Keeping Your Kids (and Yourself) Hydrated

One of the best ways to keep your kids hydrated is to start them on a water-drinking habit early in life. Healthy habits created during childhood help little ones grow into healthy adults.

The key to developing a good water-drinking habit is to introduce water as the drink of choice. It’s easily done when the little ones are weaning off breast milk and formula, but as they grow up and see what the older kids and the adults are them are drinking, it becomes more of a chore. Those juice boxes with convenient straws are tempting beverages to serve, but once the kids get a taste for a sweet liquid, it might be difficult to convince them that water is best.

Look around you and check out the grownups you know. Who drinks water and who avoids water? There are those who carry water bottles everywhere as well as those who pop a soda can whenever possible. There are the so-called health buffs who drink expensive “pure, not from concentrate” juices. By the time teenagers grow into adults, it’s much harder to break the habit of drinking sugary beverages and to focus on water. Nonetheless, it can be done.

Here are a few “tricks” to keep kids and grownups hydrated with water and to help them develop good drinking habits:

•          When they’re little, choose colorful straws and special sippy cups that are designated just for them. Drinking water can be fun and desirable when presented as “special.”

•          At home, set up a water station that’s within reach of children who can pour and serve themselves. This allows them to feel independent and make good choices on their own. Compliment them for making the right choice and helping themselves, even if they make a mess or spill.

•          Appeal to older kids’ sense of logic and responsibility. Teenagers want to look good, so discuss how water has no calories and is a great hydrator. Remind them that when water is dispensed from the faucet or a water filtration system such as the PiMag Waterfall® or PiMag® Sport Bottle, it can help decrease the amount of plastic waste humans create. Contemporary kids care about the ecosystem and may be even more aware of the environment than the adults surrounding them.

•          Have lemon, lime or orange slices available to add to the water you drink. You can also have on hand raspberries, sliced strawberries or kiwi and blackberries. These are healthy yet flavorful fruits to help transition from sweet beverages to water.  

•          Carry a water bottle such as the PiMag® Sport Bottle wherever you go and refill it throughout the day.

•          To help your water habit, choose water as your beverage even when eating out.

According to the authors of a 2015 study, “Ingesting water along with amino acids, fats and minerals seems to help the body take up and retain more water, and therefore maintain better levels of hydration, which is especially important following exercise and periods of heavy perspiration. Sipping water a little bit at a time prevents the kidneys from being overloaded and helps the body retain more water. For those hoping to stay optimally hydrated, a slow-and-steady approach to water consumption and coupling water with a little food is a more effective method than knocking back full glasses of water between meals.”1

Why not invite your family members to make hydration with water part of your Nikken  Summer Challenge?

1 https://time.com/5646632/how-much-water-to-drink/