The Feng Shui family teaches you how to create a Feng Shui treasure land
Good feng shui in landscapes also has a simple pattern, which can be summarized as follows: green dragon on the left, white tiger on the right, red bird on the front, and Xuanwu on the back. These four mythical gods actually refer to mountains. The ideal Feng Shui treasure land is like this: backed by rolling mountains, this mountain is the backing mountain, the main mountain, the ancestral mountain, and the dragon vein, which is the so-called "Xuanwu"; facing the open plain, it is called "Mingtang", and Mingtang is not a panoramic view. Wuyu, there is a screen-like mountain in front of it, called "Anshan Mountain" and "Chaoshan". The mountain case is like in front of the case, and the mountains are bowing to greet each other. This is the "Suzaku" in Feng Shui; the river meanders around the flow in front. However, there are many mountains covering and guarding it on both sides. The mountains on both sides are "Green Dragon" and "White Tiger". The Feng Shui treasure land has such an image: Xuanwu bows his head, Suzaku dances, green dragon meanders, and white tiger tamely bows. Villages and cities built according to this Feng Shui theory are sited with mountains on their backs and rivers on their backs, surrounded by mountains and rivers; the mountains are affectionate and the water has twists and turns. The symmetry here constitutes balance, openness and coverage, direct exposure and implicitness complement each other. It is said that although the early Western missionaries who came to China regarded Feng Shui as a heresy of witchcraft, they could not help but marvel when they saw the harmonious beauty between Chinese villages, cities and nature: "The hearts of Chinese people must be full of poetry."< /p>