T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
65.1 | Water means just that - water | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | | Tue Jun 23 1987 11:38 | 13 |
| Had to reply to this one, as it just came up at the Weight Watchers
meeting I attended last week.
Our leader clearly stated that the recommended eight 8 oz. glasses of
water should be just that -- water, not diet soda, coffee, or whatever.
Just about all diet sodas contain some sodium, which retains water.
Coffee tends to dehydrate the body, rather than maintaining fluid
balance. These other things are fine if you drink them in addition to
the required amount of water, but are definitely not a substitute for
water.
Paul
|
65.2 | 1/2 & 1/2? | SRFSUP::GOLDSMITH | Fritz! They've killed Fritz! | Tue Jun 23 1987 11:38 | 10 |
|
My doctor says liquid is liquid. If you take in your daily two quarts
as water or diet pepsi it is still the same. However, in that same
breath he says that at least half of that intake should be real
water.
Confusing!
--- Neal
|
65.3 | | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Jun 23 1987 11:55 | 6 |
| The new diet sodas with nutrasweet are much lower in sodium than
the saccharine ones were. My diet cherry 7up says 35 mg per serving
and there's 2 servings per can.
--Louise
|
65.4 | Soft drink with NO sodium | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | | Tue Jun 23 1987 15:04 | 7 |
| Also, there is a soft drink out called "Diet Rite Cola" that contains
NO sodium and NO caffein. It's available in Massachusetts and southern
New Hampshire; not sure about other parts of the country. (DeMoulas
usually has it for 88 cents for a 2-liter bottle.)
Paul
|
65.5 | | CSC32::VICKREY | IF(i_think) THEN(i_am) ELSE(stop) | Mon Jun 29 1987 15:38 | 8 |
| According to the can in my hand, Diet Rite Cola is salt free, sodium
free, caffeine free, sugar free, and saccharin free. (It also says
100% NutraSweet, but there is liquid and bubbles in there too.) I
believe it is from the RC people - it's always the same price as the
other RC products.
Susan
|
65.6 | The importance of water. | CSCMA::YETMAN | For all you do, Disk bug's for you | Sun Jul 12 1987 11:22 | 204 |
| The following is an article from the July 1985 issue of Muscle and
fitness. It is reproduced here (compliments of my fingers)
without permission from the magazine. It deals with WATER
retention which seems to be a big topic for all of us.
The magazine is dedicated to body building but it contains many
useful articles that deal with health issues that face all of us.
If you enjoy reading this let me know and I will try and add other
articles that I have enjoyed over the years.
Fighting Water Retention
By Howard E. Flaks, MD
I'm going to make two statements you may find very surprising,
even shocking. Then I'll explain why they're true - and why
they're very important to you in controlling your weight.
1) Most people in the world go through life in a somewhat
dehydrated condition.
2) Whether you're a bodybuilder seeking to cut up before a
contest, or a non bodybuilder who wants to combat water
retention, the best way to do it is to drink more water.
Have I got your attention? I thought so. The two sentences
you've just read probably seem astonishing, even self
contradictory. But they're based on years of sound medical and
biochemical research. I can vouch for the truth of both of them
because much of the pioneering research was conducted by my
father, Dr. Jack Flaks, who's been treating problems of obesity
for over 30 years at his clinic in Johannesburg in the republic of
South Africa.
In my last column in the April Muscle & Fitness I discussed water
as the "magic elixir" of life, and told you without taking in a
sufficient quantity of it, you would never achieve control over
your weight. That sufficient quantity is 96 ounces per day, or 12
eight ounce glasses, plus eight more ounces for every 25 pounds
you are overweight. These 96 ounces are the bottom-line basic
requirement for healthy living. But, unfortunately, most people
don't drink as much water as they need.
I recently told this to a patient in my Beverly Hills office, only
to hear him protest, "But that can't be my problem, doctor, I take
in plenty of water - probably too much, in fact. I start out in
the morning with orange juice and four or five cups of coffee, I
have another cup of coffee at work, I drink a glass of wine at
lunch, usually another cup of coffee or perhaps a soft drink in
the afternoon. Then I go home, have a cocktail before dinner and
a couple of cups of coffee after dinner. That must work out to
more that 96 ounces!"
I asked him how often he drank water, plain, unadulterated water
from the tap, the water cooler or bottle. "Oh, I don't know," he
answered. "I'll probably hit the water cooler once or twice
during the day when I pass by it. But I'm drinking all the time
aside from that. Seems like I'm always thirsty."
This overweight patients problem, aside from the wine and the
cocktail (nothing puts weight on you faster than alcohol) and his
caffeine intake (which doesn't make you fat but isn't good for you
for many other reasons), was that he was drinking everything but
water. And, yes, he was drinking all the time because he was
thirsty. His body was deprived of the water it needed to keep him
healthy, and replaced it by retaining almost every drop of the
niggling amount he allowed it. As a result, he was puffy and
overweight.
Wine, gin, coffee, tea, fruit juice and soft drinks are all
fluids. That is they consists of mostly water, with various
substances suspended in solution. And they don't have the same
chemical properties as ordinary water. It's water you need to
drink in quantity. Alcohol and soda pop contain too much sugar.
So, to a lesser extent, does fruit juice, which may also be full
of chemicals that promote fat-storage. The caffeine in coffee and
tea is bad for your heart and blood pressure. Even diet soda
doesn't do much for you, and contains sodium, which contributes to
water retention. Coffee, tea and diet soft drinks don't make you
fat, but they don't count toward your daily water requirement,
either. Drink coffee and tea if you must (cut down if you can),
drink sugarless soft drinks if you like them, but first and
foremost, drink at least 96 ounces of water a day.
It may sound like allot, but it's easy to do. An eight ounce
glass isn't very large. Keep it on your desk at work and keep
refilling it. Keep a glass of water on your night stand at night,
and drink water when you first get up. Check off each glass of
water on a "water diary" to show how much you've drunk each day.
It will only be a short time until you don't have to record your
drinks anymore. Because, I promise you, as your body adjusts to
the proper water intake, you'll find yourself getting thirstier
but only for water. You'll find yourself filling you glass
without having to remind yourself to do so. Once you've achieved
water balance, your body will tell you when and how much you need
to drink. You'll probably even wake up in the morning with a dry
feeling in your mouth. There's nothing abnormal or unhealthy
about this dry feeling (as long as you haven't caused it by
drinking too much beer the night before!), and the remedy for it
is quick and inexpensive: drink a glass of water!
Now, how can drinking lots of water work against your tendency to
retain fluids? It's logical. When you don't take in enough
water, your bogy retains the amount you do take in, just as a
camel stores water in his hump to enable him to survive long
journeys across the desert. The bad news is, this old, stored
water becomes contaminated by waste chemicals from your body.
Your kidneys can't process this contaminated water the way they
would process clean, fresh water, so your liver has to detoxify it
by breaking down the contaminants. That means your liver can't
perform it's main task, which is to break down fat. Thus, as you
store water, the fat you eat is stored in your fat cells instead
of being broken down into its chemical components by your liver.
You become bloated, water logged and obese.
The good news is that you don't die from dehydration. Your body
keeps you alive - at the cost of mucking up your normal fat
metabolism.
Trying to solve the problem of fluid retention by drinking less
water, the way many bodybuilders do, only aggravates matters.
Fluid retention occurs even when you drink no water. In addition,
the less water you drink, the less your body will be able to flush
out sodium, which, as we all know is one of the major causes of
fluid retention.
Sodium is a metal and like all metals, is poisonous to the human
body when it becomes too concentrated. When your body's sodium
level rises - for example you eat something salty - you become
thirsty. Your body releases antidiuretic hormone (ADH), which
makes you retain water in order to dilute the sodium you've just
ingested.
If you don't drink more water after eating salty food, your body
pulls water from your intestines to dilute the extra sodium. If
you do drink more water, you force more water through your kidneys
- more than they can reabsorb into your body. You don't want that
sodium-contaminated water reabsorbed, of course. What you want is
for the excess to enter your urine, where you can flush it out.
That's how water helps rid your body of harmful sodium.
Without an adequate intake of water, this system can't operate
properly. And don't worry about drinking too much water. It's
impossible. Any excess will be urinated and/or sweated out.
Nobody ever drowned from the inside out.
What about diuretics? They're another solution to the fluid
retention problem favored by many body builders. But unless you
drink more water while you're taking them, there no good.
Diuretics force stored water out of your body. The problem with
their use is that, as you may now suspect, your body responds to
this process by "perceiving" a lack of necessary water and by
storing up what's available. So unless your drinking enough
water, diuretics won't solve your retention problem. The answer
isn't to take more or stronger diuretics either. Your system can
become addicted to them, and you may find yourself unable to
function properly without them.
Diuretics can also cause constipation. When your not drinking
enough water, your body will drain water from your colon, your
stool can become hard and dry, and constipation can result. It
often happens that constipated people begin having normal bowel
movements again once they start drinking enough water.
By now you should understand that the traditional solution to
water retention, drinking less water, is no solution at all. The
less you drink, the more you need, and the harder your body works
to retain what little it has. Only with an adequate supply of
clean, fresh, life giving water can your body's systems function
in a way that keeps you healthy, lean, and strong.
Editors note:
Howard E. Flaks, MD, is a Beverly Hills physician with extensive
training in psychology. His specialty is bariatic medicine - that
is the treatment of obesity.
Personal note:
I started taking the advise is this article and it managed to help
me drop more than 20 lbs! I am not claiming that the whole 20 was
water (I bet at least 1/2 of it was), but the other benefits of
helping out your liver, etc... have helped me manage my weight
with a lot less effort.
Good luck with all your weight loss efforts,
Regards,
Chris.
|
65.7 | bothered by the reasoning | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Sun Jul 12 1987 21:16 | 32 |
| The recommendation of note 65.6 seems sensible, but I found the
explanation of the internal process a bit suspect. The portion
that troubled me is extracted below:
<< start of extraction >>
The bad news is, this old, stored
water becomes contaminated by waste chemicals from your body.
Your kidneys can't process this contaminated water the way they
would process clean, fresh water, so your liver has to detoxify it
by breaking down the contaminants. That means your liver can't
perform it's main task, which is to break down fat. Thus, as you
store water, the fat you eat is stored in your fat cells instead
of being broken down into its chemical components by your liver.
You become bloated, water logged and obese.
.
.
.
If
you do drink more water, you force more water through your kidneys
- more than they can reabsorb into your body. You don't want that
sodium-contaminated water reabsorbed, of course.
<< end of extraction >>
>> I will try and add other articles that I have enjoyed
Please do so.
|
65.8 | ounce vs deciliter | SHIRE::BIZE | | Mon Jul 13 1987 01:26 | 9 |
| What is the equivalent in liters/deciliters of the amounts of water
mentioned in the article, i.e. what's an ounce of water to an European
(non-English, obviously!)
Thanks for you help.
Joana
|
65.9 | conversion from ounces to ml or grams | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Mon Jul 13 1987 05:12 | 10 |
| From the 1952 Handbook of Chemistry & Physics pg 2592:
Ounce [US fluid] = 29.57 ml.
Ounce [UK fluid] = 28.41 ml.
Ounce [avoirdupois] = 28.35 ml.
I'd use a conversion factor of 30.
|
65.10 | water, water, water | MILVAX::SULLIVAN | | Mon Jul 20 1987 12:35 | 13 |
| It took me 24 years to take the advise of our family Dr." drink at
least 8 glasses of water a day." I am overweight, had!!!! high blood
pressure and belong to w.w. When I am lazy and do not drink my
water (12 to 15 8oz glasses a day) I lose about 1 to 1.5 for the
week, if I drink my water daily my loss is from 2.5 to 5.5 for the
week. My blood pressure remains down, any salt I do use is quickly
flushed out of my system (and I do mean quickly) by drinking the
water. I have found that if I do slide back on the diet and increase
my water for the rest of the week, I still lose. I started with
8 glasses a day, the more water I drank the more thirsty I became.
I never thought I would be able to drink the quantities of water
a day that I do, but I do, and I enjoy it.
|
65.11 | Water balance. | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Jul 21 1987 09:27 | 7 |
| I've heard that you *CAN* drink too much water - some story about
a guy who was drinking gallons per day and couldn't lower the
amount because his body had become used to it. Anyone heard
the same story? Apparently he got pretty sick from it.
--Louise
|
65.12 | Putting Overconsumption in Perspective | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Tue Jul 21 1987 12:35 | 10 |
| Re: .11
Well, the 8 recommended glasses a day is only around 2 quarts--hardly
multiple gallons! My husband has drunk around a gallon a day in
the summer when he's working in the yard and sweating like a horse.
In that situation he needs it. I don't think any of us are in the
multi-gallon club yet, are we?
Marcia
|
65.13 | EXTREME? | MILVAX::SULLIVAN | | Tue Jul 21 1987 12:50 | 9 |
| RE: .11
I am drinking about one gallon a day, according to weight loss,
my drop in blood pressure and my doctor, I am doing all the right
things. My dr. claims the water will never hurt me but, it will
aid in keeping my system clean from salts and aid in the weight
loss. I do seem to take things to the extreme but I think a lot
of over-weight people do.
|
65.14 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Thu Jul 23 1987 05:55 | 8 |
| I have heard that a number of experts consider herbal teas to be
in the same category as bottled and tap water, unlike soda, coffee
and regular tea.
I don't remember the source, though.
Holly
|
65.15 | AGREE | MILVAX::SULLIVAN | | Thu Jul 23 1987 12:28 | 4 |
| According to my weight watchers leader herbal tea is in the same
category as water.
Eileen
|
65.16 | no caffeine | REGAL::ACKERMAN | | Thu Jul 23 1987 12:29 | 3 |
| Maybe herbal tea is the same as water because it doesn't contain
caffeine like regular tea and coffee does.
|
65.17 | substitutions!! | AKOV05::GALVIN | ALPHA.......works for me | Fri Jul 24 1987 07:34 | 9 |
|
My W.W. lecturer told us that herbal tea and home made lemonade
(without sugar) can be used instead of water.
Fran
|
65.18 | | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Fri Jul 24 1987 09:56 | 12 |
| ...and home made no sugar lemonade has nutrasweet in it, very
likely, which gets us back to the no-caffeine diet sodas.
I've heard you can get all the water you need from fruits
and vegetables.
Does anyone have any more info on the TOO MUCH WATER problem,
aside from the folks who maintain that they aren't even
close to that level of consumption and could not have problems?
--Louise
|
65.19 | Water to lose weight (moved from 96.0) | AIMHI::KRISTY | This brain intentionally left blank. | Mon Aug 10 1987 09:24 | 12 |
| JAWS::LRP 8 lines 10-AUG-1987 07:31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WATER
WATER IS THE GREATEST WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT I STARTED TO DRINK 9 12
OZ GLASS A DAY 2 WEEKS AGO AND LOST 10 POUNDS. THIS WAS SUPPOSE
TO BE THE HARDEST WEIGHT TO LOSE. BECAUSE I WAS 120 LBS, 5'3",
I'M NOW A COMPACT 110 LBS. DRINK 8 GLASS OF WATER A DAY AND 1 GLASS
FOR EACH 25 LBS YOU ARE OVERWEIGHT. BELIEVE ME IT WORKS!!!!
|
65.20 | Too much, too fast, too bad! | USRCV1::CARNELLP | I gotta get another hat | Thu Sep 10 1987 06:43 | 15 |
| Re .18
A recent radio news report told of a man who died from water
toxification, in other words he poisoned himself with water! The story
goes that he drank something like 7 liters in less than an hour in
order to "Drive out the demons". The water built up in his blood
stream and caused his brain to swell. He died from a cerebral
hemorrhage.
The lesson here is to drink your 8-10 glasses a day, but do it
SLOWLY. According to the report it was the speed with which he
drank the water that killed him, not the quantity.
Paul.
|
65.21 | Some much your teeth float? | SRFSUP::GOLDSMITH | Any major dude would tell ya... | Thu Sep 10 1987 11:39 | 8 |
|
He must have had bad kidneys. The human body will not drown itself
unless both kidneys are either shut down or nearing failure. If
a person has bad kidneys and drinks alot of water, then they may
give out and Puff! instant drowning.
--- Neal
|
65.22 | Film at 11? | USRCV1::CARNELLP | I gotta get another hat | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:57 | 8 |
| The report said he died within one hour, which seems too short
a time for kidney failure. It also seems too short a time for the
kidneys to have done much anyway! Does anyone know any more about
this? I only heard the one report on NPR, it was not in the local
paper that day and I didn't see anything about it on the tube.
Paul.
|
65.23 | call the station. | SQM::AITEL | NO ZUKES!!!! | Fri Sep 11 1987 22:02 | 6 |
| If you heard it on NPR, sometimes your local public radio station
can help you track it down. They may need to know the date and
time of the report, as well as the subject.
--Louise
|
65.24 | more water info | TOOK::GEISER | | Thu Oct 08 1987 11:18 | 250 |
65.25 | | TOOK::GEISER | | Thu Oct 08 1987 11:31 | 34 |
|
The previous article is something that I found in "The Mother Earth
News" a year or so ago. I was so impressed that I cut it out and
saved it. I thought it was good enough that I spent the time to type
it in and share it with you.
I've been a water drinker for about a year now. Probably 80% of my
liquid intake is water, and I really can see the difference. If I don't
have 3 cups of water before my 11:30 aerobics class, I drag through.
If I have the water, I've got much more energy.
Like I said, the article came from "The Mother Earth News". This is
not a magazine about diet or nutrition. Just about more natural
living styles. The article is long, but I hope you enjoy it. Let me
know what you think.
One more thing about water...
I drink a lot of it. I drink it with my meals. I drink it when I
go out. I drink it when I'm in a resturant. Why is it that when
I say I'll just have water, people look at me like I'm strange?
I had to convince a friend the other day that I really wanted
water with my dinner, and that the reason wasn't that I didn't like
the other choices. I just wanted WATER! ("Are you SURE you don't
want a coke or something?") And how about going into some fast food
place. Can I ask for water there? Has anybody tried this?
So much for ranting...
Maryann
|
65.26 | why hidden? | CIPHER::VERGE | | Thu Oct 08 1987 12:46 | 13 |
| Unfortunately, at this piont in time, .24 is set hidden. Any
ideas why? I read it before it was hidden, and was going to print
it out for my own reference use. I am on a weightloss program that
advocates 8 glasses of water a day, and this helps explain why.
I have drinking the eight glasses (or more) for about three weeks,
and already I crave the water if I don't drink it. I also drink
water with meals, etc, and people I know have gotten used to it.
Please "unhide" .24.
Thanks for sharing the article with us. I appreciated it.
Val
|
65.27 | Sorry | SRFSUP::GOLDSMITH | Los Angeles shakes me up... | Thu Oct 08 1987 14:07 | 9 |
|
Note 65.24 was an unauthorized reproduction of a copywritten article,
it had been set hidden to avoid having Digital held liable for a
copyright infringement suit.
Sorry... :-(
--- Neal
|
65.28 | article summary | TOOK::GEISER | | Fri Oct 09 1987 09:25 | 91 |
|
Ok, so I'm not allowed to post the entire article. So, I'll
summarize...(Can't tell that I'm a water fanatic, huh?)
The article is not about weight loss or diet. It is about proper
body hydration and how too little water affects your body. Most people
don't even realize that they're not getting enough water because they never
seem thirsty. But, thirst is not the best indication of proper hydration.
Other more accurate signs include dark yellow urine, constipation and dry
mouth.
But, the part of the article that I found moust interesting was that
water plays a big part in how much energy a body can exert. So, if you're
exercising, it's even more important to drink enough water to compensate
for that lost through perspiration. Let me quote part of the article, because
I don't think I can do this part justice.
"... a Harvard psysiologist, G. C. Pitts, tested
groups of male athletes by putting them on treadmills timed at 3-1/2 miles
per hour.
"The subjects in the first group were given no water at all and were
asked to walk until they were so fatigued that they could go no farther. These
athletes lasted about 3-1/2 hours. Their temperatures rose rapidly during the
test period and, in the exhaustion phase, finally reached an average of
above 102 degrees F.
"The members of the second group were allowed to drink as much as they
desired, and their temperatures didn't rise nearly as rapidly. However, after
approximately six hours of exercise on the treadmill, as the men reached
exhaustion, their body heat zoomed up.
"Finally, Dr. Pitts chose a third group and carefully calibrated their
water losses, replacing the exact amount of water lost (about one cup every 15
minutes) while the men were exercising. As a result, though they stayed on the
treadmill seven hours, the test subjects did NOT experience a drastic rise in
temperature nor did they reach exhaustion. In fact, when asked how they felt,
they replied that they could go as long as the doctor wanted them to!
"Several conclusions can be reached from these experiments. The first
is that thirst isn't necessarily a good indicator of the body's need for water.
You must, in general, drink more liquid that your thirst seems to call for.
Second, there's a close relationship between water consumption and fatigue.
Third, water appears to have a significant effect upon the regulation of body
temperature. And fourth, a more active person is in greater need of water
because of the dehydrating effects of perspiration and rapid breathing."
The article goes on to explain that some of the water that your body
needs can be gotten from the food you eat. But this only accounts for 3-1/2
cups. The body's metabolism also produces about 1/2 cup a water per day.
But, your body loses about 10 cups of water per day. This explains how:
"Generally speaking, the average person loses at least two cups of water
daily through the respiratory process. Another two cups are emitted through
perspiration, even when no significant amount of physical work is carried on,
and the intestines and kidneys together lose a total of about six cups during
the day. So if you add it all together, you come up with a total loss of ten
cups (and that't not counting any excess lost through perspiration during
exercise)."
It then goes on to explain how you can roughly estimate how much
water you should drink per day:
"...you can estimate your need for liquid by dividing your ideal
weight by two, which will indicate the number of ounces of water you should
be drinking. To find out how many CUPS you need, divide this quotient by
eight. For example, a fit person weighing 150 pounds would come up with a
calculation of 75 ounces, or 9 to 9-1/2 cups. If, however, you weigh 160
pounds but SHOULD be 30 pounds lighter, you'd compute your water needs using
that "should be" figure."
I'm not sure I agree with that last statement. Especially for those
of us who could stand to lose 40 pounds or more. It seems to me that if you
have a great deal of weight to lose, and you're olny drinking enough water to
properly sustain the weight you want to be, then your body will not have enough
water. But, this is purely my opinion, and I'm not a doctor.
The last part of the article tells about other alternatives to water
that people usually drink and why they're not as good as water. Coffee, even
decaffeinated, contains caffeine and caffeols that irritate the stomach lining.
Soft drinks contain too much sugar, and sometimes caffeine. Alcohol, even in
moderation, decreases the oxygen-carrying ability of the blood. And fruit
juice contains too much sugar; you'd be better off eating the whole fruit.
Well, that's the gist of it. But I can't really do it justice.
If anybody is still interested, send me some mail at netrix::geiser, and
I'll send you the article.
Maryann
|
65.29 | Good article, BUT... | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Who threw those pies? | Fri Oct 09 1987 09:33 | 11 |
|
re .28:
I don't agree with the statement about calculating the amount of
water one should drink by their "should be" weight either. In fact,
I once read an article which stated that a person should drink an extra
*quart* of water a day for each 25 lbs. he/she is overweight!
Paul_who's_also_a_water_fanatic
|
65.30 | time for a water break :-) | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Fri Oct 09 1987 11:56 | 37 |
| re .25 (Maryann)
I have also been a water drinker for just over a year now, when I started
WW. I don't usually drink soft drinks of any kind, unless I'm desperate and
there's no other choice. I used to drink cans and cans of Mountain Dew.
>If I don't have 3 cups of water before my 11:30 aerobics class, I drag through.
>If I have the water, I've got much more energy.
This sounds really good to me in theory, but if I drank 3 cups of water before
aerobics I'd never make it through class! Maybe I should try working up to it
in a safer environment. I have taken to drinking a glass of water after the
aerobics portion of my aerobics class, and that has worked well (now I just
have to get back to aerobics--next week for sure!)
I have never gotten strange looks in restaurants when asking for water. Or
maybe I'm just used to getting strange looks. :-) Asking for no dressing on
my salad (not even on the side) gets strange looks! Well, maybe I did get
strange looks during vacation when, at breakfast, the waitress would ask us
if we wanted coffee and we'd say no, and I'd ask for some water instead. :-)
I always ask for water at fast food restaurants. I've never had any problems.
And, at home, we have one of those Poland Springs 2.5 gallon containers w/
the spigot in the fridge (filled with our well water now since it was proven
I can't tell the difference :-)), as well as several assorted flavored
sparking waters for a little variety. I like the bubble-less water better
most of the time, though, I'm just not used to bubbles anymore!
Speaking of water, time for a refill. I have a 12-ounce glass at work, and I
try to make frequent trips to the water fountain and ladies' room. It feels
good to get up from my chair and take a little walk. I usually try to drink
from the fountain first as much as I can, fill my glass, and then drink some
more for good measure. :-)
Jill
|
65.31 | non-chemical decaf?? | CAM::JOHNSON | | Fri Oct 23 1987 06:09 | 14 |
| what about 'naturally decaf' coffee (using the 'swiss water process...
whatever that may be). it also has no sodium, which is a plus.
any ideas on this???
i have just been poking around in this file, collecting some great
tips (i DEFINITELY have to decrease my diet soda intake, and increase
my water), and i could't find an appropriate note for this question,
so i'll just stick it here. does anyone know any details about
'sugarless gum' ?? since i quit smoking 3.5 years ago, i have become
a gum fiend (> a pack a day), and have just satrted wondering if
there are calories there to worry about (not to mention what it
does to my digestive system).
thanks in advance for the info, and keep on losing everyone!!!!!
sarah
|
65.32 | +/- 5 cal./stick | SHIRE::BIZE | | Fri Oct 23 1987 08:48 | 17 |
| RE: Sugarless Gum
I also take sugarless gum, the "SUPERPINK" kind, once in a while
to assuage cravings for sugar. The brand I use is TRIDENT, and it
states that it contains 4.9 calories per stick. A package contains
5 sticks, so count on 25 calories a day if you eat a pack a day
(mind you, I don't know the calorie count in other brands).
What the chewing air does to your stomach is something else again...
Never heard about "naturally decaf", so can't help you there.
If you dring more water you'll also eat less gum, as they don'r
really mix!
Joana
|
65.33 | Water Increase Weight? | VAXWRK::CONNOR | I see the bad moon arising | Thu Nov 12 1987 09:41 | 7 |
| I just got into drinking lots of water (for me it is
nine 8-oz glasses). However, my scale this morning
indicated nearly a two-pound gain from 3 days ago.
Should I expect this? The water has reduced my appetite
so I expected a drop.
|
65.34 | water, water, everywhere | RSTS32::VERGE | | Fri Nov 20 1987 07:44 | 9 |
| If you just started drinking the water, you may show a temporary
weight gain. It may take 3-4 days for things to balance out. On
my program, if I don't drink all the water I should, I get dehydrated,
then when I start up with the water again, I show a weight gain
for a few days. The gain is only water and temporary (provided
you din't accompany it with extra servings of hot fudge sundaes!
Cravings? What cravings? ;') ) and you should see a return
to normal and some weight loss soon.
|
65.35 | how about diapers? | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Tue Nov 24 1987 07:41 | 8 |
| The problem I have with drinking all that water is the tooo frequent
trips to the restroom! It's hard to work when you're popping up
and down every 10 minutes or so. I have to drink it earlier in
the day, so I'm not up all night.
guess there's no solution here...
theresa.
|
65.36 | For me, it got better in time ... | SHIRE::BIZE | | Tue Nov 24 1987 08:23 | 11 |
| RE .35
Have you been drinking water for long? I had the same problem when
I first started drinking water after long years drinking as little
as possible. However now (after 12 weeks) I seem to be able to hold
a little more water at a time and trips are consequently less frequent.
However I do tend to get up at least once per night (I am so used
to it, I do it in my sleep!)
Regards, Joana
|
65.37 | pour another cup... | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Wed Nov 25 1987 09:35 | 9 |
| re. 36
Thanks Joana, for the hope. Yes, I just started seriously
drinking water. This notesfile really got me going - didn't know
all the good benefits before! In the meantime, excuse me...
Theresa.
|
65.38 | I gained too... | WMOIS::E_FINKELSEN | I'm a closet exhibitionist | Wed Jun 14 1989 12:41 | 11 |
| I've started to lose weight via the subliminal tapes mentioned in another note.
I lost 9 pounds and then decided to start with the water program. I gained 4
pounds back! I've been drinking for a week. I was going to stop but if there
is hope that it will drop again, I'll continue.
I also have trouble going to the ladies' room every 20 minutes. It drives me
nuts. I even got rebellious the other day and said, "That's it. I'm just not
going anymore. I'm tired of it." No need to explain who won that one!
Ln (I feel water logged!)
|
65.39 | What about long trips?? | WMOIS::E_FINKELSEN | I'm a closet exhibitionist | Wed Jun 14 1989 13:49 | 11 |
| I forogt to ask. How do you handle your water program when you have to go on
long trips?
I went on a small trip Saturday that consisted of 4 hours of highway driving.
(very few rest stops, unless you want to get off the highway)
So, I just stopped drinking on that day and then tried to start up again on
Sunday. I find it much easier to do when I'm at work.
Ln
|
65.40 | water works | RIPPLE::BARR_TE | | Fri Apr 06 1990 16:44 | 14 |
| I'm new to this topic. Howdy!!
I've been on a fitness program for six months now. Lost 20 lbs,
1 size, and in better shape than I have been for years. Well, about
water intake. I read an article in a local Sunday publication that
said you should drink .5 oz per 1 lb. Our bodies require water to
function. So our organs work properly and we don't dehydrate.
Although you may disagree with the ratio above, as least drink you
8 glasses of water every day. Water also helps flush out the waste
in your body. No sense in carrying that excess weight around.
trb
|
65.41 | WATER HELPS | WLDWST::WILSON_L | | Tue Jun 05 1990 21:02 | 16 |
|
Hi I'm new to this topic.
I'm one that has had medical problems due to drinking too much sodas,
juices and whatever else I could get my hands on.. So I've learned
my lesson about subsituting other drinks for water. I had what they
called an acid stomach (burns like ____). So to those of you out
there subsituting your stomach says stop. Plus water has no calories
and drinking 8 ozs every 2 to 3 hours really helps clean out your
system.
lecia
|
65.42 | | SNOC01::MYNOTT | Hugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikes | Tue Jun 05 1990 21:33 | 23 |
| Funny story:
After touring the States for three weeks with a friend who is only that
and drinking my gallon of water a day (most of it before 2pm)...I can
tell you he got mighty sick of stopping every 30minutes (sometimes
sooner) to find a restroom. Not to mention the waiting on airlines!
(^' (^' Plus the wonderful fact that all restaurents in the States
give you water on arrival. I had it coming out of my ears at times (^'
I think I've tried all the gas stations, hotels, restaurants, etc in
New England, New York, Colorado, San Francisco and LA.
I found it easier during that time to spread my drinks out, but it was
harder overnight as I tended to get up a lot more after dark! Now that
I'm back in OZ, I am drinking 2 litres (1/2 gallon) before 11.00am and
then the rest before 3.00pm, leaving one glass to have with dinner.
I managed to buy a 32oz plastic bottle with straw to keep in the car
filled at all times, instead of the plastic coffee cup that most New
Englanders have on their dash.
...dale
|
65.43 | | ELMAGO::JBADER | Bienvenido a la semana infernal | Sun Aug 19 1990 17:36 | 7 |
| Regarding the earlier notes where the water wasn't spring water
and therefore, not as palatable ... at work I squeeze a bit of lemon
into my water ... at home, I can use the water that has been special
filtered without the use of lemon. I have a friend who squeezes
a bit of lime into it. Definetly makes it tastier.
-sunny-
|
65.44 | bored with water | SMURF::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:36 | 6 |
| The notes which talk about 'substitutions' for water are dated 1987.
Does anyone know if this theory still holds? I am bored with water and
find myself tending to not drink rather than have another glass of
water. How about seltzer water? No caffine, no sugar, no salt. Does
the carbonation make it unacceptable for the 64 oz/day?
Thanks.
|
65.45 | WW and water | AKOCOA::THORP | | Fri Feb 08 1991 18:01 | 7 |
| Weight Watcher's plan says you can count any caffeine free beverage as
part of your daily water. This includes the flavored seltzers,
caffeine free soda, coffee or tea. Even fruit juice (although on WW
you have to count this as a fruit too).
Chris
|
65.46 | Nothin' quit like ol' H2O | MOOV01::GRADY | Mortgage on my body a lein on my soul | Fri Feb 08 1991 20:54 | 9 |
| For WW maybe diet soda is the same, but not for your body. I'm not
trying to shoot down what you've just written Chris. Just Relaying
what Iv'e read, and heard. As far as the body is concerned nothing
is the the same as 100% H2O. Your body still has to filter the soda
due to the added chemicals. As for selzer?
I think it's recomended that you get 96oz. of water a day. That's
besides anything else you drink. Someone correct me if I'm misatken.
John
|
65.47 | Spread-it-out or no? | NIOMAX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*229-7808 | Thu Apr 04 1991 23:40 | 11 |
| I've read all the notes on WATER and haven't seen this mentioned much:
Is there a "preferred" way to drink the water? An article I recently
read suggested a quart in the morning, a quart around lunchtime, and a
quart in the early eve. Up 'til then, I just kept filling my water
glass and drank my ~80 oz. slowly all day/eve. Is it BETTER to drink
it so spread-out as I do, versus the "1 qt in the am, 1 at lunch ..."
method? Does it make any difference in how your body handles the
water?
-Jim
|
65.48 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie(8) | Fri Apr 05 1991 09:40 | 3 |
| Spread out is certainly easier!
- andy
|
65.49 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Fri Apr 05 1991 14:34 | 3 |
| re .48:
Standing straight up works reasonably well, too.
|
65.50 | LIMIT: Stomach size | SSGV01::VERGE | | Fri Apr 05 1991 19:10 | 4 |
| Considering the size of the average stomache, how do you
think you would feel if you drank a whole qt all at once????
Val
|
65.51 | some of know that feeling | SMURF::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Fri Apr 05 1991 19:39 | 1 |
| If you ever had an ultra-sound in early pregnancy, you know !
|
65.52 | my .02 | GIAMEM::JGRADY | | Mon Apr 08 1991 19:29 | 22 |
| Well seeing as I drink 1.25 to 1.5 gal. of water at work, plus
what ever water a may drink later on at home. I've found that, for
myself that is, any more then 20 to 25 onces an hour will be too much
for my system to absorb. Any thing after that an hour seems to run
right through me, as it were.;^)
I've also read that cold water is absorbed faster then warm water.
I how ever don't know why. My guess is that the colder the H2O, the
more dense is. There for the easier it is for your body to move to
where it needs it.(?)
I do suggest to anyone looking to increase their water intake to
say 96 onces(I think this is the qty. I've heard the most), to take
it a day at a time, and work your way up. If you have to, do what I
did, and mark the amount's down you've drank for the day down. This
way you know when to add on more onces a day.
If you do decide to just start drinking alot more water(96oz.?)
one day, and not do it slowly be prepared. Although you probably
won't hurt yourself in any way, your trips to the bathroom will
increase dramaticly. They will over time lessen, but you'll always
be going more often if you keep drinking 96, or more onces a day.
There's nothing wrong with it. It's just part of a good healthy diet.
John
|