Welcome to Our Second Core Pillar

Guided by Wisdom


Constitutional Pattern Recognition

Traditional healing systems have always recognized that different people need fundamentally different approaches to health. Rather than one-size-fits-all solutions, these ancient medical traditions developed sophisticated frameworks for understanding individual constitutions and tailoring support accordingly.

Ayurvedic Constitutional Types (Doshas) Ayurveda identifies three primary constitutional patterns, Vata, Pitta, and Kapha, and their various combinations. Some people naturally run hot and thrive with cooling foods and calming practices. Others have cooler constitutions and need warming, energizing support. Some have fiery digestion that can handle heavy foods, while others require gentle, easily digestible meals.

Your doshic constitution provides a roadmap for making decisions about nutrition, exercise timing, daily routines, sleep patterns, and which herbs might support your system. This isn’t about rigid rules, but understanding your body’s natural tendencies.

Traditional Chinese Medicine Patterns: TCM examines how vital energy (qi) flows through the body and identifies where imbalances typically occur. Some people tend toward deficiency patterns, characterized by a lack of energy or warmth. Others lean toward excessive patterns with too much heat, activity, or inflammation. These patterns guide treatment approaches and lifestyle recommendations. While it’s still symptom-based, it offers extensive natural wisdom of herbs, energy meridians, and the flow of energy.

Energy Center Assessment: The Vedic chakra system maps seven primary energy centers that govern physical, emotional, and spiritual health. In comparison, Human Design expands this to nine centers that can be defined (consistent energy) or undefined (open to conditioning). Understanding your energetic configuration reveals where energy flows freely versus where blocks occur, and whether you’re designed to have consistent energy or remain flexible.

Korean Sasang Constitutional Medicine This system identifies four distinct constitutional types, each with specific organ strengths and vulnerabilities, guiding which organs need extra support and which dietary approaches are most supportive.