📝 Detailed Answer
The hardest part of dieting is resisting snacks. I remember how I used to force myself to hold back, only to eventually binge—wasting a lot of effort. In Korean medicine, frequent snack cravings are analyzed from three angles: 1. Spleen deficiency (biheo, 脾虛): when the spleen's function is weakened, nutrient absorption falters, and the brain sends false hunger signals. Instead of suppressing the urge, eat small amounts of warm, easily digestible food. 2. Phlegm-fluid (dameum, 痰飮): when waste accumulates and blocks qi and blood circulation, the body mistakenly thinks it lacks energy and craves sweets. Herbal teas that promote circulation are far better than simple sugars. 3. Blood stasis (eohyeol, 瘀血) combined with stress: severe stress thickens the blood and stagnates it, triggering the brain's reward system to seek stimulating snacks. At Baekrokdam Korean Medicine Clinic, we approach this by: first diagnosing whether your condition is spleen deficiency or phlegm-fluid; second, prescribing customized herbal medicine to stabilize appetite by curbing false hunger; third, recommending constitution-based alternative snacks (e.g., nuts, unsweetened yogurt); and fourth, gradually reducing snack frequency so the body relearns how to use energy on its own. The core insight is that snack cravings should not be endured—instead, you must resolve the body's imbalance so that the cravings naturally disappear.