📝 Detailed Answer
Yes, a constitution-based diet is essentially a process of finding 'the path that suits your body.' In Traditional Korean Medicine, each person has inherent strengths and weaknesses in their internal organs (jangbu) and different metabolic patterns. For example, one person may have a spleen deficiency (biheo) constitution with weak digestion, while another has a phlegm (dameum) tendency leading to water retention. Ignoring this and following a uniform diet yields poor results and easy rebound weight gain.
At our Baekrokdam Korean Medicine Clinic, we proceed as follows:
**Step 1: Constitution Diagnosis**
Through consultation, pulse diagnosis, and abdominal examination, we identify the broad constitutional type (Taeyangin, Taeumin, Soyangin, Soeumin) along with current imbalances (spleen deficiency, phlegm, blood stasis, etc.). For instance: 'Ah, this person has active liver function but the spleen is very fatigued.'
**Step 2: Customized Diet Plan**
We provide recommended and cautionary foods based on constitution. For example, Soeumin (少陰人) have weak digestion, so warm, soft foods are advised; Taeumin (太陰人) should focus on vegetables and fish rather than meat. Current symptoms like constipation, coldness, or edema are also considered to suggest specific meals.
**Step 3: Herbal Medicine & Acupuncture**
Herbal medicine regulates metabolic function—for spleen deficiency we use spleen-tonifying herbs, for phlegm we use phlegm-dispersing herbs. Acupuncture or moxibustion stimulates points that help appetite control and digestion. Importantly, this is not about 'take this pill and lose weight' but a tool to transform constitution and habits together.
**Step 4: Lifestyle Coaching**
Meal timing, sleep patterns, and exercise intensity are adjusted to match the constitution. For instance, a spleen-deficient person benefits more from gentle walks or yoga than intense workouts. If exercise leaves you exhausted, it's likely not suited to your constitution.
**Step 5: Regular Review**
Typically every 2–4 weeks, we check not just weight or measurements, but overall condition, digestion, and bowel changes. Feedback like 'I've been stressed this month and need more rest' leads to fine-tuning diet and herbs.
In summary, a constitution-based diet is not a quick-fix method but a gradual process of understanding your body's signals and improving the constitution itself. I can't promise 'do this and you'll definitely lose weight,' but at least you'll avoid the wasted effort of the past.