Feng Shui Basics
What is feng shui, anyway? Here are the basics.

Feng shui literally, "wind-water" in Chinese has become one of the hottest design trends and conversation topics going around.
But while feng shui is suddenly in vogue, it is nothing new. Its history began in the fourth century B.C. when the Chinese invented the compass. During the following century, they began using the device to aid in the proper placement of grave and home sites.
Finding the optimum final resting place for ancestors was to ensure health, harmony and prosperity for their descendants, because we are all connected by cosmic, universal energy called "chi."
Today there are as many forms of
feng shui as there are practitioners. These are the three main "schools" of feng
shui:
Form School:
This school of feng shui began in southern China. It is based on looking at and evaluating
land forms, waterways and geography.
Compass School: The absence of geographical and geological features and the
relative flat topography of northern China necessitated the development of the Compass
School, which dominates throughout most of the world. This is the traditional, classical
feng shui practice which uses either a Chinese (luo pan) or Western-style compass to
determine the eight compass directions in a room, office or home. Because those directions
govern various aspects of your life, you place the corresponding colors, animal symbols,
numbers, and elements in the areas that you wish to activate.
Black Sect Tantric Tibetan School: In this school, which has gained popularity in
the United States, you disregard compass directions. Instead, you stand at and use the
entrance of the room, house or office as your main reference point. Then you place objects
and other enhancements according to what you aspire to and wish to accomplish.
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From 4000 years ago to the present
day, the essential purpose of Feng Shui has remained the same; to increase wealth, improve
health, and promote rewarding relationships for household members.
Those who practice this ancient Chinese philosophy, learn to construct a harmonious and
auspicious place to live and work. To achieve this, one must first consider the placement
of all objects in their surroundings. In ancient China, these "objects" included
geographical landscapes naturally occurring near a dwelling. Positive chi flowed from
life-sustaining lakes and streams, or protective trees that prevented erosion, attracted
wild life, and sheltered homes from storms and rain. Mountains or hills stationed nearby
were believed to bring strength and stability to a house.
In today's world, incorporating a
mountain into your downtown studio, may seem a rather impossible feat. However, the
fundamental concept of creating a perfectly balanced haven can be modified to extend to
modern furnishings, accessories, and actual structural and building materials that
represent a natural counterpart. For example, green carpeting, translates into a grassy
forest floor.
Traditional landscape features are divided into five main categories. The fundamental
arrangements include: wood, water, metal, fire, and earth. According to Feng Shui
principles, balancing these symbols will help inhabitants of the transformed dwelling feel
better, healthier and more content.
Basics
Want to make your home feng shui-friendly, but don't
know where to start? Here are the basics.Regardless of the school you choose, feng shui is
based on these fundamental concepts:
A classic feng shui site, located halfway up a hill, sheltered on three sides with a wide view in front preferably of water.
Avoid sharp, straight edges to
keep energy flowing.
In nature, we find perfectly straight lines in only very short segments, as in the canes
of sugar and bamboo. Even the tallest redwoods and pines have irregularities. It is a
natural law that energy flows in wavy lines like the breezes, mountain ranges and streams.
In the land, chi moves in dragon lines along the topography; in people, its paths are
called meridians.
This undulating flow is beneficial and natural.
Freeways, tunnels, bridges, buildings, corners of building and lampposts have straight
edges, which are considered conduits of negative energy called sha ch'i or
"killing energy."
In feng shui, such are to be avoided.
Balance the "yin" and the
"yang."
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The duality of the universe and the world around us is expressed in the "tai
chi," a circle created by a light and a dark droplet, positioned end to end.
Yang" is male: bright, hard, active, aggressive, odd numbers and the left
side."Yin" is the female: soft, passive, nurturing, fluid, even numbers and the
right side.
Notice that in each half, there is the presence of its complement, in the form of a dot.
This has been accepted for several thousand years in Chinese philosophy, but the
acknowledgment that every male has a feminine aspect, and every female has a male side, is
new to the Western mind and medicine.
Together, yin and yang comprise a whole, and yet there is an element of each in the other.
But sometimes we have too much yang, and other times, we have too much yin. It is up to us
to find and maintain the balance between the two in our physical, mental, emotional,
spiritual, sexual and intellectual selves. Achieving this balance helps us become grounded
or centered, much like a rock that is pounded by the elements and still remains
unyielding.
Use the elements in generative ways.
Each of the five elements fire, earth, metal, water and wood relates to the
other in two different ways.
The first relationship is generative or creative. For example, water nourishes wood, wood
makes fire, fire creates earth (as in volcanoes), earth creates metal, metal creates
water. The second relationship shows how each can be overcome or destroyed by the other.
That is, water puts out fire, fire melts metal, metal cuts wood, wood displaces earth,
earth dams water.
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