Feng
Shui Improves Life
by
Rob Daniels
Business
people as well as common folks throughout the world
improve all aspects of their lives using Feng Shui.
Although the exact origins of feng shui are debatable,
it is thought to have originated in China about five
thousand years ago. According to Feng Shui cultural
and social issues are influenced by natural, metaphysical
and cosmological factors.
Anyone
that has researched Feng Shui history knows that this
level of interaction between all things is the theory
of chi. Although chi is present everywhere, it pools
in special places which are very auspicious in feng
shui. When a less than auspicious placement occurred,
Feng Shui cures were sought to change the flow of
energy. This inclusion of nature into the living environment
is the first point in Feng Shui and it provides solid
ground for higher levels above. The art of Feng Shui
is the balancing of energies through adjusting the
relationships of particular items in the environment.
In Feng Shui, a home and family were lucky if they
were blessed to be placed in the most auspicious surroundings.
Feng
Shui is an ancient discipline which shifts the chi
(life force energy) in your home to improve your life.
It is becoming better known in the West for one good
reason: It works wonders.
One
of the basic rules when decorating with feng shui
is to make sure that the path of energy, whether good
or bad, cannot flow through your home. This happens
when windows are directly across from each other,
or doors are directly in front of a window. When good
energy flows through your home, you can have good
luck one day and bad the next, since the good energy
has just flown through. When bad energy flows through
your home, it is believed to cause more than just
bad luck, including death and pain. Although the bad
energy can flow out of your home, it leaves its wrath
and can be hard to fully get rid of.
When
a neighbor's driveway points toward your front entrance,
counter it by affixing a pa-k'ua mirror to the door.
Pa-ku'a mirrors are usually available at Chinese gift
stores. A pa-k'ua mirror can also be used against
sharp, pointed objects directed at your house for
instance, TV antennas, protruding tree branches, or
spiky architectural features. Place a large mirror
behind the stove so that you won't be surprised when
someone comes up behind you. Hang a mirror up at the
end of a hallway so that it does not seem like a dead
end. If the West section is missing in your home,
you can install a bright light or a mirror to partially
remedy this problem. You can also activate the West
section of your bedroom as well. Do not sleep facing
a mirror. The water element of the mirror will cause
ill health. Avoid having any water feature in the
bedroom such as aquariums, paintings of rivers and
lakes, computers or televisions.
Avoid
sleeping in a room where a toilet or washing machine
is located upstairs. Sleeping underneath an exposed
overhead beam will cause headaches, depending on where
the beam 'hits'.
Arrange
furniture so you can face the doors while sitting.
Make the environment much more comfortable by arranging
seating areas away from drafts and adjusting lighting.
Clean up clutter to encourage relaxation and help
you to find things easier.
Widen
the front walkway to your home to make it more inviting.
Be sure paths between rooms and through rooms are
wide and easy to use. This allows you to walk around
easily, as well as promotes chi. Oil your doors so
they don't squeak, reducing mental irritation.
Fresh
flowers will spread their fragrance all over so decorate
flower vases with beautiful red roses and tulip flowers
and place them at different corners in the house.
One of the basic rules when decorating with feng shui
is to make sure that the path of energy, whether good
or bad, cannot flow through your home. This happens
when windows are directly across from each other,
or doors are directly in front of a window. When good
energy flows through your home, you can have good
luck one day and bad the next, since the good energy
has just flown through. When bad energy flows through
your home, it is believed to cause more than just
bad luck, including death and pain. Although the bad
energy can flow out of your home, it leaves its wrath
and can be hard to fully get rid of.
To
arrange furniture always start with an empty room.
Once a room is empty, you can then fill it one piece
at a time. You should begin with the larger pieces,
like the couch, bed, television, etc. When placing
each item, analyze whether the object is relevant
to the area and whether people can flow through the
room without running into anything. Ask yourself if
you really need it in the room you are working on,
or if it would better fit into another room, or if
you should donate it, to goodwill. You do not have
to put everything back into the room that you took
out. Get rid of whatever you have left after arranging
each room. This is considered clutter and can slow
down your positive energy.
Arrange
furniture so you can face the doors while sitting.
Mirrors are good in most rooms, but once again avoid
their use in the bedroom (invites third parties into
the relationship) and also they should not face the
front door as this causes Chi to bounce back and out
the door. They are good for use in long corridors,
kitchens with stoves facing the wall and living rooms
where you cannot see the front door from when seated.
Make the environment much more comfortable by arranging
seating areas away from drafts and adjusting lighting.
About
the Author
Rob
Daniels is a long term practitioner of Yoga and Pilates
additional articles available at Pilates Shop http://www.pilates-shop.net
and Yoga Store http://www.yoga-store.net
|