chadlincoln wrote:I don't even come close to drinking enough water.
I drink a LOT of water - especially the kind steeped in coffee beans.
I've cut back my coffee intake substantially, but I used to basically drink it all day long till only a couple hours before bed. Now I drink water all day.
knapplc wrote:Madison - where did you get that info? That stat on breast cancer is almost certainly bogus.
Or is the whole thing supposed to be just a setup for the picture (which was photoshopped)?
I believe that it could reduce cancer, but not that much. Here is an article...
Water: The Miracle Drug-Disputed!
Summary of Rumor: This email simply lists some hard-to-believe facts about water such as 75% of Americans being chronically dehydrated, water helping back and joint pain, dehydration contributing to memory problems, and water consumption reducing the risk of cancer. bullet
The Truth: While TruthOrFiction.com cannot vouch for the accuracy of all of the sources of these statements, they have not been plucked out of thin air. This popularly circulated email about water sounds exaggerated and without foundation, but it is actually a summary of a magazine article that appeared in WOMEN'S WORLD magazine in July of 2000.
Some of the article is based on the work of Dr. Feyedoon Batmanghelidj. Dr. Batmanghelidj is a London-educated physician who was a political prisoner in Iran in 1979 and whose job was to provide medical care for the thousands of prisoners who were awaiting trial or, in some cases, execution. It was there that he collected more than 3,000 case histories of people who he feels were remarkably helped by drinking increased amounts of water and whose variety of ailments he felt were related to dehydration. He is the author of a book titled Your Body's Many Cries for Water.
The WOMEN'S WORLD article also draws upon research from the University of Utah, Connecticut, cardiologist Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D., author of Optimum Health, the University of Washington, Baylor College of Medicine, and others. The cancer statistics are from Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and British researchers.
Madison wrote:As to the pic, again, no clue if it's photoshopped since I don't recognize the lady, but if you go to your local adult video store, you'll see that there are ladies out there with breasts that big.
i don't know about you, but those have to be the blurriest boobs I've ever seen