Same person, different inputs, different outcome.
That's how your body works. Your body is not a statue. It's more like a thermostat. It's constantly adjusting.
Or better yet, think of it like a bank account. You keep making the same deposits, you get the same balance.
Change deposits, the balance starts to change. Now listen, that doesn't mean everything will necessarily reverse overnight, cuz it doesn't. It also doesn't mean it's easy, and it also doesn't mean you ignore medical advice.
It simply means this, you don't let one moment in time define the rest of your life. Most people hear a diagnosis and immediately start asking, "How do I live with this?" And sometimes that's necessary, but a lot of times it's the wrong starting point, because that question assumes that this thing is permanent. A better question is, "Why is this happening? Let's get to the bottom of this." That's the question that opens doors. Not, "How do I manage this forever?" but, "Why is my body doing this in the first place?" That's where holistic health actually makes sense.
Not as what some call alternative medicine, but a complete picture. All the components that go together to make a whole. Food, sleep, stress, movement, body composition, habits, environment, mindset. See, if all you do is stare at a label, a diagnosis, you never investigate what created it. Let's take two big ones people hear all the time, then I'm going to wind this thing down.
Type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure.
When people hear type 2 diabetes, they immediately think, "My body is broken."
But in many cases, what you're seeing is a system that's overloaded. Too much incoming energy. Too much processed food. Too much stored energy for your system to handle well. Too much stress.
Not enough sleep. Not enough movement.
That's not broken, that's a response.
Same thing with high blood pressure.
People hear that and think, "Well, I guess this is just who I am now. What kind of medication are they going to give me?" But blood pressure is influenced by a lot of things. Body fat, insulin resistance, sleep quality, stress levels, diet, electrolytes, movement. Again, not random, which means there are levers. And if there are levers, there's influence. That's where hope comes from. It's not hype. It's not fantasy. It's just cause and effect.
You've got to get to the cause. Now, let me say this clearly, mindset is not everything, but it is the one thing that determines whether anything else happens, cuz your mindset decides what you do next. If your brain says, "Why bother?" you don't change your food. If your brain says, "This is hopeless."
then you don't go for a walk after dinner. If your brain says, "This is just genetics." you don't fix your sleep. Your mindset is the steering wheel. You can have gas in the tank, but if you're pointed at the ditch, that's exactly where you're going. For a lot of people, the diagnosis turns the wheel.
They don't stop living, but they quietly stop fighting. That's where things start to slide. So, what do you actually do?
First, separate yourself from the label.
Stop saying things that glue that to who you are. Instead of saying, "I'm diabetic." say, "My blood sugar is high right now, and I'm working on it." That one shift keeps the door open. Second, treat the diagnosis like a clue, not a conclusion. Your body isn't attacking you, it's communicating. It's saying, "Hey, something's off. Pay attention."
Third, focus on the basics. Not trends.
Not magic powders. Not hacks.
Basics. Real food. Less processed junk.
Better sleep. Daily movement. Lower stress. Getting some sunlight.
Consistency. This stuff is not exciting, but it's effective. Fourth, work with your doctor without turning over your identity to them. They can help you understand what's going on, but they do not get to tell you who you are. So, that moment that felt like the end may actually be the start. The start of paying attention. The start of asking better questions. The start of finally fixing what's been building up for years. Don't let the diagnosis be the funeral. Let the diagnosis be the fire alarm. And yeah, it's loud. Yeah, it's uncomfortable, but it's there to wake you up. So, don't let a diagnosis define you. Let it inform you. Let it wake you up. Let it point you in a better direction. But don't wear it like a name tag. You are not your A1C. You are not your blood pressure. You are not your blood sugar. You're not your lab results. You're a system that can change. Maybe not overnight. Maybe not perfectly, but change is on the table.
And sometimes your whole comeback starts when you finally stop saying, "This is who I am." and start saying, "This is what I'm dealing with right now." That's a completely different story. And guess what? You get to write the ending.
Y'all, I hope this video helps. I felt really compelled to do this one, so if you're not subscribed to my channel, you like things like this, please subscribe on the way out. Give me a like on this video, and consider sharing it with somebody that you know that may be going through this exact thing. Stay healthy.
Don't let your diagnosis determine your destiny, and I'll see you on the next video.
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