Edmonton Journal

WATER WOES

Hyped as a tonic for beauty, it’s all wet

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Read any interview with one of the world’s “most beautiful women” and you will find they have one frustratin­gly simple beauty secret in common. It’s never the obvious thing, like jackpot genes or a round-the-clock crack team of profession­als devoted to bu ng and tightening their skin, though those can’t hurt. It’s water. Some ingest it ice-cold, some scaldingho­t. Some like it purified alkaline or lovingly spritzed with lemon. But always, it’s water. By the gallon, if you can stand it.

I cannot. As I said to a colleague recently, I’m almost certain I’ve been dangerousl­y dehydrated my entire life. I have been known to go days without downing so much as a Dixie cup of water. “What would it feel like to refill a Nalgene?” I have often pondered, half-awake and sallow. I could be two inches taller than I am now, and — if Victoria’s Secret Angels are to be believed — achingly luminous. But I just can’t clear one hurdle: Water is, in the words of my lifestyle doppelgäng­er, Lindsay Lohan, “so boring.” Its narrow taste profile ranges from nothingnes­s to winter cold metallic, and if I drank the amount recommende­d for my body type (about 2.2L per day), I’d need to sport a CamelBak and a catheter.

But all of my whining cannot o set the severe biological costs of water loss: dry mouth, fatigue, headache, sunken eyes and dietary upset. I’ll give Kate Moss credit — it’s di cult to project e ortless radiance when you’re feeling constipate­d and/or undead. To determine once and for all whether “wetness” is, as the wise Zoolander once said, “the essence of beauty,” I drank my recommende­d intake for a month.

Full disclosure: It was a month spent making frequent trips to

the ladies’ room. (And by frequent, I mean once an hour, giving new meaning to the phrase “water torture.”) I kept an entire Brita jug at my desk to top up my trusty Kate Spade tumbler, and would pace the o ce, grudgingly sipping my flavour-less elixir like Harvey Levin from TMZ. A moderately sized cup of water sat on my nightstand. Some nights, I used my amateur telepathy skills to will it to evaporate from the August heat. Other nights, my dreams involved rushing waterslide­s or being reincarnat­ed as a blue whale.

For all the H2O in my proximity, you’d think my skin would have improved. Wasn’t that the point of dousing my insides for four weeks? Regrettabl­y, aside from a barely detectable reduction in my rosacea (which was likely attributab­le to my many serums, anyway), I remained about as ruddy as my mama made me. The true payo manifested in my habits: Thanks to my daily deluge, I was often too full to eat junky afternoon snacks. Walking home after work felt only appropriat­e now that I travelled with a S’well bottle in hand. Even the water retention I cursed, closed fists to the sky, puffed me up enough to straighten my posture ever so slightly.

Water, with or without lemon, was not the toxin-banishing miracle liquid Miranda Kerr promised it would be. (I’m not even sure what a “toxin” is, to be honest.) What actually heightened my natural beauty [flu s hair] were simple, intuitive tweaks spurred on by my water consumptio­n, also known as moderation. Snooze, right? As much as it pains me to admit, the secret to achieving that maddeningl­y elusive, lit-from-within Hollywood glow is exactly as boring as we fear it is. As boring as water.

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