atmospheric pressure (i.e., the weight of the air above your head) imparts a uniform stress of 1 tsf on your head. Let's say your head is one square foot in plan dimension (i.e., blockhead - ha). The air pressure would then make you "weigh" ALOT! Well, that's not right. You may only weigh 220# like me.
Atmospheric pressure is acting in all directions. So, the 1 tsf is acting sideways, upwards and downwards in every dimension of your body. As a result, it has no affect on your body weight. When you stand on a scale, the reading is your body weight - and just that!
Same is true for hydrostatic forces. When you stand in a pool and hold your girlfriend, she seems light as a feather. If you stood there and they drained the pool, her weight would decrease.
Vertical forces above the water table account for the weight of the soil grains and the weight of the water in the pore space. Vertical forces below the water table include the weight of hte soil grains, but the hydrostatic forces are subtracted.
Let's consider a water table at 10 ft and calculate the vertical effective stress at 15 ft (consider soil with a moist unit weight of 120 pcf). You'd have a soil load of 1,800 psf, but subtract out a hydrostatic force of 288 psf.
Hope this helps.
f-d
¡papá gordo ain’t no madre flaca!