Feng Shui bagua indicates the different direction, issues, and people. When you use it properly, you can review the past, predict the future, and correct the feng shui. |
||
Feng Shui Bagua |
![]() |
|
The Man Wong Ba Gua is a temporal or time element interpretation of the trigrams. In the spring there is a lot of thunder (Jun), as the beginning of one year. The thunder brings the rain and the beginning of growth, which is wood (East). Toward late spring there are still heavy winds, and perhaps typhoons, so Shon represents the wind in the southeast. During the summer Lay is the sun and is hot in the south. The earth (Kwan) may begin to crack later in the season, so it is located in the southwest. In the autumn, the earth is very parched and water is evaporating. The west is called Doi. On the northwest side, late autumn, it is the season to hunt the animals in preparation for winter. We call this season Kin. In the winter Hum refers to snow and ice, which is a form of water. It is also difficult to travel in the winter and we think of this as a hard season. The late winter is a time of stillness before the new growth in spring. Animals, as well as plants, are still hibernating, and so we call the northeast Gan. With the coming of the thunder and rain in the spring, a new cycle begins, and so we travel through the year with the Man Wong temporal Ba Gua. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The second most important aspect of a house is the bedroom. We spend a large portion of our time sleeping, and it is here that we find the rejuvenation of health, spirituality, relationships and the organ affected most in our bedrooms is our lungs. (Read More) |
Basic in Feng Shui are the Five Elements, which are fire, earth, metal, water and wood. Each of these has several different meanings and is associated with different compass directions. |
Feng Shui Masters use a special compass, called the Lo Pan, to accurately determine the direction our homes face. The inner circle of the Lo Pan shows the eight houses: |
Royal Academic Institute © Copyright 2009 |
||