Your body is made up of about 60 percent water – in infants, even up to 75 percent, and slightly less in older people. These figures alone are impressive, but they only tell part of the story. Water isn't a passive filler that simply takes up space. It's an active player in virtually every physiological process that takes place in your body. Without water, metabolism would grind to a halt, temperature regulation would break down, nutrients couldn't be transported, and waste products would accumulate in the tissues. Water is, quite literally, the medium of life.
The diverse roles of water in the body
Water's transport function is fundamental. Every nutrient you eat—whether vitamins, minerals, amino acids, or glucose—must somehow get from your digestive tract to the cells that need it. The blood, which performs this transport task, consists of over 90 percent water. Oxygen that you breathe is also transported to every cell via the blood. In the other direction, metabolic waste products—carbon dioxide, urea, and other end products of cellular metabolism—are transported for excretion via the lungs, kidneys, and skin. Without sufficient water, this transport becomes inefficient, and the cells don't get what they need, while waste products accumulate.
Temperature regulation is another vital function. Your body must maintain its core temperature within a very narrow range – deviations of just a few degrees above or below this range can be life-threatening. The primary mechanism for this is sweat: when it gets too warm, your sweat glands secrete water onto the skin's surface, and the evaporation process draws heat away from the body. This ingenious cooling mechanism only works if there is enough water available to produce sweat. Dehydration reduces the ability to sweat, and the risk of overheating increases – particularly dangerous during physical exertion or in hot weather.
At the cellular level, water is the solvent in which the chemistry of life takes place. Enzymes, which catalyze biochemical reactions, only function in an aqueous environment. The DNA in your cells is surrounded by water, which stabilizes its structure. Communication between cells, the transmission of nerve impulses, the contraction of muscles—all these are electrochemical processes that require water as a medium. Water also lubricates joints and organs, protects the brain as a buffer against impacts, and keeps mucous membranes moist, which serve as the first line of defense against pathogens.
The immediate consequences of dehydration
The body's sensitivity to dehydration is remarkable. Even a slight loss of one to two percent of body weight in water—that's 700 grams to 1.4 kilograms for a person weighing 70 kilograms—can measurably impair physical and mental performance. The symptoms are often so commonplace that we attribute them to other causes: afternoon fatigue, a vague headache, difficulty concentrating, irritability, and reduced stamina during exercise. How often do people reach for coffee or a painkiller when a large glass of water is all they really need?
What's special about water is that your body can't really store it—not like fat as an energy reserve or calcium in your bones. The body's water content is relatively constant, and any loss must be continuously replenished. You constantly lose water: through urine, the most obvious way; through stool; through sweat, even when you're not actively sweating—known as 'insensible perspiration'; and through breathing, when moist air escapes from your lungs. For an average adult, this loss adds up to about 2 to 2.5 liters a day under normal conditions, significantly more in hot weather, during physical activity, or when ill with fever, vomiting, or diarrhea.
The good news: Simple and inexpensive
In a world obsessed with expensive supplements, complicated diets, and exotic superfoods, staying hydrated is refreshingly simple and inexpensive. You don't need special products, scientific training, or a huge budget. Tap water in Germany is of excellent quality and rigorously tested. The only investment required is a little awareness and establishing a habit. The return on this minimal investment is substantial: improved energy, clearer thinking, better physical performance, and support for virtually every bodily function. In this guide, you'll learn how much you really need, how to tell if you're well-hydrated, and how to make staying hydrated an automatic, effortless habit.


