Honestly, needles scared me. When the doc said I needed diabetes shots, my hands got sweaty just thinking about it. So I went digging online and found people talking about self-testing questionnaires. Sounded weird but decided to try it.

How I Started
Grabbed a notebook and pen one morning. Wrote “Why Shots Freak Me Out” at the top. Felt silly at first, but poured coffee and started scribbling answers to these questions:
- When the needle touches my skin, I imagine _______
- The worst part about injections is _______
- If I didn’t have to do shots, I’d feel _______
- My biggest fear about messing up is _______
Filled two whole pages without stopping. Discovered my real panic wasn’t even the pain – it was imagining snapping the needle inside me. Crazy, right? But seeing it written made it less like a monster under my bed.
The Testing Phase
Next Thursday before my scheduled shot, I did the questionnaire again with new questions:
- How shaky are my hands today? (Drew a scale 1-10)
- Three deep breaths before picking up the pen: yes/no
- Where in my body do I feel tension?
Did this checklist for a whole week. Noticed my hands shook less when I answered right after breakfast. Also spotted a pattern – my shoulders turned to concrete every damn time.
What Changed
Started doing shoulder rolls during the questionnaire ritual. When shot time came, I’d hum a dumb commercial jingle while reading my own answers. Slowly stopped white-knuckling the insulin pen.
Now I keep that wrinkly notebook with my supplies. Still do the questionnaire every month or when that old dread creeps back. It’s like having a conversation with my scaredy-cat self. Doesn’t make shots fun, but turns panic into just… another thing.








