Is chlorine in our water negative for better health?
Options
Replies
-
htimpaired wrote: »DeguelloTex wrote: »Actually your body removes chlorine when you drink it in water. When you use a hot shower the chlorine gas is 50x stronger. Your skin obsorbs it quicker and you breath it into the blood stream more rapid. It's listed as a
pesticide on the fda website because it kills living organisms and been found in high concentrations in breast cancer people.
Better stop breathing while taking a shower. Better yet, don't shower.
There's a whole host of people in my town that have chosen that option. I choose the stop breathing when i'm unfortunate enough to come across them.
Ive also learnt i can move very fast when motivated by lack of oxygen.
0 -
dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.0 -
I can not longer drink the water that comes from my faucet. I get sick after 2 to 3 glasses. I will throw it all back up. Sorry that was gross but that is what happens. I HAVE to have filter water. (Kroger's filter water is great and I drink at least 3 to 4 bottle or more a day.0
-
Cynthiamr2015 wrote: »I can not longer drink the water that comes from my faucet. I get sick after 2 to 3 glasses. I will throw it all back up. Sorry that was gross but that is what happens. I HAVE to have filter water. (Kroger's filter water is great and I drink at least 3 to 4 bottle or more a day.
What the heck is in your water?0 -
Also I found that the water that runs through a reverse osmosis filter. It is better! It taste clean and has NO bad smell !0
-
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
0 -
Chlorination is a new positive IMO. Certainly other ways to disinfect water though.0
-
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...0 -
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...
Few people comprehend the word "treated" though...0 -
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...
Few people comprehend the word "treated" though...
One of my favorite "how it's made" type shows showed a water bottling plant and talked about the different filtration process. The more entertaining part is that part of the water supply was bottled, and the rest of the water went into several other filtration process and treatments and then into the municipal system. So, because it underwent further filtration, the municipal system actually had cleaner water.0 -
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...
Few people comprehend the word "treated" though...
One of my favorite "how it's made" type shows showed a water bottling plant and talked about the different filtration process. The more entertaining part is that part of the water supply was bottled, and the rest of the water went into several other filtration process and treatments and then into the municipal system. So, because it underwent further filtration, the municipal system actually had cleaner water.
I love how much bottled water is RO water from the Plano water supply...
Believe there's still a bottled water company bottling up a CA public water supply source and selling it too...drought and all.0 -
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...
Few people comprehend the word "treated" though...
One of my favorite "how it's made" type shows showed a water bottling plant and talked about the different filtration process. The more entertaining part is that part of the water supply was bottled, and the rest of the water went into several other filtration process and treatments and then into the municipal system. So, because it underwent further filtration, the municipal system actually had cleaner water.
I love how much bottled water is RO water from the Plano water supply...
Believe there's still a bottled water company bottling up a CA public water supply source and selling it too...drought and all.
0 -
People don't realize there's more jeopardy from flushed prescription medications than from any chemicals used in the treatment processes. Those prescriptions don't get filtered out, sometimes and can be still present in the tap water.0
-
-
0
-
ldrosophila wrote: »dutchandkiwi wrote: »I wonder how much faster all the pathogens would kill you if the tap water was not chlorinated. Pretty dang quick, I would think.
We are lucky that a lot of our water goes through natural sandfilters (nature reseerves as well as water reserves) but about 1/3 to half of our water is sourced from our main rivers.
Our water tastes so much better than in the US as I recently found out. All of a sudden I understood the resentment to drinking tapwater.
Do you have an issue with water shortages in the Netherlands? I live in the West of the US and many states suffer from water shortages, and as a result some areas are forced to used recycled waste water or water transported from many miles.
In Houston, a large portion of our drinking water is reclaimed from the sewage produced by Dallas. Last time Texas had a huge drought, facebook was full of memes telling Dallas to keep flushing...
Few people comprehend the word "treated" though...
One of my favorite "how it's made" type shows showed a water bottling plant and talked about the different filtration process. The more entertaining part is that part of the water supply was bottled, and the rest of the water went into several other filtration process and treatments and then into the municipal system. So, because it underwent further filtration, the municipal system actually had cleaner water.
Yes that happens in Utrecht here in the Netherlands, though they are two companies next to eachother The Bar-le-duc bottled water pipe goes into the same aquifier as the muncipal supply, about 400m down further down. One costs about 100 times what the other costs. The water that comes form there is known to be very soft (very little calcium) and the best in the country.
0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 391.5K Introduce Yourself
- 43.5K Getting Started
- 259.7K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.6K Food and Nutrition
- 47.3K Recipes
- 232.3K Fitness and Exercise
- 391 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.4K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 152.7K Motivation and Support
- 7.8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.2K MyFitnessPal Information
- 22 News and Announcements
- 925 Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.3K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions