Question:
How can I stop my husband from insisting on drinking only bottled water?
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
How can I stop my husband from insisting on drinking only bottled water?
Twelve answers:
Neha
2009-09-25 11:07:22 UTC
Can't you get one of those water filters you attach to your faucet? It will clean the water and he won't have to use those plastic water bottles. He could even get a washable water bottle so that he can fill it up and use it whenever.
webcop33
2009-09-25 11:13:29 UTC
Keep the bills and show him how much it costs per year. Also, there are many studies that show that many companies sometimes just use tap water, but add some minerals and then bottle it up.



Show him the sources of the bottled water.
Jest4fun
2009-09-25 11:55:43 UTC
Kill him and hide the body - in an environmentally friendly manner of course. Only kidding!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! : )



But really things could be worse he could be frequenting prostitutes, smoking crack in dark alley ways, or other unsavory things.



Really in the grand scheme of life; is this the hill YOU want to die on?



Why do people think they can get married and then change a person's habits? Once you change him into (you) you might not want to be married to him because: He isn't the man you married!



As for the bottles. Maybe you could make bird feeders or some other environmentally friendly gadget.



Chances are the more you nag him about it, the more bottled water he will probably drink and as for the bottles I'd leave them where they lie. Maybe once he can't walk around the house/yard etc., he will get the point. You could look on the bright side: They aren't empty 40oz'ers!



Hey, Maybe YOU could open a recycling program! YOU. YOU could collect all the bottles in your community and recycle them and keep the money (if you make any) I'm sure you aren't the only person in your community with the same issue.
TuTu Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
2009-09-25 11:33:09 UTC
Water Filters



http://www.waterfiltercomparisons.com/water_filter_comparison.php?d=gp&gclid=CLO8p9CyjZ0CFU8M2godXUPP1Q
andyg77
2009-09-25 11:27:12 UTC
Maybe he likes the convenience.

Try filling a case of his empties with your filtered water and see if he will accept those.
2009-09-25 15:03:57 UTC
My boyfriend sounds a lot like your husband..



I bought a Brita water pitcher and he would refuse to use it, so one day I poured bottled water in one glass and the Brita in another. Yeah, I pulled a little taste test on him and he could not tell the difference. In the end, he decided to make the switch!



Good luck!
2016-05-21 14:14:19 UTC
I would let him drink bottled water if that's what he wishes to do, I mean he is an adult how could you and why should you stop him? I too only drink bottled water, I hate the taste of tap water that everyone else thinks tastes fine, I also drink soya milk which I find lovely and everyone else hates.. As long as he picks up and gets rid of the bottles I see no problem.
John W
2009-09-26 00:42:57 UTC
Refill the bottles with the filtered water. After a few months of that, tell him that he hasn't been drinking bottled water all this time.



You can also buy what's called a TDS meter which stands for Total Dissolved Solids. I bought mine from Walgreens for about $12. They measure the conductivity of water using an alternating current to prevent electrolysis, since most solids form aqueous ions when dissolved in water, they increase the conductivity. However, you'll find that the bottled water will still give a much lower reading then the filtered water especially if you have well water so using a meter could backfire on you.



Ultimately, you could get a reverse osmosis tap, or a de-ionization filter system, then the water would be practically pure. The cheap de-ionization systems sold in pet shops are not for human consumption because they have no antibacterial agents to prevent bacteria from setting up house in the filters.
Bysomeone
2009-09-25 13:18:40 UTC
Well its not that bad to drink out of a bottle water, however it is not as healthy as drinking from a filtered water faucet. In bottle water there is a chemical called bisphenol A which isn't good for the bottle if you take in too much, especially to males theres seems to be a study that claims males are disappearing because of the chemicals that surround us.
2009-09-25 18:02:17 UTC
Odds are that at some point during your day you'll reach for a nice cold bottle of water. But before you do, you might want to consider the results of an experiment I conducted with some friends one summer evening last year. On the table were 10 bottles of water, several rows of glasses and some paper for recording our impressions. We were to evaluate samples from each bottle for appearance, odor, flavor, mouth, feel and aftertaste - and our aim was to identify the interloper among the famous names. One of our bottles had been filled from the tap. Would we spot it?



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Forum: Op-Ed Contributors

We worked our way through the samples, writing scores for each one. None of us could detect any odor, even when swilling water around in large wine glasses, but other differences between the waters were instantly apparent. Between sips, we cleansed our palates with wine. (It seemed only fair, since water serves the same function at a wine tasting.)



The variation between waters was wide, yet the water from the tap did not stand out: only one of us correctly identified it. This simple experiment seemed to confirm that most people cannot tell the difference between tap water and bottled water. Yet they buy it anyway - and in enormous quantities.



In 2004, Americans, on average, drank 24 gallons of bottled water, making it second only to carbonated soft drinks in popularity. Furthermore, consumption of bottled water is growing more quickly than that of soft drinks and has more than doubled in the past decade. This year, Americans will spend around $9.8 billion on bottled water, according to the Beverage Marketing Corporation.



Ounce for ounce, it costs more than gasoline, even at today's high gasoline prices; depending on the brand, it costs 250 to 10,000 times more than tap water. Globally, bottled water is now a $46 billion industry. Why has it become so popular?



It cannot be the taste, since most people cannot tell the difference in a blind tasting. Much bottled water is, in any case, derived from municipal water supplies, though it is sometimes filtered, or has additional minerals added to it.



Nor is there any health or nutritional benefit to drinking bottled water over tap water. In one study, published in The Archives of Family Medicine, researchers compared bottled water with tap water from Cleveland, and found that nearly a quarter of the samples of bottled water had significantly higher levels of bacteria. The scientists concluded that "use of bottled water on the assumption of purity can be misguided." Another study carried out at the University of Geneva found that bottled water was no better from a nutritional point of view than ordinary tap water.



Admittedly, both kinds of water suffer from occasional contamination problems, but tap water is more stringently monitored and tightly regulated than bottled water. New York City tap water, for example, was tested 430,600 times during 2004 alone.



What of the idea that drinking bottled water allows you to avoid the chemicals that are sometimes added to tap water? Alas, some bottled waters contain the same chemicals anyway - and they are, in any case, unavoidable.



Researchers at the University of Texas found that showers and dishwashers liberate trace amounts of chemicals from municipal water supplies into the air. Squirting hot water through a nozzle, to produce a fine spray, increases the surface area of water in contact with the air, liberating dissolved substances in a process known as "stripping." So if you want to avoid those chemicals for some reason, drinking bottled water is not enough. You will also have to wear a gas mask in the shower, and when unloading the dishwasher.



Bottled water is undeniably more fashionable and portable than tap water. The practice of carrying a small bottle, pioneered by supermodels, has become commonplace. But despite its association with purity and cleanliness, bottled water is bad for the environment. It is shipped at vast expense from one part of the world to another, is then kept refrigerated before sale, and causes huge numbers of plastic bottles to go into landfills.



Of course, tap water is not so abundant in the developing world. And that is ultimately why I find the illogical enthusiasm for bottled water not simply peculiar, but distasteful. For those of us in the developed world, safe water is now so abundant that we can afford to shun the tap water under our noses, and drink bottled water instead: our choice of water has become a lifestyle option. For many people in the developing world, however, access to water remains a matter of life or death.



More than 2.6 billion people, or more than 40 percent of the world's population, lack basic sanitation, and more than one billion people lack reliable access to safe drinking water. The World Health Organization estimates that 80 percent of all illness in the world is due to water-borne diseases, and that at any g
capnfishhook
2009-09-25 12:13:57 UTC
I agree with Kmouse a little on this one. If you can't discourage him from drinking bottled water maybe try to encourage him to drink something like V8 or Gatorade. Too much water can actually be a bad thing. V8 is full of nutrients and Gatorade has elecrolytes. Water for the most part is empty and a person can get enough water in a day from fresh fruits and vegetables.
2009-09-25 11:41:09 UTC
Buy a water cooler. That makes him happy and reduces the amount of waste for you to pick up and that goes to landfill. Thats what I do. Tap water is gross tasting.


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