What are the ways to solve the taboo of feng shui at the gate?
The door facing the corner in the geomantic taboo is taboo, which will affect the family's career and health, and there will be many twists and turns in life. If the door faces only one third of the corner and does not form a diagonal, it can be ignored. Solution: The fixed housing pattern cannot be changed from hard clothes, but can be solved from geomantic omen with five emperors' money. When the gate is facing Feng Shui, if the suffocation rushes directly into the room, it will cause the loss of fortune.
2. Direct balcony solution
It is not a good sign to see the balcony directly after opening the door. There is nothing else on both sides of the corridor to block or offset the suffocation, which makes the pattern of houses become a gathering place of suffocation, leading to the uneasiness of houses and the loss of wealth. Solution: Use soft clothes such as bead curtains, curtains or mascots in the middle to counteract the suffocation, so that the good airflow behind can be circulated at home after being offset.
3. Solutions for stairs-facing doors
If the stairs facing the door show a downward trend, the money at home will gradually decline. Solution: Put a screen behind the gate. The screen plays a blocking role and can prevent the family from taking less money. If the stairs facing the door are rising, the money at home will flow to other people's homes. Solution: put some big-leaf plants in the gate. These plants can accumulate wealth and prevent family fortune from flowing out.
4. Solutions for doors facing corridor corners
Family members' health and career will be affected, and there are many twists and turns in life, which makes them vulnerable to blood sucking at night. The biggest problem is that half the corner is facing the door; If only one-third of the position is facing the gate, not diagonally, this is not a problem. Solution: Put a pair of golden lion heads or plants in front of the gate or iron fence to keep out evil spirits, or put five emperors' coins (that is, coins minted during the heyday of the Five Kingdoms Movement in Qing Dynasty) at the marble threshold to ensure peace.