water, water everywhere
Water covers over 71% of the Earth's surface and coincidently that's about the percentage of the human body that is comprised of water as well.
Water also is a very good solvent, exists in all 3 states on the surface of the planet, is very polar with a 104.45 degree angle between its hydrogens, and has almost the highest specific heat capacity of any known chemical. Amazing stuff, huh? Add that to the weird freezing point anomaly and you have the reason life exists on this planet. Neat, huh?
Anyway, the reason I'm mentioning this is to acknowledge that water is great stuff. However some folk think a little too highly of it. The whole "the average person needs to drink eight glasses of water per day to avoid being dehydrated" idea is a real crock of poo-poo. So is avoiding soda due to it being a diuretic or foolish stats like 75% of Americans are chronically dehydrated. Folks, it's just not true!
The average person retains about half to two-thirds the amount of fluid taken in by consuming soda or coffee in the form of water. If you're used to the effects of caffeine, then you do even better than that. So it's weird how many people believe that you lose water by drinking soda--a liquid that is nearly 100% water--but it's a rare week when I'm not advised that drinking soda will dehydrate me.
As for how much water you need, the NIH suggests that with minimal activity the average person needs 1 liter of water a day though I've also seen a government recommendation of a minimum of 2.7 liters a day so there's a lot of variation amongst experts. The one liter mark is about how much you get each day just in the food you eat. Having a few glasses of water or soda will replace what you use in average activity. 8 glasses? Hell, that'll just wash away a bunch of your water soluble vitamins--and is that really going to do you any good?
I recently had to drink 4 liters of fluid in about 6 hours for a medical exam. It was Hell! There's about 4 cups in a liter so that was about 32 cups of water. A cup every 12 minutes. By the time I was done, I was growing gills! LOL Anyway, if you feel thirsty then drink something--just make sure it's nonalcoholic--and you'll do just fine. If you drink alcohol, then a few extra glasses of water might be a good idea.
Water also is a very good solvent, exists in all 3 states on the surface of the planet, is very polar with a 104.45 degree angle between its hydrogens, and has almost the highest specific heat capacity of any known chemical. Amazing stuff, huh? Add that to the weird freezing point anomaly and you have the reason life exists on this planet. Neat, huh?
Anyway, the reason I'm mentioning this is to acknowledge that water is great stuff. However some folk think a little too highly of it. The whole "the average person needs to drink eight glasses of water per day to avoid being dehydrated" idea is a real crock of poo-poo. So is avoiding soda due to it being a diuretic or foolish stats like 75% of Americans are chronically dehydrated. Folks, it's just not true!
The average person retains about half to two-thirds the amount of fluid taken in by consuming soda or coffee in the form of water. If you're used to the effects of caffeine, then you do even better than that. So it's weird how many people believe that you lose water by drinking soda--a liquid that is nearly 100% water--but it's a rare week when I'm not advised that drinking soda will dehydrate me.
As for how much water you need, the NIH suggests that with minimal activity the average person needs 1 liter of water a day though I've also seen a government recommendation of a minimum of 2.7 liters a day so there's a lot of variation amongst experts. The one liter mark is about how much you get each day just in the food you eat. Having a few glasses of water or soda will replace what you use in average activity. 8 glasses? Hell, that'll just wash away a bunch of your water soluble vitamins--and is that really going to do you any good?
I recently had to drink 4 liters of fluid in about 6 hours for a medical exam. It was Hell! There's about 4 cups in a liter so that was about 32 cups of water. A cup every 12 minutes. By the time I was done, I was growing gills! LOL Anyway, if you feel thirsty then drink something--just make sure it's nonalcoholic--and you'll do just fine. If you drink alcohol, then a few extra glasses of water might be a good idea.
Comments
It sounds suspiciously like lose weight by eating celery because it burns more calories than you get. That's another one that has a life of its own.
Lois Lane