
Firstly, let us say that it isn't a 'faddy' version of
interior design that comes with noodles!
Far from being 'new age' Feng
Shui has a history predating most European civilisations, although it is true
to say that it is, nowadays, a blending of several forms of environmental
energetic's.
Feng Shui (wind water) has at its core the principles
of Yin (passive) and Yang (active) as being qualities of Qi
(breath). Sounds too easy.
In the beginning the was nothing, and something came into Being. This act of becoming is a
dance between two things - Nothing and Something, and set in motion the Law of
Yin and Yang, a law of Relativity. Now as the Something became it
created a path known as the Tao (path or way) and so is the Universe made
real.
The dance of Yin and Yang is the dance of life, action against
inaction, and it created all the rules of entropy whereby things are born,
mature, grow old and decay. Thus was life made real.
As the energy
danced its way along the Tao it coalesced to form the five elements of Fire,
Earth, Metal, Water and Wood; and each held inherently within itself the power
of Yin and Yang. Thus were the 5 Elements and the 10 Stems made
real.
With the creation of the 5 Elements the physical Universe was made
possible and so were born the galaxies, stars and worlds. In time the dance
would create you and me.
So, Feng Shui is about Life; it is primarily
about how to live in harmony with your environment and in accord with this
beautiful dance. Feng Shui manipulates Qi, the very cause of our existence and
the source of our vitality.
The assumption is that Qi pervades all
things including the spaces between things, and it has had many names in many
cultures simply because it is there.
And so, in time, the human
desire to understand and manipulate its surroundings gave birth to the
ideologies that are now synthesised as Feng Shui.
Shen Dao style
believes that Feng and Shui are aspects of Qi, Feng representing the freely
movable Qi in the air around us and Shui the slower moving Qi that creates
channels, or Dragon lines, beneath the ground. The Art is in the interpretation
of the coming together of these two forms and the 'tides and eddies' that
ensue.
It is a style that uses both Compass (or directional) readings of
the qi and Form in the sense of 5 Element profiling in order to arrive at its
conclusions. The environment, use of colour, building structure and the
availability of space all add to the mix.