“Just Drink Water” Is a Lie

💧 HYDRATION MYTH

"Just Drink Water"
Is a Lie.
Here's the Truth.

Someone at every job site says it. "Just drink more water, you'll be fine." That person is wrong. Dangerously, scientifically, embarrassingly wrong. Here's why.

BY POLAR QUEST BEAR  |  UPDATED APRIL 2026  |  6 MIN READ

Picture this. You're on a rooftop in Tampa. It's 97°F. You're sweating through everything you own. Your coworker, Larry, points at your water bottle and says those four magic words: "Just drink more water."

Larry means well. Larry is also completely wrong. Larry has been wrong about this for 15 years and nobody has told him. Today we fix that. Sorry, Larry.

🐻
PQ Bear here. I once drank an entire gallon of water in one hour on a job site. Know what happened? I got dizzy, my hands went numb, and I nearly passed out — not from heat, but from flushing all the sodium out of my body. Water almost killed me. Don't be me. Keep reading.
1.5L
sweat per hour in extreme heat — water alone can't replace what you lose
0.9g
sodium lost per liter of sweat — water replaces zero of this
2%
body weight lost in sweat = measurable drop in performance and judgment
What Water Actually Does (and Doesn't Do)

Water is genuinely great. We're not anti-water. Water invented civilization. But here's the thing about sweat that nobody tells you: sweat is not just water.

When you sweat, you lose water AND sodium, potassium, magnesium, and chloride. These electrolytes are what keep your muscles firing, your brain working, and your heart beating at a reasonable pace. When you replace lost sweat with pure water and nothing else, you dilute the remaining electrolytes in your blood.

This condition is called hyponatremia — low blood sodium — and it can cause nausea, headaches, confusion, seizures, and in extreme cases, death. It's rare, but it happens. And it happens specifically to people who drink a ton of water without replacing electrolytes.

"Drinking water without electrolytes during heavy sweating is like refilling your gas tank with water. The volume is there. The fuel isn't."

The 4 Things Water Can't Fix

Here's what water alone cannot do, no matter how much of it you drink:

❌ Water Cannot:
  • Replace sodium and electrolytes — You need salt. Real salt. Not more water.
  • Cool your core temperature actively — Drinking cold water helps slightly, but when ambient temp exceeds body temp, your body physically cannot cool itself through sweat alone. The physics don't work.
  • Fix heat exhaustion once it starts — At that point you need shade, electrolytes, and cooling — not just a water bottle pointed at your face.
  • Compensate for no shade breaks — Water is not a substitute for getting out of the sun. Your body needs a break from heat load, not just more fluid.
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I want to be very clear: I am not telling you to stop drinking water. Drink water. Please drink water. What I'm telling you is that water is the opening act, not the headliner. The headliner is electrolytes, shade, and ideally a portable Arctic strapped to your chest.
What You Actually Need

Good news: the fix is cheap, easy, and doesn't involve buying anything fancy. Here's what actually works:

✅ The Real Hydration Formula
  • Water + electrolytes every 15–20 minutes — Not just water. Add a pinch of salt, a sports drink, or an electrolyte packet. If you're sweating heavily, plain water is not enough.
  • Salty snacks throughout the shift — Pretzels, pickles, crackers. Your body needs sodium back. Embrace the pickle. The pickle is your friend.
  • Sports drinks for heavy sweat days — Gatorade, Powerade, or similar. Not ideal for everything, but on a 100°F roofing day, electrolyte drinks earn their place.
  • Avoid alcohol the night before — You show up dehydrated, your body starts the day already behind. One beer the night before a brutal shift costs you more than you think.
  • Active cooling to reduce sweat rate — A fan-powered cooling vest reduces how hard your body has to work to stay cool, which means you sweat less, lose fewer electrolytes, and need less replacement. Less sweating = less losing. Simple math.
How Much Water Is Enough?

OSHA's recommendation for outdoor workers in heat: 1 cup (8oz) of water every 15–20 minutes. That's roughly 24–32oz per hour. On a brutal 8-hour shift, you're looking at 2–3 gallons of fluid — water AND electrolyte sources combined.

Most people drink maybe half that. Then wonder why they feel terrible by 2 PM. Now you know.

"By the time you feel thirsty, you're already 1–2% dehydrated. Thirst is your body's check engine light — don't wait for it to turn on."

The Bottom Line

Water is non-negotiable. But it's step one, not the whole plan. The complete strategy is water + electrolytes + shade breaks + active cooling. Leave any one of those out and you're building a house without a foundation.

So next time Larry says "just drink more water," you can look him in the eye and say: "Larry, we need to talk about sodium." 🐻

Cool Down Actively. Not Just Hydrate.

The Polar Quest cooling vest reduces sweat rate, keeps your core temp down, and makes water work harder. Science is cool. So is the vest.

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