Previous | Next | Discuss :: Free Advice (General Feng Shui)
Dear Lewis,
Please note the following:-
1. If you are standing at your main entrance door (looking outside the
house), the fig tree should not be seen directly i.e. slicing any part of
the main entrance door. It should be at either side of the house i.e. left
or right side.
2. If the tree can be seen directly i.e. slicing any part of the house, it
must not have a broken stump.
The above two `conditions' is to avoid trees becoming a poison arrow to the
main entrance of the house.
In Feng Shui, avoid planting too many trees on the North-East (devil's gate)
or West (a yin location) or South West (devil's backdoor).
Too many trees or plants especially if they are not properly maintained can
create a `too yin' location and this could result in attracting `yin forces'
or spirits to these location.
There is not much significance in planting a fig tree or any other `healthy'
trees so long as the fig tree do not grow too large at the front of the
house especially at the true North-East (compass location).
Another good thing about have a garden is that it ultimately attract birds.
This is a good sign.
Warmest Regards,
Cecil
-----Original Message-----
From: Listmanager
To: Recipients of 'free-advice' suppressed
Date: Saturday, June 05, 1999 9:03 AM
Subject: figtree
>From: "S Lewis"
>
>This message is sent from "free-advice" Mailing List.
>
>what is the significance or meaning of having a figtree outside my house?
Is it auspicious or inauspicious and why?
|
[ Site Search | Forum Search | Picture Search | Site Map ] |
|
|
|
||
Help Desk: (65) 9785-3171 |
||
|
|
|
Highlights |
Extend your learning with Master Cecil Lee's Applied Feng Shui Made Easy Book. |
Site Navigation |
|
User's Comments I would like to offer compliments. you have a great web site offering excellent content. its focused and comprehensive and distinguished in the field. In the English speaking world, your services are one of the best I have seen. I understand you are offering a commercial service, concurrently you also make available informative services to a very large audience, which is excellent. I feel saddened that there are those western modern stylists who claim to practice fengshui. browsing the on-line sites of these con-artists, they are mere fronts for hawking goods at crazy prices. I am only curious of how to drive these bad elements out, as they are degrading a very well practiced tradition and cultural asset. Best Regards, Scott Chen 8 November 2003 |
Google SiteSearch |
Sponsored Links |