Announcement for the Latest Courses!
December 6th, 2007
Taught by Master Boon, daughter of Grandmaster Yap Cheng Hai
| Elementary YCH Academy Feng Shui Practitioner’s Course |
| Date | Venue | Enquiries & Registration |
| Mar 1-3, 2008 | Melbourne, Australia | Tel: +60 12 303 1991 |
| +60 12 677 4600 |
| +61 4 2364 9669 |
| Intermediate YCH Academy Feng Shui Practitioner’s Course |
| Date | Venue | Enquiries & Registration |
| Mac 4-6, 2008 | Melbourne, Australia | Tel: +60 12 303 1991 |
| +60 12 677 4600 |
| +61 4 2364 9669 |
For more information, please go through schedules.
In Search of Adventure
December 3rd, 2007
StarTwo, 12 Nov 2007by MAJORIE CHIEW* All Photographs courtesy of Boon Yap
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| From north to south, east to west, Boon Yap has travelledto some of the most interesting places on Earth |
MALAYSIAN-born scientist Yap Hwee Boon, in her 40s, hardly looks the outdoorsy type. But she zips off all over the world for adventure. Her travels have been taken her to South Africa, the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, Ephesus in Turkey, The Gallapagos, Antarctica, Machu Picchu - the last hideaway of the Incas, Peruvian Andes, North American Rockies, Swiss and Italian Alps, Sarawak’s Mulu National Park (when it was first opened), Soloman Islands, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, Fiji, the Philippines, ancient sites in China and Bhutan.Bhutan, the 40th country she has visited, is “the most beautiful country I have ever been to, and possibly the last remaining unspoilt inhabited place in the world”. She is “unconsciously seeking out remote places ahead of tourists before these places change”.A free spirit, Boon loves all activities of the great outdoors such as kayaking, rock- and mountain-climbing, skiing, scuba-diving, caving and hiking.Based in Melbourne, Boon, as she is affectionately called, has a business consultancy in strategic marketing and international business development for the biomedical industry throughout Asia Pacific. The only daughter of Malaysian feng shui grandmaster Yap Cheng Hai, she has been working abroad for about 30 years and also has a feng shui consultancy business.Early last month, she travelled to the remote Tibetan regions of China - Western Sichuan and Eastern Tibet.She was on a stint as a volunteer art conservator with KhamAid Foundation. She spent a week in remote Tibetan village in Western Sichuan with six other volunteers from around the world, working together with team of experienced Nepalese conservators trained by an Italian expert, to restore damaged Tibetan Buddhist wall frescoes in the village temple and the altar rooms in some established family homes.
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| Antarctica: These penguins seem to bewaiting for the ship to sail in. |
After that, she embarked on a very specialised tour to check out the other potential sites and buildings worth restoring. She also planned to view previous art/architectural preservation projects of KhamAid.”We’ve been visiting some incredible Tibetan Buddhist monasteries - including the monastery of Pelpung, the second largest monastic hall outside Potala - and getting access to places that normal tourists wouldn’t have, thanks to our leader Pam Logan, the founder and head of KhamAid. These monasteries are set in the most spectacular mountains that are very difficult to access, even in this day,” she said.”We have to go through dirt roads, landslides, rivers and Chinese roadwork blockades to get there.”She has spent one-and-a-half years living and travelling throughout China.”I went to China to master my Mandarin in order to further pursue my passion in all things esoteric in ancient Chinese philosophical wisdom, such as divination, destiny reading and martial arts,” she said.
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| Boon Yap: ‘I travel withinmy means, and the greatesttravel does not have tocost much’ |
Late October, she was in Beijing and its surroundings with her father on a field trip to study the feng shui of the imperial mausoleums of the Qing emperors.She travels for three reasons: due to the nature of her work; to experience far-flung places and cultures; and to explore the last remaining wilderness.She was recently back in Kuala Lumpur on a short visit to her family.”Whenever I get the chance to hit the road, I would do it. Slowly through the years, I have lived my dreams,” said Boon who, as child, dreamed of travelling to faraway places.”My father advised me to work hard to earn a decent living first, and then go and enjoy life” said Boon, who believes in working hard and playing hard.She mused: “How often have you heard people say that when they had time, they didn’t have moeny and when they had money, they didn’t have time? So, I travel within my means, and the greatest travel does not have to cost much.”Boon dislikes tour groups and prefers travelling alone or with one or two close friends as there is a greater chance of becoming acquainted with locals and experiencing their way of life.At 13, she visited Thailand with her brother and family friends. But her first real trip was through Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand for two months, a trip she rewarded herself with after spending eight consecutive years on tertiary studies.She travels with an open heart and mind. Her senses are alerted to new sounds, smells, sights, tastes and touch. She tries to understand the history and culture of the place and its people, or just to soak in the energy of the wild places.
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| Spiritual haven: The Takstang Monastery in Bhutan isperched on the edge of a mountain slope |
Boon has taken up photography for pleasure, as a way to record memories in a picturesque and meaningful way.Photographing animals in the wild is a special experience. “They are fearless of humans,” she recalled . For example, seal-lion cubs and penguins have come up so close that they left their nose prints and fishy breath on her lens - a testament that humans are not their natural enemies.”Yet we club them by the hundreds upon thousands for their fur, and march them into meat grinders for their meagre oil. The closest humans can ever get to feeling on the other side of the fence is when faced with a pride of lions on the hunt,” Boon said.Mingling with the localsOn her first trip to Bali 20 years ago, she stopped to ask a farmer for directions, and found herself listening to his very forlorn story - his wife had left him and thier two daughters, and he hadn’t enough to put them through school. Despite having very little to spare, he invited her to his home and shared what little food he had.He then displayed his craftwork to sell, apologising for the poor quality because he had just learn the craft. Boon enquired about the cost of schooling, and then bought the basket for AUS$25 so that his daughter could complete her secondary schooling. Two years later, Boon received a letter thanking her and relating how well his daughter had done in school and had secured a good job.In the high country of the Tibetan nomadic people and land of sky burials, she recollected: “We were confronted with the wildest looking men on horseback, daggers strapped to their sides, snow leopard furs on their backs for warmth, adorned with incredible turquoise and coral jewellery, and yak leather saddlebags. When they rode out of the forest and flashed toothy grins at us, we felt as if we were transported back hundreds of years!”
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| Heaven and earth: Magnificient view ofLangmusi (the Tibetan part of China) |
Treachery at seaBoon had the greatest scare was when she nearly drowned off the treacherous waters of the “shipwreck coast” of The Great Ocean Road of Victoria, Australia, which is notorious for over 400 shipwrecks throughout its 200 years of recorded history.”My two scuba-diving buddies and I got into difficulties in an unexpected undertow on a clear sunny day with blue skies and a calm-looking sea. The infamous waves that surfers call ‘dumpers’ can whip off masks and snorkels, bash regulators around one’s mouths till is is impossible to hold on, and repeatedly drag virtually anything afloat 20 feet under.”We were caught in just such a surf. Panic is deadly in times like this. While under, I could see my buddy struggling to grab hold of his regulator just like I was. We kicked with all our might to get to the surface. He was fortunate, being on the edge of the surf, and managed to escape. But I was caught in the middle and heading towards a rock ledge. Somehow, I managed to gather my wits and inflated my buoyancy vest and went limp just as the surf was about to hurl me against a rock shelf. On another occasion, I had to keep my wits about me as I wen to the aid of my friend who got into trouble while snorkelling in the Galapagos islands.”Adventures in ChinaIn her travels to China last spring (April to August), she explored ancient historical places around Beijing. She considers springtime “the most beautiful time” to visit the Summer Palace and Yuan Ming Yuan. She visited tourist attractions such as Xi’an (to see the Qin tomb and terracotta warriors), Luoyang (the Shaolin Temple) and Longmen (Buddhist Grottoes).
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| Day of rejoicing: People flocking to select juicypeaches in a country town in China, resulting in congestionon the narrow road |
She also set off to the little known province of Shanxi where she visited WuTaiShan, one of China’s famed five Buddhist mountains; Ping yao, a well preserved World Heritage site and original Ming dynasty city; Datong’s Yunggang Buddhist Grottoes with the most exquisite cave carvings of Bodhisatvas (another World Heritage site); and the Tang dynasty XuanKongSi, the Hanging Temple suspended on a cliff face at least 100m above ground level.Last July, she journeyed to remote Gansu, in “an amazing pilgrimage”, following the trail of ancient Fuxi, Daoists, Buddhists, and the eight legendary immortals.Then, she went to the Tibetan parts of China - Xiahe and Langmusi - which are home to magnificient towering monasteries, and where sky burials are still being performed on a regular basis.”Folks here are garbed in traditional costumes: the fearsome-looking men astride their horses with daggers at their side and the women colourfully adorned with massive baubles of turquoise and coral. Crimson and saffron robed monks and nuns mingle with the locals in their daily lives,” she said. She recalled her horse-trekking experience in the Sichuan mountains “with only the sound of our horses and mist festooned pine trees and clouded mountains for company”.In December last year, she went crystal hunting for genuine crystal rocks that could be collectors’ items but which she uses for feng shui purposes.”There were rubies, emeralds, sapphires and tourmaline in their raw rock forms, and the most beautiful yellow and sky-blue volcanic crystals. Mother Nature never fails to astounds me,” Boon said.Travelling was really tough on the mountain road though some of the more remote parts of Yunnan and Vietnam inhabited by ethnic minority groups.On invitation of a Lama friend, she went on a pigrimage following Buddha’s footstep; visiting Bodhgaya and meditating under the Bodhi tree on Wesak Day, then through Sikkim and into Bhutan to visit some centuries-old incredible monasteries, receive dharma lessons, and trek through rhododendron and pine forests in the Himalayas.For recreation, Boon has picked up martial arts again.”I learnt wushu from some great masters introduced by my father. Last August, I joined my taiji master, Men Hui Feng, to go to Tai Shan, Shandong, to practise tai ji quan on the Eastern peak .Tai Shan is the most sacred of the five daoist mountains. It is said that Tai Shan is a power site for the practice of tai ji quan, so to practise there is to connect with the qi of the sky and earth,” she says.Last November, her father roped her in to perform at the International Nan Shaolin Wushu Competition at Quanzhou, Fujian (home to one of the Shaolin temples), a style called Wuzhuquan which is a famous style of southern Shaolin.”He wanted me to show a special style that only our lineage has. That was the first time I ever participated at a wushu competition. I won a gold in the all-round women category, another gold (a grand prize in the form of a most exquisite DaMo carving bestowed for best in each country) for Malaysia and a silver for the prerequisite form of our wushu style called ’samjien’.”
Experiencing Foreign Cultures
December 3rd, 2007
Star Two, 12 November 2007
FOOD is usually a fascinating facet of travelling but sometimes, one would rather not gulp down bizarre foods.
Boon Yap ate live baby (isn’t so baby in actual fact) octopus in Kwangju, a South Korean seaside city on one of her bio-med consultancy rounds.
“My distributor earnestly thought he was giving me a real threat, a delicacy. As a tradition would have it, and without and forewarning, the waitress grabbed the writhing octopus off a bowl of water in the middle of the table with a pair of chopsticks, wrapped the tentacles around the sticks, dipped it into chilli sauce and stuffed it into my mouth before I knew what was happening,” she said.
“I felt it writhe, so I chewed as hard and fast as possible. It was a case of it or me, as it was trying to bite me from the inside! Trying my best not to throw up all over the Professor next to me, I grabbed the white hand-towel supplied and held it against my mouth to stifle everything back, and desperately gulped it all down! Never again!
“Then there were baby scorpions, bee larvae…”
Her list of memorable experiences includes sleeping under the stars on the Australian sleeping under the stars on the Australian Snowy Mountains, and on the 90 Mile Beach in Victoria state, cushioned by beach heath that served as her bed; listening to huge wombats munching; gazing into the Milky Way that straddles the breath of the Australian night sky like a string of diamonds; and, more recently, standing on the rooftop of Pelpung Monastery in the middle of the mountains of Sichuan.
And if you think that nature’s call is not a problem in the pristine nature, Boon tells you otherwise…
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New friends: The people of Bhutan. Mingling with the locals is one of the highlights of travelling. |
Her worst ever encounter was on a grassy lawn, backing onto a mountain beside a sacred lake to the Tibetan people.
She said : ” We were led there by a lama on his duty round where he made blessings beside the lake. In scenery like this, I thought it was safe… bad mistake… I learnt that the stench of toilets is mutually independent of scenic beauty but the number of flies is proportionate to the strength of the stench. It was so fol - sight and smell - that I had to wave off the flies so furiously that I felt I was taking off liek a helicopter with pelvic rotors.”
In some off-the-beaten track journey, one has to put up with the usual crammed stinky buses and trains while travelling in the most populous nations of China and India. But when the unexpected occurs, there should be quick recourses.
On one occasion, Boon’s expedition ship had to detour to a research station to arrange for a passenger to be airlifted out. On another occasion, she was delirious from septicaemia in the middle of the bush from a cut and had to head for a small town clinic for a penicilin injection and antibiotics.
Boon has encounted temperature and air pressure extremes. ” One moment, you’re admiring a beautiful summer’s day in the high country of south-east Australia abd suddenly a blizzard occurs. Or in the Antarctic seas, a hurricane would whip up within an hour,” she said.
Culture shock?
Well, she admitted that not much shocks her although local customs are fascinating. What she still funds unpleasant is the harshness of life that makes people nasty to one another.
“This I tend to encounter in large cities that are ‘out of balance’ or where the people grew up through times of war. I have also encountered cultures that are susprisingly forgiving, having been presecuted for a long time’ said Boon.
Her advice for women travelling alone is: “Dress and act sensibly, exude an air of confidence, don’t expose yourself to unnecessary riskd that you may not be able to handle, and learn some basic self-defence techniques!”
The Hunt for Crystal Mountains
June 1st, 2007
The Edge, Haven
A long hard journey through China in search of Mother Nature’s jewels
SIMPLY PUT, FENG shui is about how the environment affects a person’s luck. In other words, how a person is oriented to his environment can impact his fortune. Still, the beauty of feng shui goes beyond reading a person’s fortune within a confi ned space. It is about the knowledge of orienting a person to his environment to harness benefi cial energies and avoid the harmful ones in order to bring him good fortune.
It is common knowledge that location and direction are key factors in classical feng shui. In ancient times, where man lived closer to nature, orientation to environmental features such as mountains and water were of particular importance. This still holds true for the San He (Three Combinations) school of feng shui — which requires an understanding of Man (home) with respect to surrounding mountains and water — as well as the San Yuan and Yi Jing Ba Gua schools of feng shui.
Typically, depending on the location of the property itself or the direction of the main door of a property, there are certain prescribed positions for a mountain or a body of water that can bring good fortune or misfortune.
According to the feng shui lineage I belong to, we not only consider the external environment (macro-feng shui), but also the internal environment (micro-feng shui). We also look at natural and man-made features. This is part of the practical evolution of feng shui to keep up with the times.
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I usually ask my client to acquire a crystal rock to symbolise a mountain and a little table fountain as a water feature when a San He formation is called for to enhance a client’s feng shui. A beautiful rock that looks like a mountain will usually suffi ce, as the aim is to get something that resembles a mountain but please do not get something that is made out of polymer or papier mache. Also, crystal instead of ordinary mineral rock tends to combine the placement concept of feng shui with the benefi cial effects of crystal energy.
However, my work often does not end there because it is not so easy to purchase these crystalline rocks in the different cities and countries that I consult in, especially those that are beautiful and worthy of the interior of my clients’ properties. Thus began my hunt for rock crystal mountains.
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Last December, together with a geologist friend of mine, we travelled into the interior of southern China near the border with Vietnam to source Mother Nature’s jewels, ranging from the ubiquitous quartz crystals to the precious gemrocks — a journey of 8,000km in 15 days.
China’s train service has improved a lot in recent years (if one knows which train to take). They range from modern express trains that are well serviced and clean to those that crank along at snail’s pace with narrow hard bunks squished one above the other and fi lled with unpleasant odours. I prefer the train because I can travel through the night in sleepers, thus saving time. Furthermore, for me, the view from an elevated train track snaking through a countryside is always much more interesting and picturesque than highways and the people make for a good way to gain the flavour of a place travelled.
My journey began from my base in Beijing to Changsha, the capital of Hunan province, an overnight journey of 1,600km to meet up with my geologist friend. From Changsha, we travelled southwest by train to Guilin, Guangxi, to rendezvous with another rock hunter friend. Together, we headed south to the southern crossroad town of Nanning. Guilin, with its limestone scenery, remains one of the more unspoilt cities in China. Nanning, in contrast, is a very modern, spacious and clean city. Beyond Nanning, we journeyed back in time.
Our journey into the remote parts of Yunnan started from Nanning on a different mode of transport (which was my first experience and I promised myself that it will be the last!).
The familiar interstate air-conditioned coaches were internally fi tted with double-decker beds. However, the bedclothes provided most probably never saw the light of day for years. With good intention, the owner-operators required passengers to remove their shoes upon entry — huge mistake!
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The resulting foul stench on the 16-hour, 800km trip into the heart of Yunnan’s Wenshan prefecture defi es description. We barely survived with mandarin peels stuck up our nostrils. With cast-iron stomachs developed from much travel, we bumped through the night without any mishaps, having had a meal of pond-fi sh cooked with water from the same pond, no doubt. We couldn’t exit the bus fast enough on arrival at a small provincial town, which boasts about 50,000 inhabitants (a tiny city by Chinese standards). It was here that we visited other rock hunters and took a look at their precious collections of rubies, emeralds and sapphire crystals and varied enchanting rock crystals of every form and colour — just an inkling of what was to come.
Our next destination was to a hilly bordertown with a name that conjures up “slopes of hemp and chestnuts”, where another crystal hunter showed us his treasures. Due to the specifi c geological activity in the vicinity, each location saw a different selection of crystals on offer. Here, we saw purple and green jade as big as a boxer’s clenched fi st, and blue jade that I had never come across before. But the most intriguing piece was a boulder that proudly held out fi ve to six different precious gem crystals such as topaz, tourmaline, aquamarine crystal clusters, with each cluster the size of a coconut.
The return journey wound through 150km of treacherous mountain roads in the freezing night air. My frozen face eventually thawed out with a local delicacy of chicken hotpot cooked with coconut milk and mountain herbs that Yunnan is famous for.
Onward, we travelled, in cloud-laden weather typical of this province known as “Southern Clouds” since the days of Genghis Khan. Our minibus was fully laden with live chickens in gunny-sacks strapped on the roof and local Miao minorities balanced on tiny stools where seats were not available. They were obviously unused to bus travel, as two thirds of our busload ended up being sick. My experienced rock hunter friends were quick to jump to the front at the fi rst sign of trouble but I was very much dependent on a window under my control. Between opening the window to escape the cigarette smoke and closing the window to escape the backflow, it was not easy to doze on this six-hour journey.
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| Viewing my Miao friend’s clothes for sale in Bacha Sunday market |
Along the road, a clear sparkling waterfall appeared from the jungle, and we followed its meandering course until it joined the reddish-brown silt-laden river called the Hong He (Red River) that forms the border between this stretch of Yunnan and Vietnam. As we neared Hekou, the border town with Vietnam, the rice fi elds were replaced by banana plantations for as far as the eye could see, their lush-green fronds set against a backdrop of blue mountains. Mule carts laden with bananas for the market blocked the narrow mountain roads.
We arrived at Hekou in the evening to the bustle of a lively night scene of stalls and people dancing in the quaint esplanade that ran along one side of the Hong He. Here were shops selling all sorts of Vietnamese goods. It was rather strange travelling through kilometres of seemingly deserted country, to then suddenly stumble on a busy township with trade crossing the borders at all hours. Here, I sampled crunchy bee larvae for lunch.
Travelling on a Malaysian passport in this region has its advantages, for I didn’t need a visa into Vietnam while everyone else did. So I ended up being the carrier pigeon where I crossed the border twice a day to help take the rest of our luggage across when two of us decided we would rather tackle the unknown alternative route back into Nanning than to suffer in the sleeper bus again.
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Across the border in north Vietnam, we went to a Miao market town. The Sunday market in Bacha, where villagers from miles around gather to socialise and shop for the week, was in full swing. There were fi ve Miao groups to be found, easily recognisable from their traditional clothes. The market offered clothes, bags, bedding, all hand-made with some of the most intricate needlework, home-brewed alcohol, all kinds of food for sale, including the heart-wrenching sight of crying puppies huddled and shaking, plus almost anything that is required for their simple lifestyle. We ate and chatted with two Miao women who were aunt and niece from two different villages who come weekly to Bacha to sell clothing and alcohol. They shared our meal of horse meat and doufu, although I noticed they didn’t eat the horse meat.
We then ventured to Sapa, a rather rundown French colonial hill resort. French infl uence can be seen in the buildings once we entered Vietnam, which we fi nd quite unique. The countryside around are dotted with villages of the Black Hmong, a Miao minority group, set among mountains with terraced fi elds. We visited their villages, saw their schools and bought their handicraft. We then made our way to Ha Long Bay, a World Heritage site of the most beautiful and tranquil setting of limestone karsts islands rising from the turquoise seas for as far as the eye could see. Our journey there and out by train, taxi, local bus and motorbike was an adventure and challenge because beyond the Chinese border and outside the suburban reach of Hanoi, no one spoke any of the southern Chinese dialects or English. And as this trip was impromptu, we never learnt the Vietnamese names for these places. To make things more diffi cult, every Vietnamese we met tried to take advantage of our lack of familiarity with the place. Through sheer determination and travel wiles, we made it to this magnifi cent place.
My return to Beijing was at a record pace. We were almost stranded on the border crossing into the Chinese part of Pingxiang, but we bribed our way through. We were glad to leave the deserted pitch-black border area deep in the night and spent the night in Nanning. A 30-hour train ride then took me back to Beijing.
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The Year of the Ding Hai Fire Boar
April 1st, 2007
The Edge, Haven
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What’s in store for 2007
AS THIS IS the fourth year into the Period 8 Luck cycle, we can generally expect events to be more stable than recent years. However there are other aspects of influence that foretell a dynamic year ahead. For those poised on a new venture that has gone well to date, you can expect continued good fortune, for those where things have not been so rosy, you will likely continue to have a bumpy ride. But it is not a year to rest on one’s laurels, as cosmic energies that clash will cause sudden changes and, if not prepared, can upset all carefully made plans. Although, as a whole, these clashes will bring more good than bad, we have to be particularly careful of health-related and other natural disasters this year.
Although territories in northwest Asia will enjoy good prospects in Period 8, 2007 will bring a year of suffering to this region, particularly to the Korean peninsula and Japan. Northwest China will not be immune. The rest of China may expect to continue to progress, although not without intense competition and its fair share of underhanded activities. The months of February, May and November will be particularly intense. A recurrence of avian fl u is a high probability, and earthquake disasters not unlikely. India’s economy is fair this year.
Europe’s economy can expect growth. However, political disagreements will be rife and countries in this region need to ensure conflicts do not arise. The US continues to face challenges, especially of a monetary nature. However, all challenges bring new beginnings, so it can expect good to come out of 2007. The African continent continues to have its problems, without slight financial reprieve this year.
Relatively good news can be expected in countries in the southeast such as Southeast Asia and Australia and New Zealand. A bumpy ride is not unexpected, however, there is more wisdom this time round and money luck and reputation have better chance of being realised.
There may finally be relief from the draught in Australia. In contrast, the US may experience a hotter and dryer season this year. Potential earthquake disasters reside along the Pacific Rim of Fire, with Japan, Korea and Taiwan at risk.
LAYOUT OF ENERGY TO AVOID AND TO HARNESS
Sectors of Energy Violation: San Sha (3 Killings), Wu Huang (5 Yellow), Tai Sui and Sui Po
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The blue denotes the annual violations San Sha, Wu Huang, Tai Sui and Sui Po. The mauve denotes houses that face these directions should avoid renovation this year. |
The areas to avoid disruption are northeast. Renovations or landscaping in this area are to be postponed. If your main door faces northeast, place a metal item in that sector. It is also advisable to hang a metal wind-chime in the northeast part of your property for this year.
Homes facing southwest or the great part of east should avoid renovations altogether this year. If you must, then it is critical to consult a feng shui master.
Avoid activating the northeast or the northwest sectors, eg. refrain from placing red items in the northeast or water in the northwest for fear of quarrels and loss of wealth.
SECTORS OF FAVOURABLE ENERGY
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Footnote: The following suggestions for sectors or directions to activate are only based on the annual prevailing energies according to Xuan Kong Flying Star analysis. It obviously does not take into consideration the person in question nor the buildings’ energy charts and as such are only valid for this year and is a generalisation. |
The sector to activate for knowledge and study is the southeast. A water feature or painting of water will enhance one’s intelligence and accomplishments.
For wealth fortune, activate the southwest with light or a lamp. This year, east is the relationship sector, so enhancing this area with water can bring romance for the single, or adultery for the married!
The following table gives your Life Gua number based on your year of birth and their corresponding auspicious directions for life. East Life Gua people are Life Gua 1,3,4 and 9. West Life Gua people are Life Gua 2,6,7 and 8.
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INCORPORATING YOUR PERSONAL GUA BENEFITS
Feng Shui’s benefi ts lie not so much in its ability to provide predictions of the future, but much more on how the environment can be understood and modified to changes one’s luck.
Incorporating Ba Zhai analysis can provide a more tailored approach to improving one’s feng shui for the year.
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East Gua people will do well to use the sectors of the property marked with E, while West Gua people utilize rooms marked with W. Sectors marked with X are to be avoided. Red denotes sectors favourable for the respective Gua, and unmarked means nuetral energies reside in those sectors. |
Similarly, homes with doors that face east tend to enhance occupants’ brilliance and authority. Use bright lighting here.
South facing homes are less ideal this year, so one can use water to dissipate the negative energies here.
| Master BOON YAP is the daughter of Grandmaster Yap Cheng Hai and the principal of Feng Shui for Enriching Lives. She consults and teaches classical feng shui worldwide and can be contacted at (012) 303 1991 / (012) 677 4600 or via e-mail at boon@masterboon.com. Check out her website www.masterboon.com for more articles. |



















