- What Do You Need to Know About Feng Shui Audits?

by Master Wey, Ba Zi guide

Discovering the profound depths of Feng Shui goes beyond the surface of merely arranging lucky charms. Rooted in ancient Chinese wisdom, Feng Shui unveils the intricate dance between yin and yang energies, orchestrating the flow of Qi to foster well-being in our living spaces. As we navigate through the realm of Chinese metaphysics, Ba Zi serves as the diagnostic tool, deciphering the intricacies of our destinies. Concurrently, Feng Shui emerges as the remedy, offering practical solutions to enhance the energy flow in our lives.

As we delve into the insights of Ba Zi and unravel its implications, the art of Feng Shui beckons with promise. While mastering its techniques may demand dedication, the rewards are immeasurable. In a world where material possessions are transient, knowledge remains an enduring treasure—a beacon guiding us toward a life of abundance and fulfillment.

What are the Key Points of a Feng Shui Audit?

Here are some key points that a newcomer to Feng Shui audits should know:

  1. Purpose: Understand that the primary goal of a Feng Shui audit is to assess the energy flow (Qi) within a space and make adjustments to optimize harmony and well-being.
  2. Consultation: Typically, a Feng Shui audit involves hiring a consultant who will evaluate the layout, design, and energy of your space, providing recommendations for improvement. The Ba Zi Advisor introduces an innovative and accessible solution: merging analysis tools with eLearning into a new concept of Self-Audit Feng Shui. As you start using it and exploring the recommended articles, you'll witness improvements in both your life and understanding.
  3. Factors Considered: The Ba Zi Advisor will take into account all the information you provide, which includes the results of the analysis of your Exterior Forms as outlined below. This analysis encompasses the surrounding environment, such as roads, buildings, water bodies, pillars, trees, etc., as well as the measurements discussed in the article Conduct Your Own Feng Shui Home Audit. This holistic approach aims to understand how these factors impact the flow of energy.
  4. Enhancing Positive Energy: A Feng Shui audit aims to enhance positive energy (Sheng Qi) while minimizing negative energy (Sha Qi) to promote well-being, prosperity, and harmony.
  5. Adjustments and Remedies: Based on the assessment, Ba Zi Advisor may suggest adjustments or remedies, which could include rearranging furniture, adding elements like plants, aquariums, candles or lamps, metal objects, or stones, or making external changes.
  6. Personalized Approach: Every space is unique, and recommendations provided during a Feng Shui audit are tailored to the specific needs and energy of the individual or family residing in the space.
  7. Long-term Benefits: Implementing Feng Shui principles learned from an audit can lead to long-term benefits, including improved health, relationships, and success in various aspects of life.
  8. Continued Learning: Feng Shui is a vast field with ongoing learning opportunities. While a Feng Shui audit can provide valuable insights, it's also beneficial to continue learning and exploring the principles of Feng Shui to further enhance your living or working environment.

By understanding these basics, newcomers can approach a Feng Shui audit with a clearer understanding of its purpose, process, and potential benefits.

Remember, incorporating Feng Shui into your life is a gradual process, and each adjustment can contribute to a more balanced and harmonious living or working space.

How to Conduct an Exterior Form Analysis?

Every Feng Shui audit should commence with a thorough analysis of the building's surrounding environment (San He).

The ancient texts suggest that forms precede formulas and the analysis of a building is conducted from the exterior to the interior.

In simpler terms, exterior forms are the primary activators of Palaces and Flying Stars. In form analysis, the key is to identify those that generate Sha Qi.

How to Recognize Sha Qi-Generating Forms

In Feng Shui, Qi is the vital life force flowing through everything. It's dynamic, cyclic, and categorized into phases, crucial for optimizing Feng Shui. Sheng Qi brings luck, progress, and stability, while Sha Qi is destructive, attracting illness and hindering performance. Our aim: seek Sheng Qi, and avoid Sha Qi.

Recognizing Sha Qi-generating forms outside of a house involves observing various environmental factors that can potentially disrupt the flow of positive energy (Qi). Here are only some common forms of Sha Qi and how to recognize them, soon we'll write for you an article exclusively on this important subject:

  • Straight Roads Towards the House:
    • If there are roads or pathways leading directly towards the house in a straight line, it can create rushing Sha Qi or aggressive energy. This can be observed by standing outside the house and noticing if the roads or pathways seem to converge directly towards it without any natural obstruction or curve.
  • T-Junctions or Crossroads:
    • T-junctions or crossroads in front of the house can create sharp Sha Qi. These junctions act as conduits for fast-moving energy, which can create pressure and instability. Standing outside the house, observe if there are roads intersecting directly in front of it, potentially forming a T-shape or crossroads.
  • Overhead Power Lines or Tall Structures:
    • Overhead power lines, tall buildings, or structures looming over the house can generate oppressive Sha Qi. This can be recognized by looking up from outside the house and noticing if there are any imposing structures casting shadows or creating a sense of heaviness over the property.
  • Sharp or Pointed Objects:
    • Sharp or pointed objects directed towards the house, such as the corners of neighboring buildings, sharp-roofed structures, or nearby antennas, can create cutting Sha Qi. Walk around the exterior of the house and observe if there are any sharp or pointed objects pointing directly toward it.
  • Negative Landforms:
    • Negative landforms such as steep hills, cliffs, or large rocks blocking the flow of Qi towards the house can create Sha Qi. Survey the surrounding landscape from outside the house and note if there are any natural features obstructing the flow of energy toward the property.
  • Stagnant Water or Blocked Pathways:
    • Stagnant water or blocked pathways around the house can create stagnant Sha Qi, which disrupts the flow of positive energy. Look for areas outside the house where water pools or pathways are blocked, preventing the smooth circulation of energy.

Identify the Missing Sectors

In Feng Shui, a Missing Sector in a house can have significant implications for the flow of Qi energy. Each sector of a house corresponds to specific aspects of life, such as health, wealth, relationships, and career, as defined by the Bagua map. When a sector is missing or incomplete, it can create imbalances in those areas of life. Areas of life represented by the missing sector may experience limitations, obstacles, or challenges. For example, a missing wealth sector could signify financial difficulties or limitations in wealth accumulation, and a missing relationship sector could lead to difficulties in forming or maintaining relationships.

To identify the missing sectors of a house, you need to overlay the Bagua with its nine palaces onto the house plan (in other words, divide the house into nine equal parts with parallel lines). If you notice that more than half of a palace is missing, then it is considered missing and marked accordingly.

In the example above, you can observe that the SouthWest sector of this house is missing. What are the consequences of this? Enter the Facing Direction of the house into Ba Zi Advisor, and you will see what the missing sector represents and its impact on the occupants. As you already know, every house has 4 favorable sectors and 4 unfavorable ones. The worst scenario is when a favorable sector is missing, obviously.

Gathering and Harnessing Data on Sha Qi and Missing Sectors

When identifying exterior forms generating Sha Qi or missing sectors, use a compass to determine their direction within the eight sectors:

  • SE: 112.5 - 157.4
  • S: 157.5 - 202.4
  • SW: 202.5 - 247.4
  • W: 247.5 - 292.4
  • NW: 292.5 - 337.4
  • N: 337.5 - 22.4
  • NE: 22.5 - 67.4
  • E: 67.5 - 112.4

Then, mark the corresponding checkboxes in the "Manage buildings" section of Ba Zi Advisor.

What are the Analysis Methods in Feng Shui?

San He and San Yuan are the two most significant ideologies in Feng Shui, interdependent and utilized to optimize harmony and balance within a space. San He focuses on manipulating landforms and building placements to activate or enhance beneficial energies and neutralize or diminish the influence of negative energies. It is also known as the School of Forms.

San Yuan, also known as the School of Formulas, concentrates on analyzing time periods and cycles to determine the distribution of energies in space and time. This school relies on concepts such as the 20-Year Period, the Eight Palaces (Ba Zhai), Flying Stars (Xuan Kong Fei Xing), and other time analysis techniques to identify and amplify favorable energies while minimizing the impact of unfavorable energies. If you're seeking more information on these topics, feel free to delve into the articles Quickstart Feng Shui: Building Analysis for Beginners - Part 1 and Part 2.

Both schools are integral to Feng Shui practice, aiming to harmonize environments by either shaping the physical landscape and structures (San He) or understanding and harnessing temporal influences (San Yuan).

If we've previously touched on Form Analysis, let's now delve into the concepts of the Eight Palaces and Flying Stars. In Ba Zi Advisor, we view them as interdependent and complementary, so we conduct both analyses and correlate the results.

The Eight Palaces Method

The Eight Palaces method, also known as Ba Zhai in Feng Shui, is a technique used to analyze the energetic influences within a space based on the orientation of the building. This method divides a property into eight sectors or palaces, each representing different aspects of life, such as wealth, health, relationships, career, and more. The Central Palace, while depicted in the illustration, is not a functional palace in Feng Shui practice.

Representing a building as a rectangle and dividing it into Palaces with parallel equidistant lines, while convenient and easy to understand, is not entirely accurate. In reality, the division is made into sectors of a circle, into 8 equal sectors corresponding to the 8 cardinal directions (North, NorthEast, East, SouthEast, South, SouthWest, West, and NorthWest), and you can achieve this by overlaying the Luo pan on the house plan. It is now clearer to observe that the Central Palace essentially reduces to a point and cannot be considered a proper Palace like the others.
Bagua and Luo Pan representation of a Dui building in Ba Zi Advisor

Practitioners use various formulas and calculations to assess the energy distribution within each palace and identify auspicious or inauspicious sectors. This analysis helps determine how different areas of life are influenced by the surrounding environment and how to optimize the flow of positive energy (Qi) to enhance well-being and harmony.

The Eight Palaces method is an essential component of Feng Shui analysis, providing valuable insights into the energy dynamics of space and guiding adjustments to promote prosperity, health, and happiness.

The Flying Stars Method

The Flying Stars method, known as Xuan Kong Fei Xing in Feng Shui, is a complex technique utilized to analyze the energy influences within a space, based on the movement of stars over time. This method is closely related to the temporal energy pattern of the building, which is determined by the year of completion of its construction or, more precisely, the year when the building first began to be inhabited. At this time, the Celestial and Earthly energies present began interacting with Human energy, forming what is known as the Heavenly, Earthly, and Human trinity.

It's important to understand that, in Chinese philosophy, time is viewed as cyclical rather than linear. The largest unit of time is the Great Cycle of 180 years, divided into three parts of 60 years each (San Yuan), with each of these further divided into three periods of 20 years. Until February 3, 2024, we were in the 8th period, and now we are transitioning into the 9th period. Following this will be periods 1 and 2.

In the Flying Stars method, nine different stars are assigned numerical values, each representing a specific type of energy. Each 20-year period is associated with a leading star, represented by a number from 1 to 9. For example, period 7 (1984 - 2003) was followed by period 8 (2004 - 2023), which will be succeeded by period 9 (2024 - 2043), followed by period 1, then 2, and so on.

The period star is the primary star, the most active, and typically embodies positive characteristics. It is followed in activity by stars 1 (the future leader) and 2 (the apprentice), both of which also tend to manifest positive qualities. Conversely, the star that has just been extinguished tends to manifest only negative qualities. The other extinguished stars have less energy and manifest both positive and negative traits.

According to the principles of Yin and Yang, each star corresponds to both positive and negative traits.

Negative traits Star Positive traits
wisdom, fame, and luck 1 conflicts between partners, divorce
health and fertility 2 diseases and abortion
wealth and abundance 3 lawsuits, thefts, and asthma
achievements, creativity, writings, and idylls 4 extramarital affairs
changes, success, power 5 losses, lawsuits, illnesses, death
authority, dignity, and fame 6 loneliness and trials
financial gains and fertility 7 fires, thefts, and losses
financial success and luck 8 problems for the young and single
success and promotion 9 fires, litigation, mental problems

Now, each Palace is assigned a Base Star computed from the Building's Kua number (the leading star of the period when it was built), a Mountain Star depending on the star of the building's sitting, and a Water Star which depends on the building's facing star. These remain constant, with their effects changing only when the 20-year period changes. The Mountain Star is related to Health and Relations (passive Yin principle) and the Water Star is associated with Wealth and Prosperity (active Yang principle). Temporal Stars also influence each Palace, moving annually, monthly, or daily, interacting with the Mountain and Water stars to affect the energy of different sectors.

This analysis aids in determining where to place important activities or remedies to enhance positive energies and mitigate negative influences. The Flying Stars method is highly esteemed in Feng Shui practice for its precision and depth of analysis.

How to Interpret Analysis Results

The results obtained from the analysis based on the data provided by you about the building are presented in a concise form, by palaces. Essentially, clicking on any Palace in the Bagua redirects you to the corresponding palace information.

This is presented in the following format: the palace name and its favorability are displayed in the panel title. By clicking on 'See Ba Zhai details,' you will be presented with the Ba Zhai analysis (Eight Palaces analysis). In the actual panel, you can see the effects manifested by the Flying Stars, as well as the interactions between them or with the temporal stars: annual or monthly. Not all stars have the same level of manifestation; the strongest are, in order: the Water Star and the Mountain Star, followed by the Year Star and the Month Star. The effects of the Day Star are too weak and short-lived to be presented here.

The impacts of the building on the residents.

As the final outcome of the analysis, the impact of the building on the residents is presented to you.

Based on their birth date, the Destiny Chart of each individual and their corresponding Auxiliary Stars have been calculated. Depending on the directions of manifestation, which are presented in the following panel, these can be activated or nullified.

However, these matters are quite complicated and require expertise from the practitioner, as well as advanced knowledge, since the effects may not always be desirable. Beginners are advised not to attempt these remedies without consulting experienced practitioners. We will provide more information on these matters in the upcoming articles.

Stay tuned!

Master Wey

Ba Zi guide

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