Every autumn, cold dry air arrives and a wave of rhinitis with it. Korean medicine reads this through the guard qi (wei qi) at the body’s surface: the cold contracts it inward and thins the protection it gives. The reading points to a simple remedy — raise a sweat, keep warm afterward, and sleep enough.
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.
Digestion and the Cholecystonia Constitution: A Weak, Cold Colon and a Sensitive Gut
Cholecystonia takes in and stores food well, but its large intestine — its most recessive organ — struggles to move waste out. So when the body runs down, the colon fails first, in an IBS-like picture of a cold lower belly, a sensitive gut, and cold hands and feet. The anchors of care: keep the gut warm, and sweat appropriately.
Digestion and the Hepatonia Constitution: A Strong Liver That Forgives the Stomach
On paper the Hepatonia constitution should have a weak stomach — both its spleen-stomach and large intestine sit low. In practice it has fewer digestive complaints than its Taeeumin cousin, because a dominant liver quietly compensates, even forgiving unsuitable food. The real concern for this type is not the gut but metabolism: obesity and fatty liver.
Digestion and the Renotonia Constitution: A Milder Weak Stomach, and the Constipation to Watch
Renotonia is the other Soeumin, and its digestion is much like Vesicotonia’s — a cold-natured, weak-stomach picture — only milder, because its stomach works somewhat better. It usually manages digestion well; the one tendency worth keeping an eye on is constipation. Eat warm and to the constitution, and eat enough.
Digestion and the Gastrotonia Constitution: A Robust Stomach and Modern Excess
Gastrotonia is the rarest of the eight constitutions — built around an unusually robust, vigorous stomach. But robust is not immune, and an age of abundance turns that very strength into a risk: overeating, heavy drinking, and the reflux a hot stomach brings. The upside is that when it does go wrong, it rights itself faster than most.
Digestion and the Pancreotonia Constitution: Stomach Heat, Heartburn, and Reflux
Where the Soeumin suffer from a weak, cold stomach, the Pancreotonia constitution suffers from the opposite — a strong stomach that tips into heat. That heat drives acid upward as heartburn and reflux, and it is fed by a hasty temperament. Why a strong stomach is not a safe one, and how to cool it.
Digestion and the Vesicotonia Constitution: When Sunken Qi Lets the Organs Drop
The third and final weak-stomach pattern of the Vesicotonia constitution is sunken middle Qi — the digestive energy that should rise instead sags downward, and its most striking result is organs that literally drop. Why gastroptosis is common in this type, and why treating it as a purely structural problem tends to fail.