When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
So I just started teaching women on this forum. Within weeks, the women started writing back, “It’s working! I can feel the difference!”
From that moment on, the forum became the hub of the Whole Woman Community. Unfortunately, spammers also discovered the forum, along with the thousands of women we had been helping. The level of spamming became so intolerable and time-consuming, we regretfully took the forum down.
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Founder
Whole Woman
louiseds
October 23, 2009 - 6:26am
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fluid quantity
I think that pale urine is the benchmark here. If it is dark, drink more. If it is clear and copious, drink less. Yes, what you eat does have a big effect on what you need to drink. Fibre absorbs water. Dry grains such as muesli and snack foods have a lot of starch which absorbs a lot of water, as do nuts and dried fruit and other dried foods.
Eating less also reduces the amount of fluid needed, as most foods, particularly carbohydrate will absorb water.
So look at output, rather than input. I think your body will tell you how much you need.
I usually carry water with me so I can drink when I am thirsty, and don't have to resort to buying sugar-laden convenience drinks, which I don't like anyway, but I have given up completely on 2 litres of water per day. Ironically in summer my urine is paler than winter. I think it is because I don't get thirsty in winter.
Cheers
Louise
kiki
October 23, 2009 - 8:47am
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how much water we need
don't worry about your 2 litres louise...apparently this is a huge myth.
we lose about 2 - 2.5 litres of water a day. but, we get a lot of that back from our food--nearly half. so right there, you're down to only needing to drink about 1 - 1.5 litres max. and it'll depend on what you eat--drying food, or lots of fresh fruit full of water...
apparently also coffee and tea don't dehydrate. you absorb about 2/3 and they aren't actually diuretics. stimulants yes, diuretics now. someone i know used to be a researcher for tv and finds all sorts of amazing stuff...
but, drinking to thirst is probably what we should all do, and watch what comes out as you say Louise.
i know i get very very thirsty. i probably drink about 2.5 litres a day on average....the result, i pee a ton. far more than the 4 times a day i read. forget that! if the bladder can hold 500ml, and i'm drinking 2500 + the 1000 ml i get in food, right there if i always go to capacity i'd pee 7 times a day. so add in the peeing because i'll be on public transport for an hour, and i could easily fill a day... ;-)
Alix
October 23, 2009 - 1:54pm
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HOW MUCH WATER?
I fear there are no easy answers to this problem. In my case, I take a lot of vitamin and mineral supplements, so my urine is never very pale however much I drink. Listening to my body I find frustrating in the same way as when (long ago) I was listening to a small baby. Neither is a very good communicator. I used to wish and wish my baby could talk and TELL ME IN WORDS what she wanted. I read that we sometimes feel hungry when in fact we are thirsty: maybe the converse can also happen? And thirst can be pathological, a warning of something going wrong, as for people with diabetes.
I also read that our sensations of thirst are never very reliable and get less so as we age. Certainly, I can get so absorbed in something, I no longer feel thirst for hours. I used to do long distance competitive walking events where I would go for up to 27 miles in Summer with very little fluid intake, not feeling thirsty at all. Once past the finish, suddenly I would be desperate to drink gallons of the horrid orange squash provided, which normally I would despise. I used to notice that (conveniently) I was peeing very little, quite unlike my usual dash from loo to loo.
At home, I am much more tempted by comfort drinking than comfort eating. My desire for that soothing / rewarding cup of something does feel like thirst, but I'm sure it's not.
Christine
October 23, 2009 - 5:14pm
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drinking, breathing, and exercise
Many religions teach some version of “controlling the senses” and drink certainly falls into this category.
It’s kind of a neat practice to see if you can go longer and longer periods of time “self-contained” without desire of food or drink. Keeping your tongue rolled up to the roof of your mouth and breathing evenly into your lower belly helps with this. I agree with Kiki that, like animals, we should drink when thirsty.
I think exercise ties in with this discussion as well. When you’ve been “dormant” for awhile and then vigorously exercise, you can really get a sense of how aerobic exercise squeezes fluid from every cell in your body. We forget that the water in our body becomes stagnant and how important it is to keep things moving, for if we could see how things really are at the cellular level, we would know we’re much more like rivers than solid objects.