What should I pay attention to in the tiger living room? ? Good as water? book
We know that the living room is a place to entertain guests and rest, and the living room of a home shows the taste of the host. Especially the paintings hanging on the wall can better reflect the owner's character. Then, in the living room geomantic omen, what kind of calligraphy and painting should be hung on the wall of the living room to meet the five elements of the tiger?
May be interested
Living room Feng Shui Mascot
Calligraphy and painting that should be hung in the living room for people who belong to tigers:
1. "Being good as water"-this work is "being good as water", and Lao Tzu said: Being good as water makes everything lose its fame and fortune. It means: the highest level of good deeds, like the nature of water, is favored by everything without striving for fame and fortune. Laozi, the founder and philosopher of Taoism in pre-Qin China, highly praised "being good as water".
It means that the best conduct of human beings should be like water. This calligraphy work is suitable for study or office decoration, and can also be given as a gift to leaders or elders.
2. A Poem by Mao Leader-This is a poem by Mao Leader, which commemorates the liberation of Nanjing and celebrates the victory of the revolution. The whole poem is bold in style, bold in brushwork, full of philosophy, closely combined with narration and discussion, and uses allusions flexibly. Finally, using the viewpoints of dialectical materialism and historical materialism, this paper makes a philosophical summary of the whole poem.
The poet quotes the poem "Heaven is old if it is affectionate" written by Li He, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, and brings forth the new, showing the philosophical truth that new things will surely overcome old things. This calligraphy work is very good whether it is hung in the living room and study room at home or in the office of an enterprise company. It not only plays a decorative role, but also plays a role in improving one's own taste and self-cultivation.