Dehydration

There are only three life support systems in the body. You have the inner cell, the extra-cellular fluids that surround that inner cell and the blood plasma. If your body consists of 70 percent water, which is well-recognized throughout the world, or 50 percent of that lies within the inner cell itself; 15 percent lies on the extra cellular fluids that surround those cells.

Only five percent is in the blood plasma. Those are your three main life support systems in the body. So what happens is when you have low energy, and the cell does not hydrate, that then robs from that inner cell, which is roughly 50 percent water, are 50 percent of that 70 percent, and something has to replace that. That replacement comes from the extra cellular fluids and something has to replace those extra cellular fluids.

That gets relied upon through the blood plasma. It causes osmatic pressure in and between the cells and sooner or later, that is going to become depleted and the body actually starts losing what we call biowater - that's the intercellular water of the cell - because of the osmatic pressure trying to replace everything that gets lost due to dehydration.

And once you have dehydration, that cell then dies prematurely and now free radicals enter the body. So as the best thing – because cells are dying at the rate of 30,000 cells out of the approximately 6 trillion cells the body contains, it would actually take 6 years to replace those 30,000 lost cells through what is called cell enlargement or cell division.

Gordy Jordahl