Eight Constitution Medicine defines health not as organ balance but as adequate imbalance — moderate, sustainable differences in organ strength. Disease is excessive imbalance. This single reframe changes what diagnosis and treatment mean in ECM.
Looks Like Mom, Constitution Like Dad: How ECM Is Really Inherited
In Eight Constitution Medicine, a child can look like one parent and inherit the other parent’s constitution. Constitution reflects internal organ size and strength — not facial features — and the two inheritance streams travel independently.
Universal Health Comes Before Constitutional Health: The Haenyeo Lesson in ECM
Constitution matters in Eight Constitution Medicine, but it ranks below nutrition, social purpose, lifestyle, and mental composure. A thought experiment with three Pulmotonia women shows why the foundations come before the food list.
Korean Traditional Medicine vs Traditional Chinese Medicine: Why They Diverged
Korean Traditional Medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine share classical roots but diverged in strategy and theory. The deepest difference shows up in how each understands constitution — and why Eight Constitution Medicine could only have emerged in Korea.
The Eight Signature Diseases of ECM: Why Each Constitution Has Its Own Vulnerability
In Eight Constitution Medicine, each of the eight constitutions has a “signature disease” — a condition it is uniquely vulnerable to when its inborn organ imbalance becomes excessive. Understanding these patterns reveals what makes ECM clinically powerful.
Why the Same Patient Gets a Different ECM Diagnosis at Every Clinic
Different ECM clinics often give different constitutional diagnoses for the same patient. Here’s why this happens, what constitutional pulse accuracy actually looks like, and why the verification process is the system working correctly.
When Fermentation Changes the Rules: Doenjang, Soybeans, and ECM Constitution
Soybeans are harmful for Pulmotonia and Colonotonia in ECM — but traditionally fermented doenjang is safe for all eight constitutions. Here’s the biochemical and constitutional explanation for why fermentation can change a food’s category entirely.
Dizziness and ECM: Why the Same Symptom Has Eight Different Causes
Dizziness has different constitutional causes in ECM. This post maps the mechanism across all eight constitutions — from anemia-prone Vesicotonia to congestion-driven Hepatonia — and explains why sex differences matter too.
Why Bloodletting Worked — For Some People: A Hepatonia Explanation
Bloodletting was mainstream medicine for two thousand years. ECM explains why it genuinely helped certain patients — specifically those with a dominant liver system — while harming others.
Your ECM Constitution Matters — But Not as Much as You Think
Knowing your ECM constitution is valuable, but constitution-based diet ranks last among the five factors that determine long-term health. Here’s what actually comes first.