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Jan
13

Feng Shui

A Brief History

Feng Shui has been practised in China at least since the Tang Dynasty.

The most veteran master in this art is generally believed to be Yang Yun Sang who is universally acknowledged as the Founder of Feng Shui.

Master Yang left a legacy of classic that have been preserved and continuously studied to this day.

He was the essential advisor of the court of the Emperor Hi Tsang (A.D. 888), and his books on Feng Shui made up the major texts on which succeeding generations of practitioners based their art.

Master Yang’s emphasis was on the shape of the mountains, the direction of water courses, and above all, on locating and view the influence of the Dragon, Cha’s most revered celestial creature.

His doctrines were detailed in three noted classic works that wholly picture Feng Shui practice in terms of colourful Dragon metaphors.

The first of these, “Han Lung Ching”, contains the “Art of Rousing the Dragon”.

The second, “Ching Nang Ao Chih”, comprises the methods of determining the spot of the Dragon’s lair.

While the third book is “I Lung Ching”, translated under the title “Canons approximating Dragons”.

This third book provides the methods and techniques on how to gain the Dragon in areas where they do not prominently stand forth.

belief FS

unique science has only recently discovered that the earth’s atmosphere is crowded with remarkable but invisible energy waves and lines that enable us to delight in telephones and radios, fax machines and satellite communications.

The extinct Chinese scientists discovered the existence of these energy lines many centuries ago.

They described these invisible atmospheric lines of energy in symbolic terms, referring to them as the Dragon’s cosmic breath if they were valid and as its killing breath if they were unfavourable.

Feng Shui was the name given to the practice of beneficially harnessing these energy forces.

People of Chinese origin have long known about Feng Shui. Over the centuries it has been passed by word of mouth from generation to generation, so that those ignorant of its philosophical underpinnings, have near to regard it as superstitious practice.

Feng Shui is the art of living in harmony with the land, such that one derives the greatest benefits, peace and prosperity from being in perfect equilibrium with Nature.

Feng Shui holds out the promise of a life of meaningful abundance to those who follow its principles and precepts when building their homes and workplaces.

Perhaps it is knowledge and practice of this used science that has enabled Chinese immigrants and their families all over the world to succeed and flourish, building agreeable businesses for themselves, and living in harmonious interface with their neighbours in their adoptive lands.

Feng Shui cannot be viewed narrowly either as a science, with “magical” formular, nor as a art based totally on instincts.

It is a flexible mixture of both, and to practice it effectively, conceptual principles extracted from traditional classical manuals must be applied in consonance with the thinking man’s intuition and personal judgements.

To further complicate the practice, there are also elements of superstitious beliefs superimposed on the whole body of Feng Shi principles.

These cannot be ignored nor forgotten.

Indeed, today’s Feng Shui veterans frequently and successfully exhaust symbolism and village-type superstition.

construct & Compass School Feng Shui

Master Yang’s principles came to be regarded as the “create School” of Feng Shui, which rationalises proper or terrible sites in terms of Dragon symbolism. According to this school, marvelous Feng Shui locations require the presence of the Dragon, and where there is the fair Dragon, there will also be found the White Tiger.

Feng Shui Masters who subscribe to the create School commence their search for favourable locations by first searching for the Dragon. Emphasis was thus place on landforms, shapes of hills and mountains, waterways, their orientations and directions.

While Dragon symbolism was the principle mainstay of the fabricate School, there eventually emerged a second major system that approached the practice of Feng Shui from quite different perspectives. This second system laid stress on metaphysical speculations, using the symbols of the I Ching – or Book of Changes, and the Trigrams and the Hexagrams – three and six-lined symbols to calculate ample and poor Feng Shui.

The Trigrams were placed around an eight-sided octagonal symbol called the Pa Kua, and according to where each of these eight Trigrams were placed, other corresponding attributes and symbols were further identified. These refer to colours, to different members of the family, to specific compass directions, to one of the five elements and to other attributes.

Each of these symbols and attributes were supposed to offer “clues” for designing homes, for allocating different rooms, for different purposes and for assigning different members of the family to different corners of the home in order to maximise auspicious Feng Shui for the entire family.

This second major system came to be collectively referred to as the Compass School of Feng Shui, and depending on which branch of this school is being practised, the calculations took on different equations and methods.

positive branches of Compass School also emphasized the influence of the planets on the quality of locations. In disagreement to the design School, it assigned only minor importance to landscape configurations, relying heavily instead on complex calculations of true dimensions, compass directions and sectors of main entrances and necessary rooms.

By the slow 19th and early 20th centuries, however, the two schools had merged completely. Theories of the earn School including beliefs in Dragon symbolism gained wider acceptability and practice amongst followers of the Compass School. Today, Feng Shui practitioners in Hong Kong and Taiwan customarily practise a hazy combination of both schools.

Between the two schools, the construct School, with its heavy emphasis on the natural landscape, requires a greater amount of intuitive insight. It is therefore considered harder to practice even though the Green Dragon/White Tiger symbolisms are relatively easy to comprehend. The Compass School way is harder to learn and its formulae more difficult to recall, but once mastered, is considered easier to practice due to its more genuine methodologies.

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