Baths and Colds by Constitution: Who Should Sweat It Out, and Who Shouldn’t (Eight Constitutions)

A cold runs through a fixed set of reactions — fever, aches, cough — and letting them happen well is how you beat it. Korean medicine treats sweating as central to that, and a warm bath is the simplest tool. But how much to sweat depends on your constitution: some types thrive on a full hot sweat, while others must keep it light and finish lukewarm.

Stress and Immunity in Eight Constitution Medicine: Why Tension Opens the Door to Illness

Everyone knows stress weakens immunity, but “stress hormones and cytokines” leaves you asking what to do about it. Korean medicine offers a more usable picture: stress reaches the immune system through two concrete routes — internal heat that props the sweat pores open, and a tension that hampers the body’s cleaning work — and some constitutions feel it far more than others.

Digestion and the Colonotonia Constitution: A Powerful Colon, Food That Won’t Stay Down, and the Cost of Anger

Colonotonia is built around a powerful large intestine whose overfunction is the clinical center of the type. Its digestive troubles come in two forms — food that won’t stay down, and inflammatory bowel disease — and running through both is one thread: anger, which disperses energy outward and strengthens the already-dominant lung.

Digestion and the Pulmotonia Constitution: When Food Won’t Stay Down, and the Bowel Inflames

Pulmotonia often digests well — its spleen-stomach is relatively strong. Its digestive trouble comes from two other directions: a lung-dominant tendency that makes food hard to keep down, and a vulnerability to inflammatory bowel disease tied to anger and a meat-heavy diet. And because the liver is its most recessive organ, this type handles medicines poorly.

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