Name: Dr. Kang-pang Chan
Location: Sai Kung, N.T., Hong Kong
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Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Water Means Money

In Feng Shui terminology, water is one of the most important words that everyone is concerned about.

When "Feng" is to mean "wind," then "Shui" is to stand for "water."

The basic principle of Feng Shui dictates that "winds carries the energy wherever it travels and yet it stops when meeting water."

Hence the importance of employing the element of "water" to serve as an "energy collector" or "energy accumulator" that further explains why seashore real estate is so much in demand and thus expensive everywhere.

The human body is basically composed of water, and the chi of the water inside your body has a similar frequency to that of any water nearby, rendering it possible to create a strong connection between the two.

If the chi of the water outside your body is pure and clear compared to the chi of the water inside your body, then the outer chi can improve the strength of your inner chi - very much like charging a battery.

You can bring water features into your home by adding small indoor waterfalls, fountains, aquariums or simply a bowl of fresh water that is located onto the correct spots. Moving water, if placed in a correct manner, will help to add more abundant energies to the environment.

To gain its beneficial effect, the water must be clean and fresh, as well as always dynamic - always flowing. There are even some very specific patterns of flows required of a good Feng Shui river, according to the old Feng Shui texts.

All through the thousands of years when Feng Shui is practised, the correct locations and flow patterns of the element of water has been the most important concern among all others.




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