Lifestyle2 min read
Most people know they should drink more water. Most people also do not do it. Not because they do not care but because good intentions alone are not enough to build a habit. You get busy, you forget, the day is over, and you realize you have had two cups of tea and called it done. Here is what actually helps. Stop trying to remember. Start attaching it to things you already do. The easiest way to drink more water is to stop relying on memory and instead link it to habits that already happen in your day. Drink a glass when you wake up before anything else. Have one before each meal. Keep a water bottle on your desk or wherever you spend most of your day. When you see it, you will drink it. When it is out of sight, you will not. That is really the core of building any habit. Make the thing you want to do the easy thing to do. How much do you actually need Women need around 9 cups of fluid a day, and men around 13. This includes water from food and other drinks, not just plain water. If you eat plenty of fruits and vegetables, you are already getting some of that without realizing it. A simple check is the color of your urine. Pale yellow means you are well hydrated. Dark yellow is a sign you need more. That is your most honest daily feedback. Signs you are not drinking enough Headaches that show up mid-afternoon. Feeling tired even when you slept well. Brain fog. Constipation. Craving sugar. Feeling hungry when you just ate. Dehydration mimics all of these things, and most people do not connect the dots. If any of those sound familiar, start there before anything else. If you find plain water boring You do not have to drink it plain. Add sliced lemon, cucumber, mint, or frozen berries to a jug in the fridge. Sparkling water counts. Herbal tea counts. Coconut water occasionally counts. Even broth and soups contribute. What does not count toward hydration in the same way: alcohol, sugary drinks, and too much caffeine. They are fine in moderation, but they are not replacements for water. A simple routine to try this week One glass first thing in the morning before coffee. One glass before lunch. One glass before dinner. One glass in the evening. That gets you to at least four cups of plain water without tracking anything or changing your day significantly. Add a water bottle and water-rich foods, and you are likely hitting your target without much effort at all. Hydration is not complicated. It just needs a small system and a little bit of consistency. Start with the morning glass and go from there. — A dietitian who keeps a large jug of water on her desk and refills it twice a day without thinking about it.



