Feng Shui and Geomancy

 What is feng shui? 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
 Choosing the Right Feng Shui School or Method
 Feng Shui can greatly assist you to  
 Feng Shui and Health
 Poison Arrow  

 

What is feng shui?


The word "feng" means "wind" and the word "shui" means "water". Think of energy or "chi" flowing from the top of a mountain. It curves and twists around all the elements of the topography -- hills, valleys, busy highways -- until it reaches the water. There it stops. The chi flows from high to low and how it turns, how it waxes and wanes in its movement; how it blocks or supports the flow of our own energy, all these determine whether it is beneficial chi, called "sheng chi", or harmful chi, called "sha".

Almost everyone has had the experience of walking into a room and immediately feeling uncomfortable, as though there's something not right about the space. Bringing in the time element, why is it that we feel good some days and very different other days, even though the weather is the same, we've eaten the same foods and have no apparent reason to feel so radically different? We may even notice patterns or cycles in our ups and downs, our good times and bad times. A Feng Shui master has spent years cultivating and refining awareness of the time-space flow of the energies that affect our lives. Sometimes, small adjustments in our living space can make a large difference in how energy flows and in how we feel. These changes can show up in our lives as improved health, increased wealth and greater peace of mind.

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Choosing the Right Feng Shui School or Method


With the recent upsurge of interest in Feng Shui, many different methods and techniques have emerged. Some new forms of Western Feng Shui and the Black Hat School are based upon an intuitive approach to working with beneficial and detrimental energies. Many commercial sites make extravagant claims based on the superstitious placement of various symbolic objects.

Historically, in the long development of Feng Shui, generations of adept masters have found the "Flying School" and "I-Ching" methods of divination to be the most powerful and accurate. These are the methods that Christopher Au has practised and mastered over twenty years of diligent application. With a hint of humour, Chris has referred to these methods as the "Ferraris of Feng Shui, compared to which other methods are Toyotas."

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Feng Shui can greatly assist you to:


* Increase production and profits;

* boost your career;

* increase confidence, motivation, efficiency and energy;

* reduce stress, workload, mishap, illness, calamity;

* smooth out conflict; enhance relationships with partner and/or children;

* ensure best layouts for new or modified buildings and extensions;

* avoid the star of destruction that adversely affects business, career and health.

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Flying Star Feng Shui and Health by Christopher Au, Certified Feng Shui Master, and Colin Yardley


Flying Star Feng Shui is a time honored, sophisticated Chinese Feng Shui system that measures the flow of beneficial and harmful time-space energies that affect our lives. Similarly, I-Ching Feng Shui comprises a rigorous method of calculations designed to assist us in capturing what is traditionally called "auspicious cosmic breath". In modern terms, we might conceive of this as learning to align ourselves with harmonious energies, while avoiding or minimizing harmful ones.

In the Flying Star system, eight stars float in eight equal quadrants of a circle, with a ninth star occupying the circle's centre. Each star represents a constellation of qualities and attributes, some beneficial, others debilitating or harmful. One might think of each star as the tip of an iceberg of energetic qualities that influence our lives. We know, thanks to modern radio telescopy, infrared and thermal photography, that we live in a sea of energies, but as these powerful energies are largely invisible, we seldom give them much thought. At the same time, we must be aware that there are simply too many instances in which humans contract cancer for no apparent reason, in spite of taking exercise, eating healthy food and getting sufficient rest. From the Feng Shui perspective, the energies of position and the flow of chi can often explain these anomalies. The wrong placement of either bed, or bedroom door, or the main door to a house may produce strong negative effects over time. These issues of placement are not based on groundless superstition, but on careful and exacting observations of how living things react to the topography and to the subtle energies of their environment. Animals are often much more attuned to these energies than humans. Note how often a dog will circle and move around to find just the right place to rest. Research in Germany has demonstrated that dogs will never sleep over geopathic stress zones, i.e., zones of negative radon energy or other negative telluric energies emanating from the earth.

It is beyond the scope of this short description to describe the complex observations and interpretations of natural and cosmic energies that have produced the designations for each star in the Flying Star Feng Shui system. Here, we can only note that the following correlations have been established: In terms of health, Star # 1 governs our urology system. Star # 2 governs the abdomen, Star # 3 governs the liver, spleen and legs, Star # 4 governs our respiratory system. Therefore, if this last star is adversely positioned or afflicted in our chart, asthma, bronchitis or other respiratory problems may be aggravated. Star # 5 is related to malignancy. If this star is badly situated for someone, in conjunction with a Star # 4 affliction, there may be increased risk of breast cancer or acute asthma problems. Star # 6 governs the head, including the brain. Star # 7 governs the lungs. Star # 8 governs the back and fingers. Star #9 governs our eyes, heart and blood. The full list of anatomical correlations is far more comprehensive, but for simple applications, the above list will suffice.

The method of floating is difficult to learn and to explain. Though an oversimplification, it might be useful to think of the nine stars as nine constellations moving around the points of the compass with ourselves as the compass point center. One year a given star will be to our Northeast, another will be in the West, a third in the Southwest, and so on. We can learn how to align and position ourselves in our living spaces to enhance the influence of beneficial stars and minimize the effects of harmful ones.

Traditional Feng Shui offers many suggestions for the neutralization of the bad stars, to keep them from flexing their muscles, so to speak, and causing us injury, and sometimes life threatening problems. These methods run the gamut from simple to complex and only a proper course of training in Feng Shui will equip a person to use them with consistent good effect. Nevertheless, a simple explanation may be given based on the generative cycle of the five principal elements - Earth, Fire, Water, Wood and Metal. In this system, each of these elements has a specific relation to the others. One element will augment or benefit another, while producing a destructive effect on another. An obvious example is fire burning wood. In this relationship, wood is very beneficial to fire, increasing its heat and intensity. Wood takes energy away from water, however, by soaking it up. Feng Shui geomancy determines the position of these elements in a person's birth chart and relates that person's cycle of rising and falling fortunes to larger astrological cycles which are, in turn, governed by a specific element.

In application, this may mean, for example, that if a person is being adversely affected by the earth element of a bad star in his chart, the remedy may involve the use of brass in the person's workplace to counteract that negative earth energy, since metal weakens earth in Five Element Theory. Similarly, the use of red colored material, such as a red carpet, may be used to neutralize the negative wood element energy of a malevolent star. Here, the red color, as fire energy, burns the wood. It is always important to remember that we are not just talking about the literal visible elements here, but more importantly, about the energetics of their interactions.

A common Feng Shui remedy involves relocating or changing the compass direction which the front door of a house faces. The door is like a mouth, and if it's not in line with beneficial cosmic breath, the room will not be filled with harmonious energies. What complicates things here is that there is not one beneficial direction for all persons. Depending on the balance of five elements in one's natal chart and other considerations, a beneficial direction for one person may be disadvantageous to another and vice versa. A skilled compass based Feng Shui practitioner can sort out the complexities of good and bad directions for each member of the family. It may strain credulity to suggest that changing the direction one faces while working or placing one's bed to face a certain direction can have profound effects on one's health and fortune, but these geomantic methods have been used for thousands of years, with thousands of people swearing to their efficacy through personal experience.

One final word, no science, including Feng Shui, can halt the aging process, but it can be used to slow it down. The system, skillfully used, can assist us toward a healthier, happier life, but we must co-operate with Feng Shui energies by taking adequate exercise, healthy food, rest and etc. The avoidance, as far as possible, of the bad stars in our home can be achieved through the art of placement, which can make a difference, sometimes dramatic, in our fortune and well-being.

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Poison Arrow by Christopher Au, Certified Feng Shui Master


When I first came across the words "poison arrow", my limited English did not give me a clue until I looked at the author's picture that it was in fact a house situated on a "T". Simply put, a poison arrow is something like an arrow shooting at you, and it goes without saying that something shooting at you is bad or poisonous.

There have been a lot of talks among realtors and those who know little about feng shui that a house situated on a "T" is bad, and perhaps very bad, and should be avoided. However, like every theory, there is always exception.

To the experienced and knowledgeable geomancer, it is not bad to have a house situated on a "T", provided the geomantic calculation is correct. Indeed, geomantic calculation is extremely important in determining whether a house is bad or good feng shui, be the house is situated on a "T" or otherwise not on a "T".

I always encourage people to learn feng shui themselves because there is no certainty as to whether you have met a knowledgeable geomancer who would like to help. However, like every discipline, you must have the time and the financial resources. I have come across many people, be they Chinese or Caucasians who think that they can buy a few books and paid a hundred dollar and then they will become a feng shui master or geomancer. I was very surprised at their wisdom of thinking (when they can invent computer or rocket, etc., ) because nothing comes cheap. One cannot buy a few medicine books (and no cheap one on medical books!!!) and become a doctor. One also cannot buy a few cheap legal books (and no cheap legal books!!!) and become a lawyer. You have to invest quite a substantial amount of time and money in order to become a medical doctor or a lawyer, to name but a few professions.

In the olden days, houses built on a "T" are those for the rich, famous and powerful, including Kings and Queens, President of USA, etc. Why the feng shui masters said that houses on "T" are not good may be explained by the fact that they do not want ordinary people to be rich and powerful. Therefore, they created story to scar people away from this kind of house.

A few pictures showing houses on the "T" are appended for the readers.

The White House

 

The House of Parliament, Canada

 

The House of Parliament, Australia

 

The Hampton Court, United Kingdom

 

The Windsor House, United Kingdom

 

The Buckingham Palace, United Kingdom

 

The Capitol Building, Austin, Texus

 

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1600 Pennsylvanic Avenue by Christopher Au, Certified Feng Shui Master


That is the address of White House, the official residence of the President of United States. Is there anything to do with the feng shui? The answer is probably yes.

In one orthodox school of feng shui, numbers are used to represent the eight trigrams, or eight ba-qua’s. Some westerners take this as numerology because they think anything relating to numbers should be classified as numerology. I have no research on their thinking and therefore I cannot comment on this. However, I am going to tell you that 16 is one set of numbers that is affecting us very much and it can mean supremacy, power and authority, to name but a few.

In this orthodox school of feng shui which I am going to describe, there are two groups of numbers which are not only used for fortune telling but also are the ones that control this solar system. The Chinese take the solar system as the universe although I understood that universe has far greater sphere than the solar system has.

One of the two groups is called “Ho To” or “river map”, hence the name of my website. The other is called “Lok Shu” or the books of Mr Lok. If we take the last word of these two character groups, it will form another sentence as “To Shu”, which, in Chinese, will literally mean library. The word library in the Chinese sense means everything since you can find almost any kind of book in a library assuming funding of the library is not a constraint. These words already tell that they are everything and are controlling our way of learning, thinking, etc.

In terms of numbering, “Ho To” has five groups of number. They are 1 and 6, 2 and 7, 3 and 8, 4 and 9, 5 and 10. Why five? We have five senses, five elements, five fingers, and indeed the number five is the centre in the “Ho To” grid. In terms of direction, 1 and 6 are situated in the north, 2 and 7 in the south, 3 and 8 in the east, 4 and 9 in the west, and 5 and 10 reside in the centre of the grid. If we add 5 to 1, we have 6. Adding 5 to 2, we have 7. 5 plus 3 gives 8 whereas 5 plus 4 produces 9. Without doubt, five plus five equals ten. If we reverse the process and subtract five from 6, we get one. Subtracting 5 from 7, we get 2. Readers can complete the process.

As said, 1 and 6 represent supremacy, power and authority. Without a doubt, who does not have the kind of power and authority when one occupies the White House? Who does not have the kind of supremacy when one is the master of White House?

Therefore, is it a co-incidence that the American picked the right number, the 1600 of Pennsylvania Avenue, as the residence of the President of United States of America?

Another group of numbers, called “Lok Shu” is from one to nine. The arrangement is

4 9 2

3 5 7

8 1 6

Readers with quick eyes will see that the sum of any line, be it horizontal, vertical, diagonal, equals 15, which is three times of 5. Is it 3 dimensions of five? I leave this to the readers to figure it out.

There are so many things to tell about the numbers and the ba-qua associated with each number but I think I have to stop here because it is a process which demands at least hundred, if not thousand of pages.

The White House

 

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