Some people with metabolic disease follow a textbook plant-based diet faithfully and watch their liver, lipid, and glucose numbers worsen anyway. A pathologist explains why: for the liver-dominant constitutions Hepatonia and Cholecystonia, a plant-heavy diet works against the body’s structure — and the failing numbers signal a mismatched frame, not failed effort.
Seasonal and Local Food: Why They Work Even Without Knowing Your Constitution
You don’t need to know your constitution to eat well. Two old instincts do most of the work: local food, which generations adapted so every constitution could live on it, and seasonal food, which carries the qi the season demands rather than any one body’s. The eight-constitution diet is the finer layer added on top — not the foundation.
“All Your Tests Are Normal” but You Feel Terrible: A Pathologist on the Gap
Being told every test is normal while you feel terrible is usually not in your head. A pathologist explains the gap: Western medicine reads structure that has already broken, while Korean medicine reads function that goes wrong first. Functional disorders live in that gap — real suffering the structural tests were never built to see.
The Eight Constitutional Diets, Compared: Why One Body’s Medicine Is Another’s Poison
There is no single healthy diet. In Eight Constitution Medicine, the same foods — red meat, leafy greens, seafood, ginseng — are medicine for one constitution and poison for another. This guide compares the constitutional diet of all eight types through their four natural pairs, each with one coherent logic for what to eat and what to avoid.
Treating Illness Before It Takes Form: A Pathologist’s View
A pathologist sees disease at its endpoint — already-damaged tissue — but every disease has a long, silent prologue. The old Korean idea of treating illness before it takes form (治未病) works in that window, the same one Western medicine is rediscovering as prediabetes and pre-hypertension. The lesson: the stretch where you feel off but the tests are still normal is not “nothing wrong” — it is the best time to act.
“All Your Tests Are Normal” — What a Pathologist Means, and Why You Can Still Be Ill
“All your tests are normal” means one precise thing: no structural damage was found — which is not the same as nothing being wrong. A pathologist who also practices Korean medicine explains why function fails before structure does, why knowing it is not a structural problem is itself useful, and what to do about it (KTM, or where it is out of reach, meditation, exercise, diet, and sleep) — after the serious causes are ruled out.
“Nourish the Upright and the Mass Dissolves”: A Pathologist’s View
An old Korean medical principle says: nourish the upright and the mass dissolves on its own (養正積自除). A pathologist explains exactly where it applies — it cannot dissolve a benign tumor, a finished walled-off structure, but it is biologically coherent for malignancy, a living process dependent on its host. A complement to standard cancer care, never a substitute.
Inflammation: Western Medicine Suppresses It, Korean Medicine Disperses It
Western medicine treats inflammation as a fire to suppress; Korean medicine more often reads it as heat the body is trying to discharge. A pathologist who practices both explains when to put the fire out, when to help the body let the heat out, and why the two approaches are complementary rather than rival.
A Pathologist Reads Fatty Liver Twice: Western Medicine and Korean Medicine on the Same Organ
A pathologist who teaches Western liver disease and practices Korean medicine reads the same fatty liver two ways: as a measurable structural lesion of fat-laden cells, and as a functional sign of an organ over-performing its work of storage. The two frameworks meet most revealingly in the vegetarian who develops fatty liver against all the usual rules — and they turn out to be complementary, not rival.
The Gastrotonia Constitution: The Rarest Type, or Just the Least Seen?
Gastrotonia is called the rarest of the eight constitutions, but its rarity may be more apparent than real — a stomach so strong it rarely needs a doctor, a pulse easily mistaken for Pancreotonia, Soyangin parents who can produce Gastrotonia children, and reports that it is more common outside Korea. Seldom seen is not the same as few.