Water
124 sourcesRay Peat's views on water challenge conventional advice to 'drink 8 glasses a day.' He argued that excessive water intake dilutes sodium, increases stress hormones (as the body works to maintain electrolyte balance), and promotes tissue swelling (edema). He noted that water retention is actually a sign of the stress/estrogenic state — healthy cells maintain their structure and exclude excess water.
Peat emphasized that the quality of cellular water matters more than total intake. Well-hydrated cells maintain structured water associated with proteins, while stressed cells become edematous (waterlogged) yet functionally dehydrated. He recommended drinking to thirst, ensuring adequate salt intake, and getting water from food (fruits, milk) rather than forcing plain water consumption.
Key Positions
- Excessive water intake dilutes sodium and can increase stress hormones
- Water retention (edema) is a sign of the estrogenic, stressed state — not health
- Healthy cells maintain structured water; stressed cells become waterlogged
- Drink to thirst rather than forcing arbitrary water quantities
- Adequate salt intake is more important than water volume
- Fruits, milk, and juice provide water with electrolytes and nutrients
- Hyponatremia (low sodium from excess water) causes confusion, seizures, and can be fatal
Sources
124 items-
Butter Nutrition - Catherine Louise
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Cancer: Disorder and Energy
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Cascara, energy, cancer and the FDA's laxative abuse
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Comparison of Progesterone and Estrogen
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Diabetes, scleroderma, oils and hormones.
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Eclampsia in the Real Organism: A Paradigm of General Distress Applicable in Infants, Adults, Etc.
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El problema de la enfermedad de Alzheimer como una pista para la inmortalidad
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Epilepsy and Progesterone.
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Essays on nutrition, health, etc... - Vladimir Heiskanen (Valtsu)
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Estrogen - Age Stress Hormone.
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Fatigue, aging, and recuperation
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Fats and degeneration.
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Fats, functions & malfunctions
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Functional Performance Systems Blog - Rob Turner
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Gelatin, stress, longevity
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Glycemia, starch, and sugar in context
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Growth hormone: Hormone of Stress, Aging, and Death?
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Heart and hormones
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Lactate vs. CO2 in wounds, sickness, and aging; the other approach to cancer
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Leakiness, aging, and cancer.
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Membranes, plasma membranes, and surfaces
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Milk in context: allergies, ecology, and some myths
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Mitochondria and mortality
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Multiple sclerosis, protein, fats, and progesterone