Hydration · Cellular Minerals
We’re all told the same thing: “Drink more water.” So why, after a full day of sipping, do you still feel thirsty, foggy, and flat? The missing piece usually isn’t more water. It’s the minerals your cells need to actually hold and use the water you already drink.
Hydration shows up in how you think and feel. A review of the research found that dehydration of just about 2% of body weight can dent attention, short-term memory, and mood, often before you even feel thirsty.1
Why more water isn’t always the answer
Staying hydrated matters, but flooding your system with plain water can throw you off balance. Your kidneys can only process so much at once, and drinking large amounts of unmineralized water in a short window can leave you running to the bathroom while diluting the very minerals that keep fluid where it belongs. Signs you may be overdoing plain water include frequent urination, persistently clear urine, mild swelling, headaches, and that wired-but-tired, foggy feeling.
Why you’re still dehydrated after drinking all day
Just like plants need more than water to thrive, your body craves more than plain water to perform at its best. A few of the most common reasons every glass isn’t landing:
Your water is missing key minerals
Minerals don’t just hydrate, they direct traffic. Magnesium, potassium, sodium, and the broader electrolyte spectrum regulate how fluid moves into and out of your cells. Too much plain, unmineralized water dilutes what’s already there, so the water passes through instead of being put to work.
Real hydration happens at the cellular level. Cells need the full mineral spectrum, not just more water, to hold onto fluid and use it. That’s the difference between water that runs through you and water that actually supports your energy and focus.*
You’re sweating minerals out faster than you replace them
Sweat isn’t just water, it carries sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes. The more you move and the hotter it gets, the more you lose. This is why, during exertion, rehydration means replacing both fluid and electrolytes; beverages with electrolytes can do that better than water alone.2
Water quality, diuretics, and salty foods
Tap water can carry chlorine, lead, or microplastics; coffee, tea, and alcohol act as mild diuretics; and salty, processed foods pull water out of balance. Filtered, mineralized water, sipped steadily rather than chugged, helps every glass count.
How to make every glass work harder
Hydration goes beyond the water bottle. A simple, do-today approach:
- Mineralize your water: add a full-spectrum liquid mineral blend so each glass delivers electrolytes, not just volume.
- Eat your hydration: water-rich foods like cucumber, watermelon, and leafy greens come with minerals built in.
- Sip, don’t chug: steady sips absorb better than occasional floods.
- Listen to your body: tailor intake to heat, activity, and how you actually feel.
- Plain water alone can fall short: cells need minerals to hold and use it.
- Even mild dehydration can affect focus and mood, often before you feel thirsty.
- Mineralize your water, sip steadily, and eat water-rich foods to stay ahead.
References: 1. Adan A. Cognitive performance and dehydration. J Am Coll Nutr. 2012;31(2):71-78. 2. American College of Sports Medicine. Exercise and fluid replacement (position stand). Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2007;39(2):377-390.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.