The Fall is upon us, and then it's time to welcome sharp cool mornings, and fall festivities where pumpkin-spiced everything seems to be all the ramp.

As always, at that place's been no shortage of outstanding diabetes blog posts falling from the expression tree that is the Diabetes Online Community (DOC). Today, we're activated to ploughshare some that caught our eye during Sep, along with some posts recommended aside Department of Commerce peep readers. Thank you for that!

Please keep letting us have it away what you think more or less these and any other D-blogs making your reading list in the forthcoming month.

First, the month of September welcomed the important Jewish high holy years Jewish New Yea and Yom Kippur, and our D-blogging friend Reva Berman at TypeOnederful shares her experiences mark this important clock and navigating fasting — an important partially of Yom Kippur.

Blogging and organism online every the time in the DOC can exist exhausting, and our community welcomed the first Diabetes Friendly Media Burnout Day this past month. Thanks to Ginger Vieria at Diabetes Unit of time for coordinating this and rounding up all those World Health Organization shared their thoughts along getting frazzled.

Our DOC besides asterisked another #DayOfDiabetes on Sept. 22, when many of us share snapshots of what we are going through at the moment arsenic it relates to diabetes. Check out what our friend Karen Graffeo at Bitter-Sugary Diabetes shared, in her great post full of tweets and pictures.

This month brought us the period of time European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) get together, this year in Sweden. Annie finished at The Understudy Pancreas in England recaps the diabetes blogger summit meeting and how many important issues were discussed there.

Thanks to Australian type 1 Frank Sita for the angle on an excellent "Unmatched Year Anniversary" stake by Ally at Real Friable No Sugar. Frank had his own post on that unvarying bank note too, reflective along his experience thus far in the world of diabetes blogging. Thanks to some for being part of this community and share-out your D-lives with United States of America!

Ice caps, cancer, pilus loss… and the connection to diabetes curative research? D-Mom Moira McCarthy Stanford University connects those dots over at Despite Diabetes.

Mr. White avens Dunlap blogs all over at Your Diabetes May Vary. Ii of his four kids have type 1 and he lives with T2D himself, and Geum canadense is a vocal D-advocate World Health Organization sums up his view on "being supportive of good work" in the D-Community.

When news of Food and Drug Administration approvals and whiz-bang new D-tech makes headlines, it can be casual to criticize. Only over at Delightfully Sick, we're reminded to be grateful for all we have…

Finding new blogs is always fun for us, and we'Re thrilled to stumble upon Malina Loves that's scrawled by longtime type 1 diagnosed as a stripling two decades past. She just started in July, but already has some keen posts — including this fun "Diabetes Superpowers" piece with a clever spin on how we could use some extraordinary superpowers to pilot our diabetes better. Welcome to the DOC, Malina!

It's atomic number 102 clandestine that low blood sugars can be scary, but George "Ninjabetic" Simmons pens a Emily Price Post recently about his scariest moment yet in transaction with a severe hypo. Sorry to hear it, G, but glad IT turned knocked out Okey!

"Diabetes is a fickle bitch." Yep, I think many of the States in the D-Community can agree with that give voice, arsenic written by Kelly Kunik concluded at Diabetesaliciousness.

While we're talking about Kelly and Diabetesaliciousness, we too loved her recent interview with the mysterious "Diabetes Man Cave Dweller," who over the summer started a blog appropriately called The Diabetes Man Spelunk. This email Q&A between the deuce is worth the read, whether you're a hombre or gal.

The Invisibility of Type 1 Diabetes is the title of this Huffington Post piece by type 1 PWD and journalist Riva Greenberg, and it's sooo worth checking resolute hear what Riva says active sharing her story and educating the public through with her speech.

We know that with diabetes can be exposed to horrible discussion behind bars, and this post by Taylor over at Glu looks at a scary situation she faced as a college sophomore when she was precisely trying to be the responsible one, but ended up on the receiving end of bad police behavior.

Thanks to all for heavy works this month! Please do let us know if any exceptional D-blogs catch your eye in Oct! Just drop a comment to a lower place, or run into USA up via @DiabetesMine or Facebook, or email .