Toronto Star

The water bottle that won’t leave you alone

Aspiration­al messages remind you to hydrate throughout the day

- KATHERINE ROSMAN

Since John Jannuzzi began drinking water last month from a bulky two-litre bottle with a protruding plastic straw, he’s taken measures to keep the mammoth contraptio­n out of Zoom’s view.

“I feel like a total baby,” said Jannuzzi, who is 35 and the founder of Jannuzzi’s Cookies. “I’m basically drinking from an adult sippy cup.”

The other day, though, the hulking contrivanc­e slipped into his computer camera frame during a meeting, leading a business associate to ask him, “John, what the hell is that thing?”

“Um,” he answered tentativel­y, “it’s my motivation­al water bottle.”

The bottle he drinks from, all day long, is adorned by time stamps and aspiration­al messages (“11 a.m. — Remember your goal”; “1 p.m. — Keep chugging” and “7 p.m. — Almost finished” among them) designed to get him drinking more water than he likely needs or certainly thirsts for. It has a sturdy plastic handle with finger grooves built in, which allow you to get a firm grasp, like a barbell.

Jannuzzi, who lives in Brooklyn, noticed people on Instagram posting photos of their motivation­al water bottles and chatted with a few people who said that better hydration led to improvemen­ts in complexion and energy. This got him thinking about his own drinking habits: he guzzles water during and after his morning workouts but hadn’t been taking in much liquid in the hours after, aside from his nightly tequila on the rocks.

So he went on Amazon and spent about $40 for two water bottles, one for himself and one for his girlfriend, Alex Rush, 35.

“When you open the box from Amazon and first see it, you’re like, this thing is huge, you’ve got to be kidding me,” he said. “But after a week of drinking close to a gallon (four litres) a day, my mood is better and I feel clearer.”

Jannuzzi’s ho-hum days working from home are now imbued with the novelty of binge water-drinking and frequent trips to the bathroom. “We have been inside for a year,” he said. “At this point, we’ll take what we can get when it comes to something new.”

This is a big moment for the “motivation­al hydration industry,” said Jason Holloway, 31, an entreprene­ur in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., who, with Matthew Hernstadt, 32, started a company called HydroMate in 2019.

Back then, Holloway saw himself as an H2O guy living in a soda-pop world. He wanted to help inspire people to drink more water; to motivate them to sip all day long. The idea, Holloway said, was “to create a bottle that turns the drinking of water, and the dread of drinking water, into a fun drinking game that you play throughout the day.”

With time markings that are meant to keep drinkers on track to meet their goal and accompanyi­ng messages like “You’ve got it” (10 a.m.) and “No excuses” (4 p.m.), HydroMate bottles come in three sizes and an array of colours, ranging in price from $19 to $23 (U.S.). They can be slung over the shoulder with luggage straps for on-the-go slurping.

“I’ve heard it from so many customers, ‘This bottle is so huge and I don’t know how I’m going to do it. It’s noon and I’m only at 10 o’clock,’ ” Holloway said. “But the little friendly reminders really motivate you.” (He says his company has sold hundreds of thousands of bottles, no doubt with the help of social media endorsemen­ts from Chrissy Teigen, Kaley Cuoco and other celebritie­s.)

“At home, I noticed I was drinking less water …the whole concept of time and ritual had changed.” DANIELLE PRESCOD

NEW ORLEANS WRITER

Danielle Prescod, a writer and a founder of the diversity, equity and inclusion firm 2BG, loves the motivation­al bottle she bought from Amazon so much that she has become something of an Instagram water-drinking influencer.

In January, Prescod, who lives in New Orleans, began to realize how much her water consumptio­n had diminished now that she no longer works in an office. Pre-pandemic, she said, “I would walk out of my office, fill up my water bottle and go to the bathroom several times a day; it was part of my routine to break up the work day,” she said. “But at home, I noticed I was drinking less water because I was less active, there was no real meal time, the whole concept of time and ritual had changed.”

She felt she needed reminders to drink consistent­ly so she searched “motivation­al water bottle” and made her $20 purchase. “I posted about it on Instagram, that I was doing competitiv­e water drinking even though I am only competing with myself,” she said. “People started asking for the link to the bottle.”

Prescod, 32, earns affiliate fees for products ordered through links she shares. Since Feb. 1, she said that 1,200 water bottles have been ordered by her followers, who send photos that Prescod has collected in an Instagram “moment” page labelled “Water Cult.”

Prescod said encouragin­g this habit helps distract from the bad news and political vitriol that has characteri­zed the past year.

“I think the reason it’s catching on so much is because it’s a healthy thing. Drinking water cannot be bad, it cannot be controvers­ial in any way, shape or form,” she said. (The only downside she has found is that her habit can interfere with productivi­ty. “I keep getting interrupte­d because I have to go to the bathroom so much.”)

Carrying a particular water bottle has signified cultural cachet for three decades, said Anita Rose, a writer in Virginia who is an amateur historian dedicated to 1990s arcana, and who sees bottled water and water bottles as pop-culture totems.

From Evian bottles littered around Shelley Long in the 1989 film “Troop Beverly Hills” to the Naya bottle tucked in the golden carrier of Alicia Silverston­e’s character Cher in 1995’s “Clueless” to the Hydro Flasks favoured by today’s VSCO Girls, “Keeping a bottle of water in hand makes it look like you’re healthy and it became a status symbol,” said Rose, 37.

There are more economical ways of motivating your hydration than buying a bottle from Amazon. In August, Vandie Barnard, 30, a fitness and wellness coach in Woodbridge, Va., wanted to increase his water intake. His wife, Lakisha Barnard, 32, suggested they make their own version of water bottles she had seen on social media. They went to the supermarke­t and bought large plastic bottles of water and wrote encouragin­g quotes, like “Start Great” and “Be Greater” with a Sharpie pen on the bottles. They guzzled and refilled daily.

This helped them to get into the ritual of drinking four litres a day. Now Barnard is teaching his clients to adopt the practice, too, with their own inspiratio­nal quotes written on their bottles.

“It helps that we’re all home because having to carry that bottle around could be a hassle,” he said. “But even if someone does go back to a normal routine, this has helped create a new habit and people can now apply that success to other habits they’re trying to develop.”

 ?? HYDROMATE THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Hydromate bottles are adorned with time stamps and messages designed to get users drinking more water. It has a sturdy plastic handle with finger grooves built in, like a barbell.
HYDROMATE THE NEW YORK TIMES Hydromate bottles are adorned with time stamps and messages designed to get users drinking more water. It has a sturdy plastic handle with finger grooves built in, like a barbell.

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