PLAY PODCASTS
0754 – Why ‘Thirst’ Is Unreliable
Season 3 · Episode 754

0754 – Why ‘Thirst’ Is Unreliable

Get A Better Broadcast, Podcast and Voice-Over Voice · Peter Stewart

January 24, 20232m 40s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (sphinx.acast.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

2023.01.24 – 0754 – Why ‘Thirst’ Is Unreliable

 

Your unreliable dehydration warning system

When you feel thirsty you are already dehydrated. That’s because whereas the body treats food with a ‘store now - use later policy’, excess fluid will simply be excreted. You’ll just pee.


So, the ‘thirst mechanism’ is unreliable. To stop feeling thirsty (and so, dehydrated), and because your thirst is satiated before complete hydration is achieved, regular sipping is the common-sense approach.

 

Set a daily fluid-intake goal, either by using a marked-up water bottle[1], or a hydration-tracking app.


A good maxim is “If your pee’s all white, you’ll sound all right”, but bear in mind that some food and drinks can change the colour of your urine (such as fizzy vitamin drinks).

 

On the day of a studio session

Get hydrated and stay hydrated.

 

Make sure that the day before a lengthy session you have drunk plenty of water so your whole system is hydrated. Then keep sipping plenty of it during the recording, to keep yourself hydrated. This this will also give you a cause to pause and rest your voice for a moment.

 

If you are taking water into a studio with you, put it in a pop-close type sports bottle and put it on the floor. Then if it is knocked it won’t spill on the equipment.

[1] https://www.amazon.co.uk/Time-Marked-Water-Bottle/s?k=Time+Marked+Water+Bottle


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.