| We recommend this article: Feng Shui Home - 1, and also this: Feng Shui Home - 2. |
|
More material related to Feng Shui Home can be found here:
|
|
|
 |
|
Feng Shui Home, Feng Shui
|
 |
| » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |
 |
 |
|
|
ARTICLES RELATED TO Feng Shui Home |
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home:
Spiritual Dictionary on feng shui
feng shui: The science and study of the effect of environmental factors on living. Includes guidelines for determining the best location and direction of your home and workplace; where the rooms in your home should be to best facilitate energy flow; and how to create a garden that will bring positive energy and good luck into your home. Includes two major schools of thought. The Form School examines the shape of the land, the shape of your building, and even its direction in relation to the land around it. The Compass School is based on the pa-kua, an octagonal symbol surrounding the famous yin-yang. Each side is related to one of the eight trigrams from the I Ching, and is related to certain energies. If you are planning a house, you can put a pa-kua over the plans and determine which direction your home should face and the best way to arrange the rooms.
(See also:
feng shui , Magic,
Shamanism,
Paganism, Wicca)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home:
Feng Shui and QiFeng Shui Giving Us Direction
In Taoist thought, everything is made of qi or
energy. In modern terms, this is a perspective of the laws of nature which
views our world as made of multiple energy phases or magnetic patterns.
Consequently, everything around us has the potential to affect our well-being.
Qi is the energy that gives us life, that makes rivers flow and plants grow. Qi
is our spirit, our emotions, our subconscious, our creative intellect. Imagine
if you could see all the wavelengths of light from ultra-violet to infra-red,
you would see that qi is everywhere. It is in the chair you are sitting in, it
is in the words you are reading, flowing in the space around you. Qi is the
essence of existence.
Read more here: » Feng Shui:
Feng Shui and Qi |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home:
Minor
Adjustments, Major Difference in Feng ShuiMinor Adjustments, Major Difference in Feng
Shui
" I explain that energies do change
annually and there are some adjustments she needs to make every year to make
positive frequencies active. Using the Nine Star Chart that indicates annual
planetary cycles and their effect on her home's energy, I recommend that she
move her bed so that she faces west. She should also convert her dining area in
the southwest into a work area. Put yellow sunflowers here or cover the table
with a white or yellow cloth to stimulate the earth frequencies here for prosperity.
At the entry area, she should try to let in more western light by opening the
door or windows and put yellow flowers at the door."
Read more here: » Feng Shui:
Minor
Adjustments, Major Difference in Feng Shui |
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home: Health
and Healing Dictionary on
FENG SHUI
FENG SHUI an ancient Chinese practice of configuring home or work environments to promote health, happiness, prosperity. Feng shui consultants may advise clients to make adjustments in their surroundings, from color selection to furniture placement, to promote a healthy flow of chi, or vital energy.
(See also: FENG SHUI ,
Alternative Health, Healing,
Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home: Feng Shui in BusinessBusiness Feng Shui
There are about 30 factors that influence or
determine our success in life. Of the 30, there are some that are predestined
or unchangeable. Then, there are adjustable factors. If we were to set these
factors on a scale, how do they rank in contributing to our success in life?
How can we improve certain factors to promote us? Feng shui is one of the
easiest accessible means of change that can be used to promote our well-being.
When our business has done all the promotion in the right markets and the
product or service is competitive, and yet business is slow, we need to
consider other factors that may be influencing it.
Read more here: » Feng Shui: Feng Shui in Business |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home:
Feng
Shui and ReligionFeng Shui and Religion
It is important to understand that feng shui
is not a religion. Feng shui is the recognition or understanding of the laws of
nature, that there are certain patterns of energy. For every force, there is an
equal and opposite force. For every cause, there is an effect. This natural
phenomenon exists whether you believe in it or not.
Read more here: » Feng Shui:
Feng
Shui and Religion |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home: Feng Shui In The Bedroom - Romancing the BaguaFeng
Shui In The Bedroom: Romancing the Bagua
If
one of your goals this year is to call a partner into your life or to enhance a
partnership that seems to lack the thrill it used to have, the best room to
adjust in your home is your master bedroom. This is true whether your master
bedroom is in the Partnership corner of your house or not. The master bedroom
represents a primary relationship, no matter where it's located. Anytime there
are relationship issues, particularly in personal relationships, it is
important to keep the bedroom in order and in a balanced and harmonious state.
Read more here: » Feng Shui In Bedroom: Feng Shui In The Bedroom - Romancing the Bagua |
|  |
|
|
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home: Feng Shui - What's in
a Name?Feng
Shui and Names
Naming
something enables us to claim it. We will take on more ownership with something
that we've named, whether it's a house, a car, a dog or a favorite chair. More
importantly, once something becomes personal, we're more apt to have compassion
and patience with any trouble that might come up. We're less apt to cut corners
when doing repairs or cleaning if the space has become personal.
Read more here: » Feng
Shui and Names: Feng Shui - What's in
a Name? |
|  |
|
|
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home: Feng Shui In BusinessFeng
Shui In Business
During
the past seven years of Feng Shui practice, I have discovered that business
people who adhere to the application of Feng Shui principles in their places of
business and homes have a distinct edge over those who do not.
The
Chinese have known for thousands of years how the environment affects the
well-being and prosperity of governments, families and businesses. They know
how to "read" the energies of the mountains, waterways, trees,
shrubs, slopes of the hills, directions of the roads, and other environmental
features. They also know how shapes and colors define these energies both
outside and inside of structures. When they add compass direction and time to
these distinctions, they can give a comprehensive picture of what any
particular environment will provide for its inhabitants, and how to most
effectively use that space.
Read more here: » Feng Shui: Feng Shui In Business |
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Feng Shui Home:
Feng
Shui and Stair CasesFeng Shui and Stair Cases
First, we must understand what a staircase is
before we can know how it affects us. Staircases are made up of many steps,
each protruding out as a potential source of danger. When we are not careful,
it is easy to stumble or hurt ourselves on the steps. Staircases are also
vertical shafts that penetrate through each floor, making a "hole" in
the building, especially in high rises. In feng shui, staircases are known as a
source of sha chi or potentially harmful or degenerating energy. Therefore, in
order to understand what effect it has on us, we must know the residents' birth
elements and where the staircase is located. Different people and different
stair locations have different effects.
Read more here: » Feng Shui:
Feng
Shui and Stair Cases |
|  |
|
|
|
 |
| » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |
 |
 |
|
|
|
More material related to Feng Shui Home can be found here:
|
|
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|