Vesicotonia eats little, so obesity rarely arrives the usual way. But modern food and modern inactivity have opened a side door: skinny-fat. And for this type there is one rule that overrides the rest — do not chase a sweat, because sweating weakens the stomach itself.
Dieting as a Pancreotonia: A Big Appetite, Strong Digestion, and a Hurried Mind
Pancreotonia digests well, stores well, and — under stress or fatigue — wants to eat. The most useful lever for this type is not a food list at all: slowing down the hurried mind quiets the appetite, and alcohol and spicy food are what manufacture false hunger.
The Meat-Based Diet Belongs to Hepatonia: Eating and Exercising to Lose Weight as a Strong-Liver Type
The high-meat, low-vegetable diet that wrecks some people works remarkably well for one constitution. In Eight Constitution Medicine there is a mechanism behind it: meat strengthens Metal qi, and Metal qi shores up the lung — which is exactly where Hepatonia is weakest.
Indigestion and Dizziness: Could It Be Dampness (Dameum)? A Constitutional Look at How You Eat
Bloating that never quite clears, a foggy head, morning puffiness — Korean Medicine reads these as dameum, the stagnant residue of food the body couldn’t process. And whether it builds up depends less on what you eat than on how you eat for your constitution.
To Reduce Swelling, Should You Drink More Water or Less?
It sounds backwards, but the water you drink is usually the answer to swelling, not the cause. The body holds fluid to run its metabolism; give it what it needs and let thirst be your guide. The one exception is the night before you need to look sharp.
Why Eating for Your Constitution Helps You Lose Weight
Losing weight comes down to eating less — that part is not negotiable. But eating for your constitution makes eating less far easier to sustain, and it raises the rate at which your body burns what you do eat. Here is the mechanism behind both.
Fortifying the Spleen vs Tonifying It: A Subtle Distinction That Explains Swelling
As a student I assumed “fortify the spleen” and “tonify the spleen” meant the same thing. They don’t. One adds energy to the organ; the other simply clears the dampness sitting on it — and that distinction turns out to explain a great deal about why we swell.
What a Gold Standard Really Is — and Why I Question My Own LDL Number
Every health checkup flags me for suspected hyperlipidemia, though only my LDL is high. That sent me looking at how the gold standard behind that flag was built — and at how much looser the founding of a “firm and settled” theory can be than we assume.
Does Fat in the Blood Really Clog Arteries? Rethinking What Builds Plaque
The lipid hypothesis says cholesterol in the blood clumps into plaque and blocks the artery. But when researchers lowered cholesterol and then looked at the plaque itself, the plaque did not shrink. So what actually builds it? High blood sugar and oxidation — with cholesterol closer to the firefighter than the fire.
Does Zero-Sugar Cola Help You Diet? What the Research and Korean Medicine Both Suggest
Zero-sugar drinks feel like a free lunch: the sweetness without the calories. My own gut disagreed, and so does a surprising amount of research. Korean Medicine offers a clean explanation — sweetness without substance slows metabolism and quietly sets you up to eat more later.