L is for liquids, water for life
Li Ming was a retired woman who enjoyed working in her garden. Even the unusual heat wave that hit her region one summer didn’t deter her from tending her flowers and other plants. The temperature rose above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the humidity teetered at 90 percent. On the third day of these record-breaking temperatures, Li Ming called her daughter, Kim, but she sounded confused on the phone. Kim became alarmed and rushed to Li Ming’s house, where she found her mother lying on the kitchen floor unconscious. Apparently, Li Ming’s large fan wasn’t enough to fight the effects of the heat and humidity, and she suffered heat stroke—which can be life threatening.1
One can lower the risk of heat-related illness, such as heat stroke, by drinking plenty of liquids, particularly water. Next to air, water is the most vital element needed for survival. By weight, a newborn infant is approximately 75 percent water, and an adult about 70 percent.
The gray matter of the brain is approximately 85 percent water, blood is 83 percent water, muscles are about 75 percent water, and even hard marrow bones are 20 to 25 percent water.2 Almost every cell and tissue of the body not only contains water but is continually bathed in fluid and requires water to perform its functions.
Water, the liquid of life, is a medium in which metabolism takes place. It is:
- the transport system within the body.
- a lubricant for movement.
- the facilitator of digestion.
- the prime transporter of waste via the kidneys.
- a temperature regulator.
- a major constituent of the circulating blood.
About two thirds of the water our body requires come from ingested liquid, about one third from our food, and a small amount of liquid is synthesized during food metabolism. Fruits and vegetables generally have higher water content than other food groups.
Ideally, the body maintains a balance between the amount of water lost each day and the amount taken in to replace it. The amount of daily water lost depends on climatic conditions and physical activities.
What If Water Intake Is Inadequate?
When we don’t provide our bodies with enough water, they attempt to avoid dehydration by decreasing sweat and urine output. If this compensatory mechanism proves inadequate and insufficient fluid intake persists, dehydration will occur. Dehydration causes an impairment of the body cooling mechanisms, along with a possible rise in body temperature and an inefficient clearance of body waste. The blood thickens and blood flow becomes impaired, increasing the risk of intravascular clotting. This may manifest as stroke or heart attack. Drinking an inadequate amount of water also increases the risk of developing kidney and gallstones. It’s estimated that adequate hydration of older people could save thousands of days of hospitalization and millions of dollars each year.
Insufficient water intake also leads to constipation—to the delight of the laxative industry. Exercise and fiber intake play a role as well.
How Much Water Is Needed?
In the healthy person, a practical guide to water intake is to consume sufficient amounts throughout the day to ensure that the urine is a pale color. (Urine may be a bright yellow color after taking certain medications, including vitamin pills.)
Begin drinking water in the morning, because the body is relatively dehydrated from insensible (invisible) perspiration during sleep. Then continue to drink water at regular intervals throughout the day.
Be sure to drink water that is pure and clean. It is the most healthfully beneficial liquid we can consume.
Water as a Cleansing Agent
Another important use of water is cleansing. Regular bathing removes accumulated dirt and contaminating debris, reducing the risk of infection.
Frequent hand washing reduces transmission of many infectious agents from person to person.
Hydrotherapy
Hydrotherapy is the use of water as a simple home therapeutic application. It’s best applied as a help for simple muscular aches, pains, and bruises. When dealing with muscular aches, apply hot, wet towels alternated with cold, wet towels (ending with a cold application) to affected areas to improve blood flow. If recent injury and bruising have occurred, cold compresses are more appropriate.
Appropriate Concern for Earth’s Inhabitants
Water is a precious and indispensable resource. It’s therefore important to conserve it:
- Avoid wasting water. When possible, install toilets and shower heads in your home that use less water. When brushing your teeth, turn on the water taps only to wet and then rinse your toothbrush; turn taps off while brushing your teeth. Repair leaking faucets.
- Avoid polluting water. Water can be polluted by human excrement, industrial waste, and chemicals. Animals raised in large agricultural feed-lot operations consume huge quantities of water, and their excrement has the potential to pollute groundwater and nearby rivers and streams. Eating a vegetarian diet helps to conserve water, because foods consumed in a plant-based diet require much less water to produce.
Water of Life
Life cannot exist without water. All body functions require it. Similarly, in our spiritual lives, we cannot live eternally without the Water of Life—Jesus Christ.
May we be transformed as we drink, bathe, and are soaked in His compassion, love, and acceptance.
1 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institute on Aging, “Hyperthermia”; http://www.nia.nih.gov/health/topics/hyperthermia. Accessed online April 4, 2012.
2 M.G. Hardinge, A Philosophy of Health (Loma Linda University School of Public Health, 1980), p. 37.