Title

body
 
xxx of yyy characters
FENGSHUI

Watch this Topic   watch
Messages 

1-10 of 137 1 Next > >|

Close Topic

Reason

Message



 
Topic: TRY to HELP
if anyone have a problem related in fengshui need to wind a way out from that problem, or need suggestion related with it, or anything please post your massage and we will try to help you ok......

thanks
Posted by Fandy 
Jun 5, 2004
9:26 PM
Not everyone starts off in life with the house of his or her dreams. However, we can always try to improve our living spaces to suit our personal styles. No matter what kind of house you begin with, whether it is a detached bungalow or high-rise condo unit, a simple understanding of how spaces work can propel the interior of your home into designer stratospheres, while not losing the essence of being functional as a home.

So the question you may ask yourself is how? How can we improve our homes while integrating architecture, interior design and feng shui? In all truth, there is no difference between the three professions when it comes to creating space and value, as the link lies with how spaces interrelate with each other to create something visually appealing and lifestyle enhancing.

Like many new homes, you are given a clean palette in your interior design ventures. Like many mass housing developments around the city, it is crucial to understand how to improve your living environment without costing you your pension fund.

Take note of these key-planning aspects:

1) Never have more than 3 doors in line with each other. Visually it creates an awkward ambiance, similar to what it feels like to walk through a dormitory corridor or hospital. This is not the image you want to create in a home.

2) Never have toilets directly above any doors. In particular, the main door of the house. Just the thought of human waste above the door by which you enter your abode is enough to put anyone off. If you find yourself in this position, simply relocate the door to the side and brighten the front of your house. Bright lights assist in highlighting the house façade, while creating vital yang energy to enhance the vibrancy of living.

3) Explore the exterior of your home and investigate the possibilities you can achieve with simple garden features. This can take the form of a water feature, such as a pond, or flourishing trees and vibrant flowers. Looking out from the confines of your home into a garden filled with lush vegetation creates a certain warmth and calm. If you want to venture further, you can use flying star feng shui in planning your garden to enhance the luck of the house for the residents.

4) Clever use or curtains and wall paints can make any space appealing. Some feng shui enthusiasts grumble that it is all very well to decorate in colors that harmonize with the different sectors of the Pa Kua, but what about how it looks? Blue in the North corner, Red in the South corner, Green in the East corner, the room will look like a children’s playpen! But this is where subtlety should preside… reds, blues, greens… in fact, all colors come in many different shades and textures. Use neutral colors as a base for your walls and use your brighter colors as accents.

5)Wall colors can range from sharp vibrant colors to slight tints of shades. Organize what you intend to use the walls for and plan accordingly. Vibrant colors are typically used to create a feature aspect, such as the staircase area or individual spaces. Shades can pick out specific highlights of your house through the colors of floors, windows and curtains. You may want to investigate the use of colors in certain sectors of the house to enhance the feng shui based on the flying star combination to better enhance your house and lifestyle.

Remember that your home is your oyster, so make it fun! As you start to get into the feel of what you want, you can turn any home into a something truly palatable and affordable.
Posted by Fandy 
Jun 29, 2004
4:35 AM
Hey!

I'd just like to know something. My room is shaped mainly in a rectangle. But my window comes out at an angle into the road. At the end of my room, the shape juts out like a trapezium shape and that is the only place where light can come in. My neighbourhood is very noisy. My windows are perpendicular to a busy road with many noisy cars, dangerous African people and homeless. Is my room in danger of bad Chi?
Jun 30, 2004
7:08 AM
hi,
yes your situatuion are really bad, first do you feel headache since you live or stay in that room???? based on my calculation if you have stay 3mounth or more than it, you maybe have headache, my suggestion:
"find another place to stay ", if you cant, place a curtain in your window, and a wind chime, this can help u but not a lot. but the better suggestion is moving to anew place, ok
bad chi not come from your room, but from your environtment it will damage you hardly if you stay to long in there.
Posted by Fandy 
Jul 14, 2004
3:35 AM
When you go house hunting or even land hunting you might want to consider the landscape of a place especially from a Feng Shui perspective before you decide to call it home or build an office building or shopping mall on or whatever the building is.

The ancient Feng Shui Masters of China understood that Man's destiny is enhanced when he lives in harmony with nature, thereby tapping into its auspicious influences. Nature is likened to a living organism and its breath pervades everything thereby giving good and bad vibrations alike. What you want however is to ensure you get the best of this to enhance your life.

What to look for:

· Gently undulating hilly land
· Where the air smells good
· Where winds blow gently
· Clean waterways meander slowly
· Surrounding vegetation is lush and green


Why you need to look for these:

Well in Feng Shui tradition, auspicious locations are usually slightly elevated places where the Green Dragon of the East nestles gently with the White Tiger of the West, with their bodies curving gently towards each other thus forming a horse shoe or armchair shape. This protects from the North winds by a range of hills that symbolize the black turtle.

Meanwhile, in the South, the presence of the vermillion Phoenix enhances a site. When a site faces this wonderful configuration of hills, mountains, moving water and vegetation, then placing one's dwelling here ensures an abundance of good fortune and enormous wealth for the household of many succeeding generations.
Posted by Fandy 
Jul 14, 2004
3:49 AM
The White House - seat of the executive branch of the United States Government and Office of the President in Washington, has a NORTH - SOUTH orientation. This bears similarity to the Palace complex of the Forbidden City in Beijing China which also has a North - South orientation. The difference is, where the Palace complex faces South, the White House Area faces North. This difference is neither good nor bad but does affect different Chief Executives differently depending on their dates of birth.

In addition, like the seat of power of the Ming and Ching emperors of another age and time, the White House complex also benefits from wonderful bright halls which attract marvelous and auspicious chi that bring good fortune to the building complex, and by extension to the entire country. This is because the feng shui of the seat of power - good or bad - always spills over and affects the fortunes of a country. The bright hall effect is in fact far more pronounced in the White House. This is the semi circular patch of land in front of the White House main building bordered by Pennsylvania Avenue. When there is beautiful empty land like this in front of a building it means the good energy or sheng chi has a chance to settle and accumulate before moving in an auspicious fashion into the main buildings. The bright hall effect is considered one of the most auspicious features to have. Thus when your office or home faces a field, a park or some empty land, it simulates the Bright hall and brings good luck.

The driveway into the White House complex starts at the Northwest gate, and if we take this to be the entrance into the complex, it signifies the power of the leader is strengthened. This is an auspicious feature since the NW is also the place of the chien trigram, which symbolizes heaven and maximum yang energy - both of which features spell good luck. Thus judging purely from landscape orientations, the White House is said to have auspicious feng shui.

(i have a picture of complete analysis of white house fengshui, but because i can't attach in here you can mail me at fund_theboys@hotmail.com to get it,ok!)
By Lillian Too © June 1999
Posted by Fandy 
Jul 14, 2004
8:58 PM
Hi, Thanx for your offer of help,

Yes, I have headaches, but only when I am forced to work very hard at work.
Firstly, I've been living here for more than 2 years. Secondly, my situation doesn't allow me to move out for at least another 6 months. Thirdly, according to how you describe the perfect chi, the demands cannot be met in my city and workplace.

I live in inner city London England. There is only so much space and so much money. Grass is rare, trees are rarer... my area is a dump and as a student, I cannot afford much. How then, could I optimise my room? Apart from windchimes, what else can I add? Shall I add plants? Get rid of sharp table corners? etc? could you give me a list?

Thanks

=== Original Message ===>>>>


hi,
yes your situatuion are really bad, first do you feel headache since you live or stay in that room???? based on my calculation if you have stay 3mounth or more than it, you maybe have headache, my suggestion:
"find another place to stay ", if you cant, place a curtain in your window, and a wind chime, this can help u but not a lot. but the better suggestion is moving to anew place, ok
bad chi not come from your room, but from your environtment it will damage you hardly if you stay to long in there.
Jul 15, 2004
4:45 AM
=== Original Message ===>>>>

Hi, Thanx for your offer of help,

Yes, I have headaches, but only when I am forced to work very hard at work.
Firstly, I've been living here for more than 2 years. Secondly, my situation doesn't allow me to move out for at least another 6 months. Thirdly, according to how you describe the perfect chi, the demands cannot be met in my city and workplace.

I live in inner city London England. There is only so much space and so much money. Grass is rare, trees are rarer... my area is a dump and as a student, I cannot afford much. How then, could I optimise my room? Apart from windchimes, what else can I add? Shall I add plants? Get rid of sharp table corners? etc? could you give me a list?

Thanks

=== Original Message ===>>>>


hiiiiii,

ok, can you give me your birth date,birth time so i can calculate more to analyze and decide what suggestion should i give to you, and sure cou can ptimize your roo fengshui but before that give me your birth information, oh yeah can tell me your apartment main door facing what direction??

ok, i will do my best to help you.
Posted by Fandy 
Jul 15, 2004
8:12 PM
HALLS.

The chi enters a house through its doors and windows, but mainly through the main door, known as the 'kou', meaning mouth. The chi must be able to curve and wander through the hall in a meanderitng fashion, not just rush through and be wasted or lie in stagnant pools, losing its goodness. Auspicious Feng Shui halls are fairly wide and so let the chi move in gently and then allow it to circulate slowly throughout the property. So that the chi can move freely, the hall should be well lit, have no clutter, not be over furnished, especially with angular, sharp edged furniture. A hallway can be a good place for windchimes, bells, frog and fish ornaments and the Blue Carp, a blue coloured ceramic fish which is hollow, to be filled with uncooked rice, and placed facing the door to show any visitors that this home has prosperity.

This balance should be reflected in the lighting used and also through the colours of the walls, pictures, ornaments and carpets. No one element should be allowed to dominate. Depending on the Pa Kua direction, it is important to bring in the other elements.

When a hall seems dark and shadowy, it may be necessary to bring in slightly stronger colours, so that it becomes a bit more yang, but the colours should never be too strong as you do not want yang to dominate. If the hall is left dark, then the hall will remain very yin, also a problem, because the chi would tend to become lazy and staid! Rugs, carpets and doormats can be used to introduce 'friendly' elements both in colour and shape. I also recommend that three Chinese coins, tied together with a red ribbon, Yang side up [4 bits of writing!] are placed under the mat for general good fortune. Pound coins can be used, but cannot be tied together. They should be placed, Heads side up, which is yang.

To help good chi into the house, bright lights just inside and just outside the front door are excellent. These can be left on during the hours of darkness. The on/off security lights are not effective for the attraction of chi, as a constant light is needed.

Once the chi is in the property, it begins to flow through the passageways and rooms like a slowly winding stream. This flow must be steady, never stagnating, never rushing. If you imagine a gorge through which a strong river flows extremely fast, this is the effect which a long narrow hallway or corridor has on chi. The goodness of the chi cannot settle and be used, it rushes straight through and so is wasted, especially if there are three doors in a row, including the front door. Even worse is when there are three doors and two of them are the front door and the back door.The classic way of preventing this rushing chi, this 'gorge and rapids 'effect happening is by using the 'aspirin of Feng Shui'----the mirror. Mirrors can be placed alternately along the passageway to help the chi to curve and bounce from them instead of just rushing through. The mirrors can be quite small but should not cut off the heads of any adults in the property.

Windchimes can also be used to moderate flows of chi, and sometimes if there is an appropriate small window in the hallway, it can be opened to help the chi. This must be used carefully, as security should be a consideration. It is no good getting the right chi flow, if all your possessions are stolen becuase you forgot to close a window when you'popped' to the the shops!!!!!

Broadleafed plants are useful as an enhancement of chi, especially in dark alcoves and the sharp edges of alcoves. A few plants placed alternately along a hall, especially broad leafed plants, will help to nurture the goodness in the chi. All the above can be reversed to a certain extent if you think that the hallway is too huge and wide. The chi will stagnate in a wide hall and needs pushing along a little. Also remember, windchimes MODERATE, crystals ENERGISE, so hanging faceted spherical quartz crystals along a wide hall would move the chi. What I have found to be even better is a small crystal chandelier.


STAIRWAYS.

Easily the worst kind of stairway are spiral ones. They look so pretty, but act as a waterfall for the chi--a Niagara Falls!It just flows down the stairs, between the stairs and is lost in a pool at the bottom. I generally advise using green silk material wound around the bannisters, so introducing Wood element, a mirror right underneath the bottom most step pointing upwards and green trailing plants alternately placed up the stairs themselves. A windchime can be placed at the bottom and the top of the staircase, which can also be beneficial. The other common problem is stairs which face the front door directly. What I normally recommend in this situation is, obviously.... (to be continue)
Posted by Fandy 
Jul 15, 2004
8:28 PM
mr. fandy, i need to increase my career.What should i do??
i was born 16 Aug 1983 at 04.00 PM.Can you tell me my Kua number??and what does it mean??
Posted by Mike 
Jul 15, 2004
11:49 PM

I want to translate into: