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Feng Shui Tips (Part 1)
By
Soulspace
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If you want to improve the Feng Shui of your home or office, here are some Feng Shui tips which can safely be applied in any building:
Beauty
Good Feng Shui has to do with beauty. While this is to some extend relative to your taste, there is nevertheless a general agreement as to what is beautiful. This is your aesthetic sense perception.
Keep only things around you that you find uplifting and try to eliminate features that you find ugly, or that you merely keep out of duty.
To have good Feng Shui you’ll need to keep home or office clean and all objects in a good state of repair. A freshly painted space feels much better than a place where paint is peeling, the carpets are worn or the taps are dripping.
Clutter
Excess clutter inhibits any potentially good Feng Shui. It stops energy, - and people, from freely moving around a space.
While it is visually unappealing, it actually consists of your unfinished action cycles. These not only make your space look bad, they also keep you hung up in the past. Completing everything you start, - by completing projects, filing or throwing out papers, etc. - gives you the space to live your life in the present.
Check under your beds, in your wardrobe or neglected corners: Do you have clothes, papers or projects piling up. I have a rule I follow and that works very well: if I have not used something in a year, and it has no special value for any other reason, I will give it away or throw it out.
Shapes
You can influence the feel of a place by the shapes of its objects. Round objects are more dynamic than rectangular or square shapes. That is why it is good to sleep on a rectangular bed as most of us do.
Boardrooms often use round or oval tables; - you can see we are instinctively using the shapes that facilitate the function of the space. If you want to bring more life into a space, choose a round table or a lounge setting with more rounded forms or an oval rug.
End Note
Please note that above recommendations are generalisations. For example, if you slept on a solid wall as described above, but the inherent energy there was negative, your sleep and health would be still be compromised. The same would be true for a desk position, etc.
If above guidelines don’t result in a space that you feel comfortable in, you should consider a professional Feng Shui analysis of your home or office, which would help you tap into the positive potential of your place.
If you are designing a house or moving offices, a Feng Shui analysis can save you time and money involved with activating the wrong energies.
Brigitte Seum, Feng Shui consultant, Melbourne
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