Episode 25: Growing Up With Type 1 Diabetes
In this deeply personal episode, host Matt Butterman sits down once again with Dr. Gretchen Hoyle to share his own story of growing up with Type 1 Diabetes — from the challenges of early diagnosis to the empowering lessons of sport, community, and self-management.
M. Butterman
10/16/20252 min read


🎧 Episode 25: Growing Up with Type 1 Diabetes
Guest: Dr. Gretchen Hoyle, Pediatrician
Host: Matt Butterman
Duration: ~35 minutes
Episode Overview
In this heartfelt and deeply personal episode, host Matt Butterman and pediatrician Dr. Gretchen Hoyle explore the realities of growing up with Type 1 diabetes — from teenage independence and risk-taking to resilience, technology, and hope for the future.
The conversation begins with a powerful moment: Matt shares his experience receiving a 50-year medal for living with Type 1 diabetes at the American Academy of Pediatrics Conference. That milestone sparks a rich dialogue about what it means to thrive — not just survive — with a chronic condition through adolescence and into adulthood.
Together, Matt and Dr. Hoyle offer insight, humor, and perspective for families navigating the challenges of Type 1 diabetes in teens, including the emotional toll and the breakthroughs that make long, healthy lives possible.
Key Themes & Takeaways
🩸 The Adolescent Transition
Teenagers with Type 1 diabetes face unique challenges balancing independence, identity, and daily medical management.
What may look like “rebellion” is often exhaustion from the relentless self-monitoring and decision-making diabetes demands.
Dr. Hoyle notes that while technology like CGMs and insulin pumps have transformed care, adolescence still brings an intense desire to be “normal.”
⚖️ Risk, Resilience, and Responsibility
Puberty brings insulin resistance, peer pressure, and risk-taking — and diabetes complicates it all.
Some teens push boundaries with alcohol, late nights, or skipped checks, while parents struggle between micromanaging and letting go.
Dr. Hoyle advises parents to move from “manager” to “coach,” staying nearby as a steady, non-controlling presence — “on the banks of the river, not steering the boat.”
🏃♂️ Finding Balance Through Activity
Matt shares how cycling became his outlet — helping regulate blood sugar, build discipline, and create community.
Sports and physical activity can be empowering for teens with diabetes, improving both glucose stability and mental health.
Having role models — like other athletes with Type 1 — helps normalize the condition and inspire perseverance.
💬 The Emotional Side: Burnout, Anxiety, and Community
Living with diabetes can take a heavy mental toll. Burnout, frustration, and depression are common, especially for teens.
Dr. Hoyle emphasizes screening for emotional well-being and helping kids find supportive communities — online or in person — where they can connect with others who “get it.”
Type 1 can accelerate emotional maturity: many teens with chronic conditions become empathetic, resilient, and socially attuned beyond their years.
🌄 Hope and Longevity
Matt reflects on how far diabetes care has come — from manual injections and paper logs to automated closed-loop systems.
Receiving the 50-year medal is a testament that teens diagnosed today can live long, thriving, limitless lives.
As Matt says, “A diagnosis of Type 1 doesn’t define your child’s life — there really are no limits.”
Quotable Moments
“It’s proof that you can live, thrive — not just survive — with Type 1 diabetes.” — Matt Butterman
“Parents need to be the banks of the river, not the ones steering the current.” — Dr. Gretchen Hoyle
Resources Mentioned
Children with Diabetes – support, education, and community resources
JDRF – advocacy and research for Type 1 diabetes
Team Novo Nordisk – professional athletes living with diabetes
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