Drinking enough water sounds deceptively simple β but most people, across all ages, are mildly dehydrated for large portions of the day without realising it. In Pakistan’s hot climate, where temperatures routinely exceed 40Β°C in summer, dehydration is a genuine and constant concern. Even mild dehydration β just 1β2% of body weight β measurably impairs physical performance, cognitive function, and mood.
[quick-answer] β‘ Quick Answer: Most women need 2β2.5 litres (8β10 glasses) of water daily, increasing to 3+ litres in Pakistan’s summer heat or with physical activity. Signs of dehydration include dark yellow urine, headache, fatigue, dry mouth, and difficulty concentrating. Drink a glass of water first thing in the morning, carry a water bottle, eat water-rich foods, and set hourly reminders. Coconut water, nimbu pani, and herbal teas all count toward daily fluid intake. [/quick-answer]
What Dehydration Actually Does to Your Body
Water is involved in virtually every body function β regulating temperature, transporting nutrients and oxygen, flushing waste, lubricating joints, maintaining blood pressure, and supporting kidney function. When you’re even mildly dehydrated:
- Brain volume literally shrinks slightly, causing headaches and brain fog
- Blood becomes more viscous, making the heart work harder
- Kidneys concentrate urine to conserve water β increasing kidney stone risk with chronic mild dehydration
- Digestive function slows, causing constipation
- Skin appears duller and less plump
- Physical performance decreases β even 2% dehydration reduces endurance by up to 20%
- Mood worsens β studies show mild dehydration increases anxiety, fatigue, and negative mood even in women at rest
How Much Water Do You Actually Need?
The old “8 glasses a day” rule is a reasonable starting point but not a universal prescription. Individual needs vary based on body size, activity level, diet, climate, and health status. General guidelines:
- Sedentary adult woman in moderate climate: approximately 2 litres (8 glasses) per day
- Active woman: 2.5β3 litres per day
- Pakistan summer (JuneβAugust) or outdoor activity: 3+ litres per day β sweat losses are significant
- Pregnant women: 2.3β2.5 litres per day
- Breastfeeding women: 3 litres per day β milk production requires substantial fluid
Note: Total fluid intake includes water from all sources β plain water, herbal teas, nimbu pani, fresh juices, soups, and water-rich foods. You don’t need to get everything from plain water.
Signs You’re Not Drinking Enough Water
Urine Colour β The Simplest Indicator

Your urine is the easiest and most reliable hydration indicator. Pale yellow (like lemonade) indicates good hydration. Dark yellow or amber indicates mild to moderate dehydration. Almost clear urine means you may be over-hydrating. Use this as your primary daily guide.
Other Signs of Dehydration
- Thirst (mild dehydration is already established by the time you feel thirsty)
- Headache β especially in the afternoon
- Fatigue and low energy without obvious cause
- Dry mouth and lips
- Reduced urination frequency (less than 4β6 times per day)
- Difficulty concentrating or brain fog
- Dizziness when standing up
- Constipation
- Skin that appears dull or shows more pronounced fine lines
Practical Tips to Drink More Water
1. Start Every Morning With a Full Glass of Water
You wake up after 7β8 hours without any fluid intake. Start the day with a full glass (250β300ml) of water β warm or room temperature β before anything else. This immediately rehydrates after the overnight fast, stimulates digestion, and sets a positive tone for the day’s hydration.
2. Carry a Marked Water Bottle
Keep a 1-litre water bottle visible on your desk, in your kitchen, or wherever you spend most time. Drink one full bottle before lunch, one before dinner. Visual reminders dramatically increase water intake. Bottles with time markers (“by 10am, by 12pm”) work exceptionally well.
3. Eat Water-Rich Foods
Many fruits and vegetables are 85β95% water and contribute meaningfully to daily fluid intake: tarbuz (watermelon), khira (cucumber), tamatar (tomatoes), santara (oranges), anaar (pomegranate), pears, and strawberries. These foods are particularly valuable in summer β they provide hydration along with vitamins, minerals, and electrolytes.
4. Make Water More Appealing
Plain water can feel unappealing when you’re used to chai or cold drinks. Make it more enticing with slices of lemon, cucumber, mint, or a pinch of kala namak (black salt). Nimbu pani (fresh lemon water with a pinch of salt and sugar) is not just tasty but also provides electrolytes and is one of the best summer hydration drinks available.
5. Drink a Glass Before Each Meal
Drinking one glass of water 20β30 minutes before each meal is a simple habit that adds 3 glasses to your daily intake effortlessly. It also mildly reduces appetite (useful for weight management) and improves digestion by preparing the stomach for food.
6. Increase Intake in Heat and During Activity
In Pakistan’s summer heat, sweat losses can be substantial β especially for women working outdoors or doing physical activity. For every hour of moderate exercise, add 500β750ml of additional water. On very hot days (40Β°C+), increase baseline intake by at least 500ml and watch your urine colour carefully.
Healthy Hydrating Drinks
- Nimbu pani β water, lemon juice, a pinch of salt, and minimal sugar. Excellent electrolyte replenishment.
- Coconut water (nariyal pani) β natural electrolytes, particularly potassium. Ideal after exercise or in heat.
- Herbal teas β chamomile, peppermint, ginger tea β all count toward fluid intake and provide additional health benefits.
- Lassi (plain, without excess sugar) β hydrating, probiotic, and nutritious.
- Aab-e-dana (soaked chia seed water) β chia seeds swell and hold water, providing sustained hydration with omega-3 benefits.
Final Thoughts
Hydration is the simplest, cheapest, and most overlooked health habit. Proper water intake costs nothing, requires no special equipment, and has measurable benefits on energy, mood, skin, digestion, and kidney health. Start tomorrow: drink a glass of water before your chai in the morning, carry a bottle, and check your urine colour. Three simple steps toward consistently better hydration.

