Im realizing that I’ve actually been chronically dehydrated for a good portion of my adult life and I’m looking to change that. I just don’t enjoy drinking water (as silly as that may sound).

Any advice is appreciated.

  • otp@sh.itjust.works
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    42 minutes ago

    For me, it was having a water filter and drinking out of glasses, not cups. I don’t like the way water tastes coming out of plastic or steel as much.

  • HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Step one, fill cup with water.

    Step two, drink cup.

    Repeat steps 1 and 2 until you’ve drank enough water.

  • Seefra 1@lemmy.zip
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    1 hour ago

    Try high pH water, normal water is painful to drink, but high pH water is much smoother.

  • sbird@sopuli.xyz
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    2 hours ago

    100% get a water bottle and carry it with you. Reduces the effort needed to take a sip. Additionally, try to drink less sweet drinks too. I never liked fizzy drinks anyways.

  • antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    51 minutes ago

    Don’t. Drinking water with meals dilutes your stomach acid. Just eat less processed food and less salt and you’ll barely need to drink any water. Cooked vegetables and fruit are both mostly water.

    Only time you need to drink water is when exercising outdoors for extended periods, and even then it’s about 3-4 liters per day (including food).

    Also despite a lot of bogus advice out there, coffee is water, beer is 94% water. I have gone months with only coffee and beer and it’s not a problem.

    Finally that brings us to kidney stones. Avoid high oxalate foods, and if you are worried about stones drink lemon water or other acidic beverages, as it dissolves stones better than plain water.

    Chronic mild dehydration is not a disease and it does not need treatment. I am not a doctor, and this is not medical advice.

    Drink when you’re thirsty. Water or any other liquid other than soda pop. You’ll probably be fine.

    • yoevli@lemmy.world
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      12 minutes ago

      OP, please don’t listen to this person. Most of this is terrible advice.

      To start, it’s still advisable to drink water through the day even if you’re getting some from your food intake. A typical diet will provide around 20% of the recommended daily amount - the rest needs to come from actual fluid intake. Even with a diet with a high proportion of fruits and vegetables, it doesn’t come close to meeting the ideal amount.

      Coffee and beer are not the same as the equivalent amount of pure water. Caffeine and ethanol both function as diuretics - that is, they promote urine production which in turn reduces your overall hydration. Ethanol is worse in this category to the extent that alcoholic drinks can actually dehydrate you. Caffeine has a more mild effect and is overall hydrating, but a cup of coffee still isn’t equivalent to a cup of water.

      Citrus fruits do help prevent kidney stone formation, but it’s primarily via a different mechanism involving the citrate found in those fruits/juices rather than the acidity itself. Not that this matters too much in practice, but I point this out due to the inclusion of “other acidic beverages” as an alternative.

      Chronic mild dehydration (generally) won’t kill you, but it will prevent your body from functioning at its best and can potentially cause issues with electrolyte imbalances, blood pH, and plenty else. You should aim to stay optimally hydrated as much as possible for the benefit of your overall health.

      “Drink when you’re thirsty” is the one solid piece of advice here. Your body has evolved cues like this over hundreds of millions in order to get you to take good care of it, and its best to listen to them as much as possible. That said: these cues only works when you’re cognizant of them, and it’s still important to be actively mindful and intermittently remind yourself to follow them, especially when you’re involved in tasks that would otherwise distract you from them.

  • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    A different approach to the not liking water, get a good filter. I used breta filters for years but a few years back installed an under sink reverse osmosis filter because the water here is so hard that it just tastes bad whether left hard or softened. I knew water could be better because I grew up with decent water and liked it even back when I preferred pop or juice.

    I wonder if anyone who claims to dislike water has only ever had subpar water. Note that I include a bunch of bottled waters in that, as I vastly prefer my RO tap water to any store bought bottled water, though some were on par with breta filtered water, though I’ve always hated the waste involved in buying bottled water (other than those big ones you can refill and stick in a water cooler, which can also be RO water if you have a good water place to get it from).

    If you do go for RO, make sure the system you get has an extra stage that adds some minerals back into the water. The RO on its own actually leaves the water too pure to be safe to drink regularly, as it causes osmosis to pull nutrients out of your cells (or something like that). I’d also only suggest it in an area where water is plentiful, as it does use more water than what you get from the filter, though adding a passive pump can improve efficiency.

    • CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 hours ago

      While the mineral issues are a concern, for most people it’s overcome with a decent diet. I’m not sure that those remineralizers do an awful lot. But I don’t leave my RO water standing eg in kettle!

  • CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 hours ago

    My water intake is pretty high, but it does vary seasonally - in summer, I’ll go through 5L easily. I think that most people could stand to increase their water intake, and reports of hyperhydration are overstated - it’s mostly a paediatric problem.

    • Learn to just drink a whole cup at once. Then do that on a schedule. Every hour through the working day gets you to the 2L per day generic recommendation. Then add a couple glasses at and after dinner.
    • I don’t want to recommend bottled water because it’s environmentally reprehensible, but find a way to make water taste neutral. Part of that, though, is just getting used to it.
    • building on that taste thing - it’s probably better for the long term to get used to it than to always add flavor.
    • Find out if you like it better warm or cold. A lot of people insist on cold water, but I don’t like cold water. It takes too long to drink without a brain freeze effect, unless I want something specifically to cool me down, which is infrequent.
  • Twongo [she/her]@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    force yourself, after a while you get to the point where you can taste the difference between different brands of water or from which tap it came from

  • Godnroc@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Are you drinking water with meals? I find washing something down, even a single chip, causes you to drink more than you could by itself.

    Also, keep it at hand. A refillable bottle is worth investing in. If you like it ice cold, get a vacuum insulated vessel.

    • Maven (famous)@piefed.zipOP
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      9 hours ago

      I have a water bottle but I can never finish it in a day.

      I think the washing down food idea is really good and im definitely going to try that going forward.

  • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    The advice about keeping water nearby is good. I do that. Although I still sometimes forget anyway lol.

    Besides that: Is flavor the problem or do you just not like having to drink period?

    If it’s flavor: Add a tiny bit of a drink you do like. I add maybe like 5-10% apple juice to my water at meals. Just enough to get some of the flavor without adding too much sugar.

    If it’s the 2nd: There are others sources of water. Most fruits work and they also come with fiber, which is also important for hydration.

    Also, unlikely to apply here, but worth mentioning: When I was having problems being dehydrated, I talked to my doctor about it and we figured out that one issue was that I was mostly drinking filtered water, which will lack a lot of the electrolytes you normally get in water. I fixed this by getting a powder to add to my water. (Filtering bc of town water supply issues.)

  • Send Pics of Sandwiches@sh.itjust.works
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    9 hours ago

    You go: “Wow, I’m an adult now and sometimes I have to do things I don’t want to do”. And then you drink the water.

    The fact of the matter is that almost nobody’s favorite beverage is water, but in a display of forbearance (combined with not being too fond of the whole dehydration thing) we drink it anyway.

    Additives and things can help you in the near term, but developing good habits takes time and effort (and is very often the cornerstone of good health).

    • AskewLord@piefed.social
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      7 hours ago

      eventually good habits become self re-inforcing.

      I can’t drink mass market soda anymore, it’s disgustingly sweet. some of the smaller boutique sodas have way less sugar and are tasty.

  • Cassa@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 hours ago

    does sparkling help? cucumber, slice of lemon, orangeslice?

    I know a lot of people get those huge bottles and it helps them - just having it with them all the time 🤔

    • Maven (famous)@piefed.zipOP
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      9 hours ago

      Generally not really… sparkling water mostly just makes me wish I was drinking normal water or just normal juice. Its kinda just the worst of both worlds.

      I have gotten really into making my own juices recently like oranges and apples and yada yada but even then I dont even think I drink enough. (Plus juice is far more sugary than normal water even if its natural juices)

      • crank0271@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        You could always water those juices down a bit. So a half glass of juice mixed with a half glass of water. Basically homemade (non-sparkling) Spindrift.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Big Water Bottle has everyone convinced that we need to be chugging water 24/7.

    Unless you live in a really hot place and work outside, or have some other risk factor (like dementia or diarrhea), thirst should be enough to keep you hydrated enough.

    If you dont have additional risk factors, and you dont just exist in a constant state of thirst, I wouldn’t worry about it.

    • DomeGuy@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Echoing this:

      Being dehydrated has real and generally unpleasant symptoms which drinking water alleviates. Dehyrdation is not just when your urine has a color.

      If you have to go #1 on a regular basis, you’re probably not dehydrated.