Hydration Beyond Water: Electrolytes, Minerals and What Your Body Really Needs as Temperatures Rise
Drinking Plenty and Still Feeling Terrible?
Most of us have been there — a
warm day, two litres dutifully consumed, and still that flat, foggy, crampy
feeling that makes you wonder what on earth is going on. Here is what nobody
tells you: hydration is not just about volume. It is about composition. As
temperatures rise and you perspire more, your body doesn’t only lose water — it
loses a finely tuned cocktail of minerals, and without replacing them, all that
water can actually make things worse. I see this play out with clients again
and again, and once they understand it, everything changes.
The Minerals Your Body Is Losing
Electrolytes are electrically
charged minerals dissolved in your body fluids. They are not a wellness trend —
they are essential to every heartbeat, nerve signal, and muscle contraction.
The ones lost most heavily in sweat are:
•
Sodium — the gatekeeper of fluid balance. Without
enough of it, cells cannot hold water properly. Drinking large volumes of plain
water without sodium actually dilutes what little remains and that is when
people start feeling genuinely unwell.
•
Potassium — works hand in hand with sodium. When it
drops, you feel it: cramps, palpitations, the kind of bone-deep fatigue that
makes a warm afternoon feel like wading through treacle.
•
Magnesium — the quiet workhorse behind over 300
processes in the body, including sleep, muscle relaxation, and energy
production. Most people are already running low before summer arrives. In heat,
it depletes faster, and the fallout: cramps, twitching, poor sleep, headaches,
anxiety, is so common we’ve started to think it’s normal. It isn’t.
•
Calcium — pairs with magnesium to govern the balance
between muscle tension and release, including in the heart.
Signs the Problem Might Be Electrolytes, Not Just Heat
•
Fatigue or brain fog despite drinking plenty
•
Muscle cramps or twitching, especially at night
•
Headaches, dizziness, or light-headedness
•
Heart fluttering or palpitations
•
Irritability or anxiety that worsens in warm weather
•
Feeling noticeably worse after a large drink of plain
water
What You Can Do About It
1.
Salt your water. A small pinch of quality sea
salt, Celtic grey salt, or Himalayan pink salt in your water bottle is one of
the simplest and most effective things you can do. It provides sodium with
other trace minerals and makes your water actually usable by your cells.
2.
Eat your potassium. Avocado, banana, sweet
potato, leafy greens, coconut water — aim for these at every meal in warm
weather. Coconut water diluted half and half with filtered water is one of
nature’s best natural electrolyte drinks.
3.
Take magnesium seriously. Food sources help —
pumpkin seeds, dark chocolate, almonds, spinach — but for most people, a
magnesium glycinate supplement is genuinely worthwhile, particularly through
summer.
4.
Understand what your cells actually want. This
is where it gets genuinely fascinating. Researcher Gerald Pollack at the
University of Washington discovered that water exists in a fourth phase —
beyond solid, liquid, and vapour — called EZ water, or exclusion zone water.
This structured, gel-like form of water is what your cells are lined with and
what they prefer to use. It holds an electrical charge, like a biological
battery, and supports cellular energy far more effectively than ordinary bulk
water. EZ water forms naturally in the body when we are exposed to infrared
light (sunlight, warmth), when we move, and when we eat water-rich whole foods
like cucumber, celery, and watermelon. In summer, this is actually good news —
gentle sun exposure, movement, and hydrating foods all help build the structured
water your cells run on. It also explains why a glass of water alone never
quite hits the spot the way a juicy peach or a bowl of berries does on a hot
day.
5.
Explore hydrogen water. One of the more exciting
developments in hydration research is molecular hydrogen — water infused with
dissolved hydrogen gas (H₂). The emerging science is compelling: hydrogen is a
selective antioxidant, meaning it targets the most damaging free radicals
without interfering with beneficial ones. Studies suggest hydrogen water may
reduce inflammation, support mitochondrial function, improve exercise recovery,
and protect the brain from oxidative stress. For anyone dealing with fatigue,
joint issues, or high training loads in the heat, this is well worth exploring.
Hydrogen water tablets or a hydrogen generator are the most practical ways to
access it.
6.
Drink between meals, little and often, not a lot at
once. When you drink with food, you dilute your digestive power: both
stomach acid as well as pancreatic juices. This may be critical for those who
are stressed, have compromised digestive function or are chronically unwell for
other reasons. Also, the kidneys can only process around 800ml per hour. Large
volumes drunk quickly without electrolytes simply dilute your mineral status
further — which is precisely why so many people feel worse, not better, after a
big glass of water on a hot day.
The Bottom Line
Hydration is one of those things
that sounds simple until you realise how much nuance is hiding inside it. Water
matters — but the quality of that water, what you put in it, and the minerals
you eat alongside it matter just as much. If you regularly feel flat, foggy, or
drained in warm weather despite your best efforts, this is almost certainly
part of the picture. And the good news is that the body responds remarkably
quickly — most people notice a real shift within 24 to 48 hours of getting it
right.
If you’d like to explore your
individual electrolyte status or understand which water filtration and
supplementation approach suits you best, get in touch — this is exactly the
kind of thing functional nutrition can help untangle.
Ready to hydrate properly?
Book a consultation at Body Mind Insights.