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well. The eyes are essentially balls of jelly, and almost entirely made
of water. With long-term chronic dehydration, they begin to lose their
perfect shape as the body searches for available water. Even loss of
height is primarily a dehydration issue; the discs are essentially bags
of water, and they deflate over time.
Steven: But these are all very common signs of aging; in your
opinion why do people consistently lose water from these particular
places?
Loren: What these things have in common is that they are all not-
critical to our survival. Every day, the average body is trying to figure
out how to meet its most critical needs for water in a system that is
deficient. While the body does everything possible to insure that the
heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, blood stream and brain all have the water
that they need, when there isn’t enough systemic water, these needs
can only be met by taking water from those organs/systems that are
not critical to our survival…like all the ones mentioned above.