Cholecystonia is the Taeeumin constitution with the strongest liver-gallbladder yet a life governed by its weakest organ — a cold, easily-sluggish large intestine. Trouble begins in the bowel, the body splits into a cold belly and a hot chest, and the whole art of the type is warming and supporting the colon: warm cooked food, root vegetables first, meat alongside (never avoided).
How Should an Ordinary Person Approach Korean Medicine?
If Korean medicine is neither proven nor pseudoscience, how should an ordinary person approach it? Not with blind faith or blanket dismissal, but with disciplined open-mindedness: try it where the downside is low, judge it by your own response over time, and keep your doctor, your prescriptions, and a proper diagnosis firmly in hand.
Is Korean Medicine Scientific? First, Define “Scientific”
Is Korean medicine scientific? The honest answer is neither yes nor no. Science is a method built on a materialist assumption suited to the physical body; KTM begins from Qi, Yin-Yang, and the Five Phases. It is neither proven by the standard of the randomized trial nor pseudoscience — but a refined empirical tradition awaiting a science that can test it on its own terms.
What Is Eight Constitution Medicine? A Beginner’s Guide to Korea’s Eight Body Types
Eight Constitution Medicine is a Korean system holding that every person is born as one of eight fixed body types, each with its own lifelong pattern of strong and weak organs — which is why the same diet or remedy can heal one person and harm another.
Clear Fire and Turbid Fire: The Two Faces of Heat in Korean Medicine
In Korean Traditional Medicine, fire (火) is not the enemy. It comes in two forms: a clear fire that quietly sustains life, and a turbid fire that stirs you into action. Health lies not in extinguishing the fire but in keeping it clear.
After Sunset, Blood Works the Night Shift: A Qi and Blood View of the Body at Night
Seen through Qi and Blood, the night is not rest but the body’s busiest repair shift: while Qi runs the day, Blood works hardest after dark — which is why night sweats, nighttime insomnia, and sleep-dependent memory all point back to the same nocturnal labor.
The Colonotonia Constitution: Why the Large Intestine, Not the Lung, Is the Clinical Center
The Colonotonia constitution (금음체질) is the second of the two lung-dominant constitutions in Eight Constitution Medicine — and not a minor variant of Pulmotonia. Its clinical center sits in the over-functioning large intestine rather than the weak liver, the disease pattern differs accordingly, and the dietary strictness required during illness diverges sharply between the two constitutions even though they eat similarly in stable health.
The Pancreotonia Constitution: Strong Stomach Heat, Weak Kidney Reserve
Pancreotonia (토양체질) is, alongside Hepatonia, one of the two most commonly observed constitutions in the Korean population. The hierarchy is Pancreas > Heart > Liver > Lung > Kidney — but “strongest pancreas” does not mean “safe pancreas.” Disease in this constitution arises genuinely from both ends of the hierarchy, and many of Korea’s most cherished tonic foods are exactly what this body should not be eating every day.
Renotonia vs Vesicotonia: Why the Two Kidney-Dominant Constitutions Are Not the Same
Renotonia and Vesicotonia are the two kidney-dominant constitutions in Eight Constitution Medicine, both belonging to the Soeumin category — and both routinely confused as “the weak-digestion type.” But a single reversal in the lung-liver ordering makes them diverge in temperament, disease mechanism, and the diet each one needs. For one, the amount of food matters most; for the other, the type.
How Strict Should You Be With Your Constitutional Diet? An Arndt-Schultz Reading of ECM
How strictly should you follow your Eight Constitution Medicine diet? The honest clinical answer, after years of practice, is that the constitutional diet is a dose, not a binary — and permanent maximum strictness backfires in the same way the hygiene hypothesis describes for early-life microbial exposure.