______________________________________________________
A
Good Feng Shui House...
for All Seasons
A home to unwind, savor,
harmonize,
invigorate, connect, refresh, renew.
Since
2000, under the
tutelage and with the guidance and advice of Larry Sang, Ph.D and his senior instructors, P.K.
Odle and Chris Shaul at the
American
Feng Shui Institute
and
Sophia
Shaul of 168 Feng Shui Advisors , we, Lei
(aka Aunty D) and Pila (aka Uncle T),
are designing and
building a good Feng Shui (pronounced fung schway) house for all seasons, based wholly on
traditional Feng Shui principles in 2003.
Larry Sang with Lei and Pila, 2003
I, Lei, am chronicling this experience on the
Web. We welcome our family and
friends, far flung and close, as well as anyone interested in traditional
(classical)
Feng Shui*
in joining us, if they wish, in our Feng Shui house-building
adventure.
For
over four thousand years, Feng Shui has been the art and science of
situating oneself and/or
one's home in alignment with the Earth's positive
energies. Although many New Agers have embraced it, there
is nothing new about it.
Given our increasingly hectic and
stress-filled world, Feng Shui's present-day appeal
is understandable. By situating ourselves and living in harmony with
our environment, Feng Shui is the methodology that allows
us to harness the beneficial energies that enhance and enrich our lives here
on Earth.
Classical
Feng
Shui is not
spiritual. One does not have to be
Taoist, Buddhist or whatever to practice it. One
does not need to compromise religious beliefs or
principles because practicing Feng Shui does not call for
any kind of worship, sacrifice or offering.
While
the art of Feng Shui may sound a little mystical to
skeptics, true Feng Shui is actually steeped in the
scientific realm, combining elements from astronomy, geology and mathematics, as well as philosophy.
The practice also relies on the five natural elements -
wood, fire, earth, metal and water - and the relationship
between each element to create balanced Qi. ~
Source
Qi
(pronounced "chee" and also known as Chi/Ch'i
in China; Prana in India; Ki in Japanese;
Mana in Hawaiian)
is the most important component in Feng Shui. Qi
encompasses everything and holds together all the
different aspects and factors involved in Feng Shui. Qi
cannot be seen, heard or felt, it does not register upon
any of our senses, yet it is an vital energy and force
that flows all around us.
For
years, acupuncture
was considered by most Westerners as "a pretty
far-out thing." It was just a matter of time
when its beneficial results could not be denied. In a May
13, 1996 U.S. News & World Report feature article
titled Nod to an Ancient Art, it reported that
the Food and Drug Administration decreed that acupuncture
needles are "as respectable a medical tool as a
syringe or a scalpel."
Times have changed and now acupuncture -- which involves the
balancing of Qi in the human body -- is now well accepted in the Western world,
bringing relief to more than 12 million Americans.
Feng Shui has been
described as "acupuncture for the
environment" and the Western world is only
just now awakening to its benefits. Just as acupuncture
deals with patterns of energy, or Qi, flowing
through the body and prevents
disease by correcting energy-flow imbalances, Feng
Shui does the same for the home. Results are
results.
High-profile
figures and organizations throughout the corporate world -
from the likes of Donald Trump, Virgin Airlines, Citibank
and The Wall Street Journal - have decided to apply
Feng Shui principles to create harmony, liberate energy,
boost morale and improve productivity.
~ Source
With
convincing and provocative reports
of traditional Feng Shui 's success in enhancing people's
lives and well-being, this traditional Asian methodology
may soon become as respectable and commonplace as a design
and building tool as an engineering survey, a blueprint, or a hammer.
And
so we begin...
>>
Next: Who

*Traditional
Feng Shui as opposed to the faddish Feng Shui, "convenience on
demand," "pablum for the masses" versions, astutely
and forthrightly exposed by Cate Bramble's superb
"Ultimate
Feng Shui" Web site.
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Intro
| Who | Location
|
Chronicle
Personal
Trigrams | House Trigram
|
Advanced
Feng Shui: XUAN KONG
References
| AFSI
Grads |
Books |
Words
of Wisdom

What's New: Chinese
New Year Celebration, 2003
The
Daffodil Garden

"The
only gift is a portion of thyself."
~
Ralph
Waldo Emerson
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