📝 Detailed Answer
Many people try to follow strict, trendy diet plans, only to find themselves feeling exhausted and dizzy. While calorie counting is useful for objectively monitoring intake and preventing overeating, its fatal flaw is that it ignores 'bodily efficiency.'
In Traditional Korean Medicine (TKM), two people consuming 1,500 kcal will have entirely different reactions based on their constitution. For instance, someone with Spleen Deficiency (Bi-heo, 脾虛) may struggle with nutrient absorption and energy conversion, leading to weight gain. Another person might experience bloating and heaviness due to Blood Stasis (Eo-hyeol, 瘀血) hindering circulation. The key is not the number, but the 'state' of your body.
Furthermore, if you have accumulated Phlegm-Fluid (Dam-eum, 痰飮)—internal metabolic waste—weight loss becomes even more difficult. Even with a severe calorie deficit, a slow metabolism will lead to a quick plateau. Prioritizing the 'metabolic switch' over mere number reduction is essential.
I recommend using calorie calculators only as a supplementary tool. Instead, focus on whether your body is efficiently burning energy and identifying where blockages exist. Let's work together to find the optimal balance tailored specifically to your unique constitution.