How to read Feng Shui house, Feng Shui house layout
People always arrange their homes carefully to make their stay more comfortable. So in Feng Shui, how do you view Feng Shui homes? In this issue of Architectural Feng Shui, we will take you to learn how to look at Feng Shui houses and the layout of Feng Shui houses. Let’s learn about it together.
Teach you how to read Feng Shui houses
Avoid triangular or irregular layouts in houses.
This is more suitable for the development laws of Eastern history and culture. Chinese people value squareness, rules, symmetry and fairness (all human beings need it), while triangular or irregular houses can easily lead to mental stress (because they are not in line with the genetic characteristics of human nature). From traditional Chinese Feng Shui From a practical point of view, this kind of residential feng shui can easily lead to verbal disputes, that is, disharmony, which includes disharmony with people and disharmony with things. The more protruding corners or obvious irregularities, the more intensified this disharmony will be!
So the frustration of getting to the point and the negativity of opening the door are not conducive to the fortune development of the house owner.
To get straight to the point here means to see obstacles, that is, to block. People have always pursued safety, stability, and reliability in their living environment, so having a “backer” is the ultimate requirement for both tangible and intangible Feng Shui! (Tangible Feng Shui refers to the physical Feng Shui that can be seen and touched, while the physical Feng Shui that is intangible refers to the spiritual impact of Feng Shui on people.) It is not good to be straight to the point, because there are guidances to go down and in the negative direction. Opening the door to obstacles will cause negative psychological feelings to people, and social production and life will also be hindered.
Whether it is ancient people or modern people, the feeling is the same. The sharp corners outside the house go straight to the door, and the entire house is directly penetrated by the sharp corners. This kind of strong conflict, Attack can easily lead to serious illness in residents! The body and mind are severely depressed, and serious illness and disaster are common!
So the sharp-angle evil spirit is listed as one of the major evils among many Feng Shui evil spirits.
From the name of the bad house Feng Shui, we know that this is like a machete falling from the sky, and the impact on the house Feng Shui can be imagined. In the illustration, the narrow space formed by two buildings runs straight into the residences below. The taller the two buildings and the longer the narrow space, the greater the damage to the residences in front of them. In addition, sometimes leaps occur at urban intersections and corners. The overpasses and giant billboards that came out were all manifestations of the Heavenly Killing Evil.
The dangers caused by the Heavenly Cut Evil are that the house owner is prone to sudden diseases and accidents.
The family aggregation characteristics of Chinese society are relatively obvious. Due to the harsh environment, people in Western history often formed associations of free people, and the characteristics of freedom made them relatively independent. Oriental peoples are group-oriented and require mutual harmony. Therefore, they cannot make their houses independent of collective residences. Building houses on high places or in low-lying areas is not conducive to social production and life.
1. Presidential Suite,
The presidential suite has excellent feng shui. Most royal families and dignitaries choose the "Presidential Suite" not because of its luxurious facilities, but because of its privacy, security and meticulous service. In the masterpiece "The Prince and the Pauper" by American writer Mark Twain, the prince and the pauper accidentally exchanged identities. The prince wandered around among the people, experienced the suffering of the people, and finally corrected his bad habits and became a prince. A benevolent monarch. But Mark Twain did not create this story purely for preaching. Otherwise, he could have written the story as a plot similar to "A Dragon Plays with a Phoenix" and "Qianlong's Journey to the South of the Yangtze River" without arranging the clue of "poor boy".
In fact, it is "The Pauper" that gives readers the opportunity to travel around the British palace and experience the pure British royal life. It satisfies ordinary people's desire to spy on the royal life and provides a lot of reading. pleasure. People are always curious about the mysterious life of the royal family. For example, a large number of "time-travel dramas" in China have become popular because of ordinary people's strong curiosity about the life of the royal family. "Time Travel Drama" throws ordinary people in modern cities into ancient palaces, just like Mark Twain threw poor children into the British palace, giving the audience the opportunity to explore the life of the royal family. If we look at Lacan's mirror theory, this desire for voyeurism is a "gaze" and a projection of desire; historical dramas and time-travel dramas are a "mirror image" that allows ordinary people in the real world to be unable to perceive their own existence. , by watching the lives of others in the "mirror", one can project one's own unsatisfied desires in real life, thereby confirming one's own existence.