water consumption
angella_jacobs93
Posts: 54 Member
I have heard people say they try to drink 2 or more gallons a day. Others say 8 cups a day is to much water and that is not healthy because you could get water intoxication. I have been drinking 4 cups a day over the course of 1-2 hrs in the morning to start my day. How much water do you think is healthy to drink in a day? and per hr? Thanks!
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Replies
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2 gallons seems like a lot! I've heard that one fluid ounce per pound of body weight is a decent bench mark to strive for. I get right around one gallon.0
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I drink a glass of water with each meal and then just drink to my thirst level. My urine is very pale so I'm plenty hydrated.
I wouldn't worry about it too much. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/27/dehydration-myths_n_3498380.html0 -
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I was always told you should drink half of your body weight in ounces. I'm 250 pounds, so I should be drinking 125 ounces0
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If you're thirsty- you're dehydrated.
I drink 8 cups a day. I find that I'll only drink water if it's out of a bottle.... I always drink a bottle before my meals. To right there that's 6 cups (since a bottle is 500mls). I drink the last bottle usually throughout the day, or in the evening.
I'm never thirsty, and my urine is also pale- so for me this seems to be doing the trick. Plus it's pretty easy once you get in the habit of doing it. I have over 90lbs to lose, and I think the two cups before a meal is helping with my overall hunger throughout the day too.0 -
I drink between 2-3L of water a day and that's not including milk or the water that's present in food.
It's summer here now, so I'm drinking more. I probably only get around 1-1.5L a day in winter.0 -
amandabeaulne1 wrote: »If you're thirsty- you're dehydrated.
Another sign of chronic dehydration is NOT being thirsty though. Like me. I know I'm not drinking nearly enough, but I'm just not thirsty. I'm trying really hard to drink more water but I have no desire for it.0 -
You should drink 2litres per day and you shouldn't drink during the meals. It is better to drink after o before meals not during.0
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There's no set amount. Drink enough water to satisfy you. 8 cups is fine, 2 gallons...that's a bit overboard unless you train religiously, IMO.0
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You should drink 2litres per day and you shouldn't drink during the meals. It is better to drink after o before meals not during.
Unless there's a specific medical condition to watch out for, it does not matter when a person drinks. Many people need to wash down a meal so they don't dry-choke.0 -
You should drink 2litres per day and you shouldn't drink during the meals. It is better to drink after o before meals not during.
Unless there's a specific medical condition to watch out for, it does not matter when a person drinks. Many people need to wash down a meal so they don't dry-choke.
And just see if you can convince a server you don't need a glass of water with your meal.0 -
^this. I just let me give me one. Then they look all puzzled when they come back to refill.0
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2 gallons sounds outrageous. I second that comment that said have your body weight in ounces. I also weight 250 and aim to drink 125oz a day. That does the trick while I'm in weight loss mode. Once I'm maintaining I will be happy with about 64oz a day.0
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The overwhelming majority of people will be perfectly fine trusting their thirst. We have it for a reason.
I find self-imposed water intake goals, especially the downright outrageous ones (two gallons?) to be very similar to eating disorders. It's mostly about a need to feel in control.
If I felt the need to monitor my fluid intake (I never have and barring a medical condition that necessitates doing so highly doubt I ever will), I think some formula of "x amount of water per pound/kilogram of body weight" makes the most sense. Blanket recommendations of "x amount per day" make no sense, given that it's highly unlikely that a 100 pound female needs anywhere near the fluid intake that a 250 pound male needs. Even a formula based on so much water per pound of body weight is just a rough estimation. Fluid intake needs will vary with activity level, heat and humidity.0
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