Raw food, less water
When you start eating more raw foods, you
may find you’re not as thirsty or don’t need as much water or other beverages
as you normally do. There are several reasons for this.
First of all, raw foods, such as raw fruits
and vegetables have a higher volume of water in them, so your body is getting
the hydration it needs from foods.
This doesn’t mean you should stop drinking
water or juices. You don’t want to adopt some of the more radical elements of
the raw food trend. First and foremost, listen to your body. It will tell you
what it needs. If you’re overweight, sluggish, tired, depressed, your body
might be telling you to make some dietary changes, and raw foods might be one
way to alleviate some physical disorders.
But if you’re overweight and have symptoms
of Type II diabetes, overwhelming thirst can be one symptom. When you start
consuming more raw foods, with a higher fiber and moisture content, you may
start to lose weight, and that can go a long way to reducing your blood sugars.
If you’re not overweight, or don’t have
Type II diabetes, you still might find you’re not as thirsty as you normally
are. First of all, if you’re drinking water and juices, you’re not consuming
caffeine, which is so dehydrating and makes you thirstier. And by not consuming
as much in the way of cooked foods or especially highly processed foods, which
have astronomical sodium counts, you won’t be as thirsty either.
By consuming more raw, uncooked food, and
pure water and fruit juices, you’re putting your body into balance. Keeping
sodium to normal levels found in foods means you’ll start to require a more
balanced amount of water. Don’t think of
this as changing or taking away. Think of it as adding balance, and it will
make the process of eating healthier much easier.
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