The Truth About What is in Tap Water

Christy

What is in tap water anyway? The answer will surprise and startle you. The truth is not pretty: everything we ever put on our lawns, washed our cars with, dropped into trash cans and flushed down the toilet is in tap water. And the industrial chemicals, petroleum products and other volatile organic compounds leaking out of rusting tanks all over the world are in there too. In fact, there is no new water. All water is recycled after passing back into our lakes, streams and aquifers. Not what you wanted to hear was it?

As our bodies are mostly made from water and use water in every metabolic process the purity of tap water is a major concern of all intelligent individuals who care for themselves and the health of our planet. Knowing how to deal with the answer to this critical question is also very important. There are various ways of removing many of the toxins. Municipalities do some of the work for us with varying degrees of success.

Synthetic organic chemicals are not removed by municipal water filtration as these systems use mainly sand beds and chlorine. This is essentially bleach and filtering out visible particles. According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, “Drinking water plants are old and out of date, and water supplies are increasingly threatened by and contaminated by chemicals and microorganisms.”  We need to do better; what is in tap water will affect our children’s health too. Small children are especially susceptible to toxins such as heavy metals, pesticides and hormones in drinking water. Their systems are more sensitive and still developing. Small children consume a larger percentage of fluids per body weight and so are getting a bigger dose of these damaging substances every day.

That said, what can we do to ensure the purity of tap water we consume and depend on. The answer is home water filtration. This is the only sure way to control the security of your family’s drinking water. An investment in home water filtration is one of the best investments you will ever make in a healthy longevity. The brain is mostly water and so in the liver. Our livers, the organ that detoxifies our blood from all this garbage in our environment is, after all, almost 96% water. It must be thoroughly hydrated with clean, pure water regularly.

Don’t depend on others to take care of your water supply. Do the job yourself and you will answer the question of “What is in tap water?” with a confident smile. No harmful substances of any kind. Most people just talk about change. You can do something to increase the purity of tap water “in your backyard.” And then invite the neighbors to partake as well.

 

Lorrie

The Truth: is Tap Water Good for You?

Laurel Tevolitz

Every cell in the human body contains water. No cell can live in the absence of water. Every human should drink a generous amount of water each day. So you, the reader have reason to ask there two questions:

1) Are there any particular requirements concerning the nature of that water?

2) Is tap water good for you?

More than ten years ago, a steadily increasing number of consumers began asking that second question. One environmental group, the Natural Resources Defense Council, has shed light on the answer to that question. That Council has issued this statement: “…there is no assurance that bottled water is any safer than tap water.”

The Council took the question “Is tap water good for you?” and reformed that question. Then the Council offered an answer to the re-structured question. The Council asked questions much like there: “Are the benefits of water diminished by drinking tap water? Are they diminished by drinking bottled water?”

The same Council then said that while a human did assume a certain risk by drinking tap water, a human had no reason to feel safer, if he or she chose to drink bottled water instead of tap water. The Council pointed to the uncertainty surrounding the quality of any case of bottled water. At the same time, the Council issued a reminder, a reminder that formation of new cells demands the availability of water.

That water can come from either the tap or a plastic bottle. Both water sources deliver water with the same level of purity. Bottled water is usually no cleaner, and no safer than tap water. Bottled water does not have to meet a long list of new recommendations. Whenever bottled water has not been shipped out-of-state, then that water does not have to satisfy any specific group of federal regulations.

In fact, The Natural Defense Council has implied that the question “Is tap water good for you?” could be replaced with several other questions: “Is water that contains certain forms of bacteria good for you?” “Is water that contains the carcinogen known as phthalate safe to drink?” “Is water that that has been filtered considered good for you?”

A human should not feel comfortable about drinking water that contains bacteria. A human has no reason to reach for a glass of water, if that water contains a known carcinogen. A human need not hesitate to drink water that has passed through a well-made filter. Those three answers put a different perspective on the question “Is tap water good for you?”

The message that this article hopes to get across is this: Bottled water normally meets standards that fall well below the standards that have been met by filtered water. Bottled water can contain trace elements of certain contaminants. Filtered water lacks those same contaminants.

A well-designed filter can create tap water that has the same mineral content as spring water, but that filtered water does not contain any chemicals that might leak into spring water from the ground water. The ideal filter is an activated carbon filter, one that is used in combination with ion exchange filtration and micron filtration.

When a homeowner or a business owner invests in such a filter, then he or she should not loose sleep by worrying about the safety of the water. The chosen filter allows residents, guests and employees to enjoy safe, great-tasting water. Moreover, that water comes from a reasonably-priced filtering device.

Francisco