July 18, 2010
Understanding Feng Shui Kua
Our surroundings can have a great affect on our moods and outlook. Being a in damp basement with no windows is worlds away from being in a high rise apartment with large floor to ceiling windows, and these differences can have a direct affect on our lives in general. Having balance and harmony in your home may just sound like interior design buzzwords, but the truth is that those two concepts have been around for thousands of years in the philosophy of Feng Shui. There are a number of different elements and components within Feng Shui called Feng Shui Gua. These Gua can help make your home into the sanctuary that it deserves to be.
The different Gua represent all of the differing energies of the universe including heaven, earth, mountain, water, wind, thunder, fire, and lake. Each of these energies has a rich cultural heritage and a number of representations in Chinese culture. While they are all different, they must all work together and not against each other to provide the appropriate balance to a home.
An example of having unbalanced Gua is if you have two doors that are directly aligned with one another within your home. This creates a bad energy and flow to the home. Thinking about Feng Shui in terms of the overall flow of a home can make the concept easier to grasp.
When things flow then there can be an accompanying sense of well-being and harmony when you are in a well crafted and built home. If you think about Gua as the general flow and sense of a room that may help.
Finding out your baseline energies within your home now can be done with someone who is an expert in the subject, or you can learn to use the tools of Feng Shui - the feng shui compass and the Ba-Gua. The Ba-Gua is a tool which is covered in a grid that corresponds to accompanying symbols of the I Ching which is what Feng Shui is built on.
If you discover that the structure of your home may be lacking in good energy and you are in an apartment - the ability to knock down walls can be severely lacking. This is where a number of cures can be used in lieu of rebuilding. An example of a cure can be the inclusion of an aquarium which is thought to bring prosperity into the home. Other prosperity bringers can be fountains, crystals, colors, and clocks.
Fixing the energies of home through the application of different Gua is simple when you understand the underlying principles of Feng Shui philosophy. With some small changes you can have a more harmonious environment with a sense of balance that will not only effect you but the people who come into your home.
Filed under Feng Shui by Wendy