Every other basic 20- 30- and 40-something is addicted to LaCroix. Especially popular amongst "perfect" women who are hiding their eating disorder. |
| I prefer Whole Foods brand sparkling water myself, but just FYI, my dentist said seltzer water doesn't do anything to your teeth. |
| La Croix is some glover seltzer that is nicely packaged. Drink up, tools. |
^^ flyover |
Your dentist is wrong. |
Ah, so your addicted friend is thin and you are jealous. I love LaCroix and I'm skinny. Hate away. |
Are you a dentist? |
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La Croix is no worse than any other carbonated beverage, and it's better than sugary carbonated beverages. If you swish with water after or chew sugarless gum or eat while drinking, you're helping to avoid the problem.
I like all sparkling water - La Croix, Giant, Seagrams, etc... I am partial to a few Lacroix flavors though. It also keeps me from drinking juice and soda and sweet tea, which I'm trying to avoid. Whatever. |
| Anyone else find it a bit mental that the OP is fixated on what other people drink? I had to google what that drink even was... |
Dentist here. Her dentist is right. Regular carbonated water has only a slight pH change from regular water - not enough to affect your teeth. It's the citric acid that is in the "natural flavors" of the LaCroix that bring the pH way down to to danger zone (for tooth destruction, at least). Hope that clears things up. |
It does. Thank you. |
It's not nicely packaged, though. The packaging is hideous. While I think it's silly to pay for anything that doesn't give you calories, if it will help in the fight against obesity in this country, I'm all for it. |
| Isn't calling things basic getting kind of... basic? |
Well, it's no wonder you aren't in marketing. |
In other words: LaCroix is destroying your teeth. |