📝 Detailed Answer
Hello, I am Dr. Yeon-seung Choi from Baekrokdam Oriental Medicine Clinic. I personally remember the days of struggling with dieting—starving myself only to succumb to binge eating out of deprivation. I often wondered if 'cheating days' were the only way to stay sane. To help clarify, here is a comparison of conventional dieting, Western medication, and TKM dieting:
| Category | Conventional Diet (Cheating Days) | Western Medication (Appetite Suppressants) | TKM Diet (Herbal Medicine/Pills) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Core Strategy | Willpower-centered calorie restriction | Hormonal and neurological suppression | Constitutional improvement and metabolic activation |
| Appetite Control | Relies on self-will | Forced suppression via the central nervous system | Reducing stomach heat and inducing natural satiety |
| Metabolic State | Risk of entering 'energy-saving' mode | Temporary metabolic acceleration | Improving Spleen Deficiency (Biheo) to boost energy expenditure |
| Side Effects | Binge eating, muscle loss, lethargy | Insomnia, dry mouth, depression, rebound | Initial palpitations depending on constitution |
| Final Goal | Numerical weight reduction | Rapid appetite control and loss | Removing Phlegm-fluid (Dameum) and Blood Stasis (Eohyeol) to restore balance |
Western medications and cheating-day-based diets focus primarily on suppressing the urge to eat. However, the body tends to push back just as hard as it is suppressed. This is why the yo-yo effect often occurs the moment the medication is stopped or the diet plan falters.
In Traditional Korean Medicine, weight gain is often diagnosed as a result of Phlegm-fluid (Dameum, metabolic waste) or Blood Stasis (Eohyeol, stagnant blood) obstructing circulation. Many patients also suffer from Spleen Deficiency (Biheo), where a weakened digestive system fails to convert nutrients into energy, slowing down metabolism. TKM dieting resolves these underlying issues, helping the body regain its ability to burn energy efficiently. It is not just about starving; it is about flipping your body's 'metabolic switch' back on.