📝 Detailed Answer
Convenience store diet snacks (chicken breast sausage, salad, protein bars) and general diet methods (diet control + lifestyle improvement + herbal medicine when needed) each have clear pros and cons. Convenience store snacks provide pre-labeled calories and protein, giving a sense of reassurance like 'just this much today.' However, being processed foods, they are high in sodium and added sugars, quickly accumulating dampness (濕) in the body and leading to spleen deficiency (脾虛). In Traditional Korean Medicine, the spleen (脾) governs water metabolism and nutrient absorption; when weakened, water retention occurs and fatigue piles up. In contrast, general diet methods gradually reduce meal portions, switch to seasonal vegetables and whole grains, and supplement spleen qi (脾氣) with herbal medicine. This helps eliminate phlegm-fluid (痰飲) and promotes smooth circulation of qi and blood (氣血), making the body feel lighter.
Here is a summary of key differences:
| Aspect | Convenience Store Diet Snacks | General Diet Methods |
|--------|-------------------------------|----------------------|
| Calorie management | Easy, pre-labeled | Requires self-measuring, inconvenient |
| Nutritional balance | Skewed toward specific nutrients (mainly protein) | Balanced carbohydrates, protein, and fats possible |
| Satiety | Short and artificial | Long-lasting (dietary fiber + whole grains) |
| Side effects | Bloating and constipation due to excess sodium and sugar | Initial dizziness, appetite rebound (manageable) |
| TKM perspective | Prone to induce spleen deficiency (脾虛) and phlegm-fluid (痰飲) | Favorable for restoring spleen qi (脾氣) and eliminating dampness (濕) |
| Long-term effect | High risk of rebound weight gain, hard to sustain | Gradual constitution improvement, higher maintenance likelihood |
To put it briefly: if you urgently need visible changes, convenience store snacks may seem more accessible. However, if you want to avoid disrupting your metabolic foundation and proceed slowly, general diet methods are better. I also took the easy route initially and made some mistakes. So now I recommend patients to mix both approaches in appropriate proportions. The ideal ratio should be decided after an in-person consultation considering your constitution.