Tuesday 20 January 2015

The need of water

Down there in the darkness was a cistern filled with water so sweet that he could smell it” (Page 53).

Sun blazing overhead, heat beating down on me. Skin sizzling, blistering to the touch. Loss of breath with the weight on my back. The sweet taste of water running past my lips. The day had been long but as it drew to its end the match was over. I had played hard and long and the golf tournament was finally drawing to a close. At that point I was regretting forgetting water that day and thanked the existence of such a pure a substance as water. Nothing had ever tasted so good.

In the book, The Road by Cormac McCarthy, the father found a tank of water and he sees it as this sparkly drink that was given to him by the gods. I can relate, maybe not in the same way but being without water for long periods of time does not feel good and when you finally get that first sip of water, it's like liquid gold. The most precious substance, simple but delicious.

On the bottom of Maslow's hierarchy of needs there are the physiological/biological needs such as air, food, water, shelter, warmth, and sleep. These are the core needs to survive, for any human. But what does it mean to truly survive? Sure you need the basics to survive but to live solely on the pure needs to live on could drive any man mad. Even without the very basics of needs a human being can survive without food on average for 3 weeks and depending on many things that include the weight and build of the person in question could survive for 70 days. Without water though is a different question. Without water, at very best, 10 days and then you bite the dust. On average any human can only live without water for 3 days. Continuing on the most needed of needs if you find yourself without shelter or proper gear in a harsh environment, lets say it's a harsh snowy environment, then you will only have 3 hours to survive. Looking on the even more basic and yet simple thing that we all take for granted is air. Without air you can live for 3 minutes, after 3, if you don't die, you will suffer brain damage that will leave you in a vegetative state.

If you are to survive just remember the rules of three. 3 weeks without food, 3 days without water, 3 hours without shelter, 3 minutes without air.

5 comments:

  1. Very interesting, but I don't agree with your statement about only being able to survive 3 hours in snowy conditions.

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  2. Really eye opening. Makes you think about how many resources Americans have access to in modern times. And makes you think about how much the human body depends on water and food to survive.

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  3. When I was on a backpacking trip in the canyons of Utah, we had to plan how far we hiked everyday so we would make it to our next water source without running out of water that we already had.

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  4. When I was on a backpacking trip in the canyons of Utah, we had to plan how far we hiked everyday so we would make it to our next water source without running out of water that we already had.

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  5. I like how literal your research question is. We see in "The Road" that the man will open any door, search almost any house and rummage through every piece of trash just to find food. But does the fact that they won't eat other humans pose the possibility that food is not the most important drive for these characters?

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