📝 Detailed Answer
As a practitioner of Korean Medicine, I truly understand the struggle of failing a strict diet or feeling dizzy from malnutrition. While dietary management is a foundational practice to reduce toxins in the body, relying solely on willpower often leads to burnout.
Traditional Korean Medicine starts by asking, 'Why do I feel hungrier than others?' or 'Why isn't the weight coming off?' For instance, the accumulation of Phlegm-Fluid (Dam-eum, 痰飮) or Blood Stasis (Eo-hyeol, 瘀血) can slow down your metabolism, significantly reducing the efficiency of the same diet. Furthermore, if you have a Spleen Deficiency (Bi-heo, 脾虛) with weak digestive functions, an aggressive low-calorie diet can deplete your vital energy (Qi), ironically leading to a yo-yo effect.
Here is a simple comparison:
| Category | Dietary Management (Healthy Eating) | TKM Weight Loss (Custom Prescription) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Objective | Nutritional supply & calorie restriction | Metabolic activation & appetite control |
| Advantage | Formation of healthy eating habits | Overcoming plateaus & improving constitution |
| Limitation | Requires strong willpower; risk of plateaus | Requires personalized diagnostic process |
| Approach | Focuses on 'What to eat' | Focuses on 'How the body reacts' |
| Recommended For | Those needing basic dietary correction | Those with low metabolism or difficulty controlling appetite |
If your diet represents the 'fuel,' herbal medicine is the 'spark' that ignites it. If the spark is weak, even the best fuel will not burn efficiently, leaving you feeling bloated and sluggish. If you want to assess your current bodily state and ignite that spark according to your specific constitution, please feel free to visit the clinic for a consultation.