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distilled water was: Water in Colorado (For CO residents)

Posted: Fri Mar 06, 2015 4:02 pm
by Shannon Nelson
Really interesting issue, distilled water. Googling on "distilled water vs mineral water " brings up a lot of links, of course. Here are just a few of my own thoughts:

- It would seem odd if the best water for *continuous* use, were one that we did not evolve with (totally "pure" water, i.e. distilled). Generally, those "impurities" that we evolved with, our bodies have come to depend on, or at the very least, have adapted to. I realize that rainwater is similar to distilled, but different, and the differences may be important.

- I read (e.g. in the links below) that distilled water quickly absorbs CO2 and becomes acidic; on the other hand what makes "alkaline water" alkaline is -- minerals. (Mostly calcium and magnesium, but also others.) The links below talk more about those points.

- One point of view is that distilled water can be excellent as a short-term therapeutic aid, i.e. medicinally, e.g. in detoxing. Some of the same qualities that (according to some people) make it questionable as a long-term primary water source, can be very useful for therapeutic purposes.

- I realize that Mercola is not God :-) but here's a nice summary on his website of some other considerations about it: http://www.mercola.com/article/water/di ... _water.htm

- presents some of both sides: http://jcsesecuneta.com/tome/health/dis ... ral-water/

As far as whether inorganic minerals can be absorbed, I would certainly think so. Decades back when I first began taking magnesium for sleep, the easily available form was dolomite -- an inorganic mineral. More recently I use chelated forms etc., but sometimes also magnesium citrate, which I assume is also inorganic. What reason would there be to think that we *can't* absorb inorganic minerals? Which is not always a plus, when the inorganic mineral in question is a toxin…

Re: distilled water was: Water in Colorado (For CO residents)

Posted: Fri Mar 06, 2015 10:58 pm
by Irene de Villiers
It is definitely so.
In fact we can MOST easily get minerals from inorganic salts such as table salt (sodim chloride), potassium chloride, magnesium chloride etc.
The only prescription forms of minerals - for people whose systems waste minerals for some reason - are inorganic for this reason.

Sorry but the hype about distilled water "doesn't wash" :-)
We need minerals in all our water as when you remember that we get maybe 8 glasses of it a day, the amount adds up and is significant. It is too easy to have a mineral deficiency to risk leaving it out of drinking water.

Namaste,
Irene

--
Irene de Villiers, B.Sc AASCA MCSSA D.I.Hom/D.Vet.Hom.
P.O. Box 4703 Spokane WA 99220.
www.Furryboots.info
(Info on Feline health, genetics, nutrition & homeopathy)
"Man who say it cannot be done should not interrupt one doing it."

Re: distilled water was: Water in Colorado (For CO residents)

Posted: Sat Mar 07, 2015 11:55 am
by Roger B
Distilled water is simply not paleo. Period. Carriage return, line feed. End of file.

Roger Bird
________________________________

To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
From: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Date: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 13:58:40 -0800
Subject: Re: distilled water was: Re: [Minutus] Water in Colorado (For CO residents)
It is definitely so.
In fact we can MOST easily get minerals from inorganic salts such as table salt (sodim chloride), potassium chloride, magnesium chloride etc.
The only prescription forms of minerals - for people whose systems waste minerals for some reason - are inorganic for this reason.

Sorry but the hype about distilled water "doesn't wash" :-)
We need minerals in all our water as when you remember that we get maybe 8 glasses of it a day, the amount adds up and is significant. It is too easy to have a mineral deficiency to risk leaving it out of drinking water.

Namaste,
Irene

--
Irene de Villiers, B.Sc AASCA MCSSA D.I.Hom/D.Vet.Hom.
P.O. Box 4703 Spokane WA 99220.
www.Furryboots.info
(Info on Feline health, genetics, nutrition & homeopathy)
"Man who say it=cannot be done should not interrupt one doing it."

Re: distilled water was: Water in Colorado (For CO residents)

Posted: Sat Mar 07, 2015 3:08 pm
by healthinfo6
Distilled water is simply not paleo. Period. Carriage return, line feed. End of file.

Neither is kefir, especially made with grain vs. grass fed milk.
Have you switched to paleo friendly non-dairy milks, like coconut?
http://bit.ly/1E1VlB7
Susan

Re: distilled water was: Water in Colorado (For CO residents)

Posted: Sat Mar 07, 2015 9:18 pm
by Roger B
Susan,

Thank you for that link. I will look it over.

Kefir is traditional, and traditional is one of my guiding principles. People over time have selected diets which work for them, until processed foods and the machine age came along.

But it is a deep thought issue whether kefir is paleo. The bugs themselves are deeply paleo. The raw material, milk, is . . . . . . . . I'll have to think about that. The question with paleo is whether our genes were selected to eat a particular food. Yes, cow's or goat's milk is not paleo, but human milk is. Let me think about it for a while. In the mean time I will read what you gave me.

All of the proteins and fats in cow's or goat's milk are basically the same as human milk; they differ only in the amount. But the kefir microbes change everything. And given the intense selection process over the past 1000 years, the kefir would have to be compatible to the human genome. It is probably that at sometime someone used microbes from the human microbiota to add to the the kefir culture; don't ask me how they did that; use your imagination. (:->)

Roger Bird
________________________________

To: minutus@yahoogroups.com
From: minutus@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sat, 7 Mar 2015 09:08:53 -0500
Subject: Re: distilled water was: Re: [Minutus] Water in Colorado (For CO residents)
Neither is kefir, especially made with grain vs. grass fed milk.
Have you switched to paleo friendly non-dairy milks, like coconut?
http://bit.ly/1E1VlB7
Susan