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Dear Miriam,
Please see below:-
On 8/22/2002 2:30:00 AM, Miriam Davis wrote:
>I am completely new to the
>subject of Feng Shui. I have
>read the free lessons and
>received some of the free
>reports. I have a few
>questions:
>1) When using the 8-house
>analysis, should I draw the
>sectors as wedges of a pie
>radiating out from the center,
>or should I make 9 rectangles?
>I am a little confused. The 2
>different possibilities give
>different results regarding
>what is included in each
>sector.
In fact, both the 9 rectangles or 9 grids and the pie chart are roughly the same.
But from practical experience, it is much easier to use a pie chart radiating out from the centre.
>2) In your replies to others,
>you said that the shapes and
>forms have 50% importance, the
>8-house has 25% importance,
>and the Flying Star has 25%
>importance. Also you said
>that if you have to choose
>between location in a sector
>vs. facing direction, the
>location is more important.
>Do I apply these 2 rules for
>the house as a whole and also
>within the individual rooms?
If one is new to Feng Shui, one should never in a hurry to apply it.
You can compartmentalise Feng Shui. Feng Shui is all about luck. And the key success factor is to try to improve luck in all areas.
For interior of the home, it is best to have good shapes and forms e.g. the good positioning of the bed based firstly on Shapes and Forms. After this, apply the Eight House.
For those who want to go further can apply the Flying Star to look at any imbalances in a sector. For example, if one is frequently sick in a house, most likely, the bedroom is in a bad sector.
>3) If all the family members
>use one thing (the computer)
>and there is a conflict of
>good locations and directions
>for different family members,
>how do you resolve this? The
>best and good sectors of my
>son and myself are NE, NW, W,
>and SW. The best and good
>sectors of my husband,
>daughter, and grandson are N,
>E, SE, and S. The biggest
>users of the computer at home
>are my son and my husband, and
>I also use it but I spend more
>time at the computer at work
>than at home. My daughter uses
>it sometimes.
It is like the `problem' of the overhead beam. If no one is sitting below it, there is really no harm.
Even if one is under a beam, one must be under the beam for more than 2 hours, per day, per month, per year to have negative influence.
By all means share the PC. More importantly, under the Eight House, do check on the intangible force affecting the bedroom area. This is more crucial. And that each room fits the Ba Zi of each family member or partner(s)
Warmest Regards,
Cecil
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User's Comments After browsing many many feng shui sites, I came to one conclusion: your site is the most sensible, reasonable and helpful one of all. I've been to sites where they want to sell you just about anything and everything. The information they are willing to give is so trivial and one senses that the only thing they are interested in is to make money and sell you products that might and might not fit in with your decor or your culture, and of course doesn't serve the purpose of curing and or enhancing. Sorry for the long message, but I have a friend who spent a fortune buying all types of figurines to cure then to enhance and then eventually all she got was more figures on her credit card and no luck! I believe that what one should do is get your advise first because it makes so much sense and it is always sincere. I also believe that people should buy things that pleases their eye and provide a sense of beauty and balance. Again sorry for the long message and thank you for a wonderful site. Luna Ghobar, 10 March 2003 Students new to Feng Shui can learn more on their own, with the help of a few good books and this website, than many "practitioners" can teach them. Regina Cohn, 29, January 2004 |
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