rppa-- I'm not convinced that your observations show that coffee causes dehydration in you.
Nor am I. I note that the symptoms are the same, but I don't believe it's the caffeine, as tea does not have seem to any such effect. Or at least so my memory tells me. In this forum, I guess I need not point out the impressions and memories can be surprisingly unreliable. See Randi's recent column on the unreliability of memory.
Coffee has lots of other things in it besides caffiene and water. Perhaps your feeling of thirst has something to do with its acidity?
Thirst is only one of the symptoms. See the opening post for the others.
Now this gets really subjective, but I believe I can tell the difference between a dehydration headache (which actually is a new thing for me, just in the last few years) and a caffeine-withdrawal headache (something that used to hit me a lot on weekends, as I drink a lot of coffee on weekdays and then would tend not to have any till quite late, if at all, on Saturday). My habits haven't changed but I no longer seem to be bothered by caffeine withdrawal, even after an abrupt shift in caffeine intake.
If you put sugar in your coffee, does that have any effect on how you feel?
I wouldn't know, as I consider sugar in coffee a crime against nature. Anything for science, though...
A headache the day after may be unrelated, or not related to dehydration, at least.
It might be if it wasn't also coincident with all of the other symptoms typical (for me) of dehydration. See opening post.
Maybe you're allergic to some trace chemical in coffee. Do better quality coffees make you feel the same way? Etc. etc. etc.
Off the top of my head? Yes, I think so.
But this gets dangerously anecdotal. Time for a controlled experiment, I think.
IOW, your personal experiences may not be evidence of what you think they are, and can't confirm or deny the hypothesis that cofee causes you to become dehydrated without ruling out countless other factors.
Sure. Hence my opening this thread instead of just declaring "coffee dehydrates me". Personal experience seems to suggest that, but it's not a controlled experiment.
Got a suggestion for an experimental protocol? Anyone else want to drink some java for the cause?
In my personal experience, coffee used to cause me great....gastrointestinal distress, let's just say. Then, around late high school sometime (yes, I started early!), I switched over to "gourmet" coffee from Folger's.
I'm not real snooty about coffee, but most of my coffee these days is better quality (I'll spend $8 for a pound, sometimes, but it bugs me to spend $10 or more). And after coming back from Italy last summer, my wife and I have taken to frequently making coffee in the Italian style, using an Italian stovetop percolator. That's strong stuff.
Nor am I. I note that the symptoms are the same, but I don't believe it's the caffeine, as tea does not have seem to any such effect. Or at least so my memory tells me. In this forum, I guess I need not point out the impressions and memories can be surprisingly unreliable. See Randi's recent column on the unreliability of memory.
Coffee has lots of other things in it besides caffiene and water. Perhaps your feeling of thirst has something to do with its acidity?
Thirst is only one of the symptoms. See the opening post for the others.
Now this gets really subjective, but I believe I can tell the difference between a dehydration headache (which actually is a new thing for me, just in the last few years) and a caffeine-withdrawal headache (something that used to hit me a lot on weekends, as I drink a lot of coffee on weekdays and then would tend not to have any till quite late, if at all, on Saturday). My habits haven't changed but I no longer seem to be bothered by caffeine withdrawal, even after an abrupt shift in caffeine intake.
If you put sugar in your coffee, does that have any effect on how you feel?
I wouldn't know, as I consider sugar in coffee a crime against nature. Anything for science, though...
A headache the day after may be unrelated, or not related to dehydration, at least.
It might be if it wasn't also coincident with all of the other symptoms typical (for me) of dehydration. See opening post.
Maybe you're allergic to some trace chemical in coffee. Do better quality coffees make you feel the same way? Etc. etc. etc.
Off the top of my head? Yes, I think so.
But this gets dangerously anecdotal. Time for a controlled experiment, I think.
IOW, your personal experiences may not be evidence of what you think they are, and can't confirm or deny the hypothesis that cofee causes you to become dehydrated without ruling out countless other factors.
Sure. Hence my opening this thread instead of just declaring "coffee dehydrates me". Personal experience seems to suggest that, but it's not a controlled experiment.
Got a suggestion for an experimental protocol? Anyone else want to drink some java for the cause?
In my personal experience, coffee used to cause me great....gastrointestinal distress, let's just say. Then, around late high school sometime (yes, I started early!), I switched over to "gourmet" coffee from Folger's.
I'm not real snooty about coffee, but most of my coffee these days is better quality (I'll spend $8 for a pound, sometimes, but it bugs me to spend $10 or more). And after coming back from Italy last summer, my wife and I have taken to frequently making coffee in the Italian style, using an Italian stovetop percolator. That's strong stuff.