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Bike racing and training with Type 1 Diabetes

Author Justin Morris at the 2011 Croc Trophy. Pic: Regina Stanger

Cycling was not always my passion or my career in life, as a matter of fact at the age of 10 all I could dream about was one day being a pilot! I used to watch fighter pilot movies, play pilot video games and my bedroom wall was platered with posters of jet fighter planes! At this age in December, 1996 however my life took a path that would forever change every waking moment for myself. I think we all encounter some form of turning point moment at some point in life and looking back on them highlights how pertinent the present moment is in life. Carpe Diem so to speak.

On 7 December, 1996 I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D), I spent over a week in Westmead childrens hospital in Western Sydney learning about this disease and how it would from this moment on change my life. My survival beyond 10 years of age now depended upon multiple daily injections, blood tests, counting of carbohydrates in diet and close monitoring of any physical exercise. T1D is an autoimmune condition that renders your pancreas all but useless. The pancreas produces a hormone called insulin that helps to break down the carbohydrate in the food we eat and subsequently regulate the amount of sugar in our blood. Without this insulin our blood sugar level is in a constant upward trajectory that is without the injection of the hormone a death sentence. Lucky for me insulin has now been around as an injectable medicine since 1921.

Racing in remote places is also a challenge for every rider. A T1D rider has a few extra things to think about.

After learning about the treatments, needles, finger jabbers that would now be a part of my life I would also learn what a life pathway looked like for someone with my condition in Australia. My Mum would ask the doctor “Is there anything people with T1D cannot do in life?” The doctor responded “The only things people with T1D are not allowed to be is pilots, train drivers, military service personnel… etc”. The first answer was enough to throw me! My dream had been crushed, crushed by an organ that had malfunctioned.

Alas, the dreams of flying like Tom Cruise in Top Gun had to at best be put on hold. What I did have however was a mountain bike, this was my form of school transport when I had a gutful of the older kids teasing me on the school bus. Likely every rider has had the experience of getting that smile beam across the face when nailing singletrack or swooping down a descent. Lucky for me this was all part of my high school commute. Thanks to this, my dream had evolved from involving an aeroplane to just involving the bicycle.

Justin Morris raced on the road professionally.

It was 10 years of training, racing, crashing & breaking bones until I signed my first pro contract as a road cyclist for 2010 in the USA and was 19 years until I achieved my other dream of representing my country.

Such a journey would be an absolute roller coaster for any athlete and the stories that have evolved from this I will cherish forever.

How I manage Type 1 Diabetes and cycling

As an athlete with T1D there is a minefield of calculations, judgements, sensations, predictions and fears in the head on the start line and for every second of competition following. The following is a brief insight to these.

Photo: Dave Acree
Finishing the Tour of Denmark in Copenhagen. Photo: S. Schwenke

Every athlete and person for that matter often has an incredibly interesting and challenging story about how they have gotten to where they are. I hope this helps highlight just some of the challenges a T1D athlete has on the start line of any athletic event. If you are reading this and have T1D, I hope it helps reinforce how high performance in anything really is possible with T1D, just a few extra challenges along the way. Find a role model to remind you it is possible, there are many, many athletes with T1D nowadays!

Training in extreme climates can have an effect on BSL management.

As a side note, a few years ago I met a British bloke named Douglas who had lived with T1D for 35 years and he had been a jet fighter pilot in the Royal Air Force for over 20 years. So, really anything really is possible nowadays. We are very lucky in countries like Australia to have access to the tools we need to make dreams such as ‘pro athlete’ possible.

Photo: Sofia Tsamassiros

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