h Phoenix Qi: Five Phases
Showing posts with label Five Phases. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Five Phases. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2007

Daoism on Spring Equinox

In honor of the Spring or Vernal Equinox, the quote below is “Spring” from 365 Tao: Daily Meditations by Deng Ming-Dao, Harper San Francisco, 1992, ISBN: 0062502239.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sun and moon divide the sky,

Fragrance blooms on pear wood bones;

Earth awakens with a sigh.

Wanderer revels on the path alone.

It is the time of equinox, when day and night are briefly equal. This day signals the beginning of spring, the increasing of light, and the return of life to the frozen earth.

Of course, this day only represents a moment in time. Spring has long been returning, and we know that summer will soon follow. The cycle of the seasons will continue in succession. There is no such thing as a true stopping in time, for all is a continuum. Nature makes its own concordances as a mere outgrowth to its movement, it is we who see structure and give names to pattern.

But who can begrudge temporary pleasures to a solitary traveler? Let us go out and enjoy the day, revel in the coming of spring, rejoice in the warming of the earth. For though the ground may be covered with frost, movement and growth are taking place all around us. Beauty bared fills our eyes and makes us drunk. As we wander the endless mountains and streams, filling our lungs with the breath of the forests, let us take comfort in being part of nature. For life has enough misery and misfortune. Philosophy reminds us enough of the transience of life. Give us the charm of the ephemeral, and let it silence all who would object.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I wonder if "Wanderer revels on the path alone" refers to a human wanderer or a heavenly one – the sun! Consider: 'Planet: late O.E., from O.Fr. planete (Fr. planËte), from L.L. planeta, from Gk. (asteres) planetai "wandering (stars)," from planasthai "to wander," of unknown origin. So called because they have apparent motion, unlike the "fixed" stars. Originally including also the moon and sun; modern scientific sense of "world that orbits a star" is from 1640. Source: Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper, Historian. Dictionary.com http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/planet

March 20th is the Spring Equinox for the northern hemisphere, the time of year when the sun is at zero degrees longitude and latitude on the ecliptic, and the hours of daylight and dark-of-night are of equal length.

On the equinoxes, the sun and moon pass each other in the sky at the intersection of the ecliptic with the celestial equator as they rise and set. (The ecliptic is the path followed by the planets against the backdrop of the constellations. The celestial equator is the projection of the Earth's equator onto the sky, an invisible line enabling us to determine whether a heavenly body hovers over our northern hemisphere or our southern hemisphere. These two invisible lines intersect at the equinoxes.)

Eclipses often occur about the time of the equinoxes; solar eclipses right on the equinox day, and lunar eclipses about two weeks before or after the equinox day. Indeed, there will be a partial solar eclipse on the 19th of March this year that, providing my solar eclipse mapping program is correct, will be visible from Southern India going northward, across Eastern Asia, over the North Pole and down to Western Canada and Alaska. The time of the eclipse will extend from 0:38 to 04:24 UT with the greatest coverage of the sun by the moon occurring at 02:31 UT.

For the next six months, the sun will continue to rise and set north of the celestial equator while the Full moon appears rising in our southern sky. On the Summer Solstice, the sun will rise at its northernmost point on the horizon and the Full moon will rise at its southernmost point. From then on, the points on the horizon they each rise will move back toward the center until they meet again on the Autumnal Equinox.

It's almost like a Square Dance when the caller sings out for the shining couple to leave their corner, do-se-do in the middle, and go back to the opposite corner. The heavenly bodies do indeed dance around the sky! :-)

(Here is my attempt at graphing this dance, and I have to say, the taiji or yin/yang circle has to be one of the most useful diagrams on the planet; it is such a perfect symbol to show so many natural cycles! I'm sure you noticed that the curved lines form an infinity sign, a sideways 8! That's a topic for another post, though.)


























In the taiji diagram above, the curving line separating the black and white sections tracks the rise and set positions on the horizon of the sun from one Spring Equinox to the next. Each day from the Spring Equinox, the sun rises at a more northerly position on the horizon until, on the Summer Solstice, it rises at its most northerly position. From that point until the Fall equinox, the sunrise on the horizon is in the northern half of the sky, but moves slowly back to the Celestial Equator.

After the Fall Equinox, the sun's rising place on the horizon moves in a more southerly direction until it reaches its most southerly point on the day of the Winter Solstice. Following the day of the Winter Solstice, the sunrise point on the horizon rises again and comes closer each day to the Celestial Equator as the calendar approaches the date of the Spring Equinox.

Imagine an opposite line, a mirror image line (I attempted in blue), tracking the rise and set positions on the horizon of the Full moon for the same annual period. You see that the movement of the moon is the opposite of, and reflects the movement of the sun.

But, to get back to the Spring Equinox…

We know the sun is symbolic of yang, and the moon is symbolic of yin. At the equinox, yang grows not only as warmer weather and longer hours of daylight, but also as the sun climbs in our northern half of the sky above the Celestial Equator. Yin, the moon, diminishes by virtue of its rising and setting away from us in the southern hemisphere of the sky below the central Celestial Equator.

To follow the Dao and the example of Nature at this time of year, we begin to increase our yang activities and decrease our yin activities.

Spending more time out side is something most of us do, enjoying the fresh air and warm weather, and soaking up the sunshine to replenish our Vitamin D supply which no doubt is quite diminished after the winter! Meditation can move from the quiet, seated contemplations to more active styles such as Standing Like a Tree, or labyrinth walking. Definitely more physical activities like hiking and swimming are called for, though I find it impossible to put away the books completely! There is a lot to be said for spending a lazy afternoon outside, reading a book under a tree.

Since spring is the season of growth represented by the energy phase of wood, do some gardening! Even if it's a small pot of herbs for making fresh herbal teas or for wonderful gourmet dinners, you will be aligning yourself with the energies of the season. (I recommend growing mint. It's very easy to grow, it's an especially refreshing drink on warm days, and it aids digestion.)

You can grow all sorts of things, too, not just plants. Grow a hobby, or a business. Encourage your mind to grow by taking fun or challenging classes which might let your circle of friends grow, too!

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Feng Shui Eight House Bright Mirror School Part 3 – The House

If you didn't do this in Part 2 of the Feng Shui Eight House Bright Mirror School series of posts, you need to use a compass and find the direction your house faces. There are some exceptions, but generally speaking the wall that contains your front door is the "face" of your house and is called the "facing" or "faces" direction; the back or opposite side of your house is called the "sitting" or "sits" direction.

Set aside your jewelry while you do this. Stand with your back to the front door but away from the door frame or beams so the metal or nails don't affect the compass reading of the direction you are facing. (If your front door were your home's eyes, you and your house should be looking in the same direction, facing the same way.) Write down the degree number on the compass; i.e. if your home faces due south, the compass should read close to 180 degrees. You may also take a couple more readings from different places along the front of your home, but facing in the same direction, just to make sure there is nothing affecting the compass reading. You will use the number and direction from the reading to determine the areas and energies of your home.

This seems as though it should be pretty cut-and-dried: the direction a house faces and sits determines its number just as your year of birth determined your personal ming gua or life sign. However, there's a hitch.

Two sources for this material state that the number that represents your home is based on the house's Facing Direction and the facing is always the Wealth direction. Several other sources say the number of your home is based on the Sitting Direction and the sitting is always the Harmony direction. Obviously, it is going to make quite a difference which is which.

In my experience, the number for the house should be based on the sitting position which is the Harmony direction, and should be on the opposite side from the facing position. Consult the list below to determine your home's direction and number:

If the compass reading is between 22.5 and 67.5 your house faces NE and sits SW
If the compass reading is between 67.5 and 112.5 your house faces E and sits W
If the compass reading is between 112.5 and 157.5 your house faces SE and sits NW
If the compass reading is between 157.5 and 202.5 your house faces S and sits N
If the compass reading is between 202.5 and 247.5 your house faces SW and sits NE
If the compass reading is between 247.5 and 292.5 your house faces W and sits E
If the compass reading is between 292.5 and 337.5 your house faces NW and sits SE
If the compass reading is between 337.5 and 22.5 your house faces N and sits S

Sitting direction and number >

Trigram&phase

Influences V

N 1

water

water

E 3

thunder

wood

SE 4

wind

wood

S 9

fire

fire

SW 2

earth

earth

NW 6

sky

metal

W 7

lake

metal

NE 8

mountain

earth

Wealth

SE

S

N

E

NE

W

NW

SW

Health

E

N

S

SE

W

NE

SW

NW

Longevity

S

SE

E

N

NW

SW

NE

W

Harmony

N

E

SE

S

SW

NW

W

NE

Accidents

W

SW

NW

NE

E

SE

N

S

Obstacles

NE

NW

SW

W

SE

E

S

N

Loss

NW

NE

W

SW

S

N

SE

E

Exhaustion

SW

W

NE

NW

N

S

E

SE

On the eight-sectioned circle you printed out from Part 2 where you wrote the influences each direction is to you, write the influences of the house into each section. If you didn't see part two, print the circle below, and follow the link to Part 2 at the end of this post.




















You should easily be able now to compare the influences of the home to your personal number and directions. If it looks unfavorable, and it will if you happen to be an East Group person in a West Group house where all the favorable directions of the house are all your unfavorable directions, don't worry.

My favorite feng shui author Eva Wong places most of the emphasis on the number and influences of the person instead of on the dwelling. The most important things to do are to exit the home in one of your favorable directions, and have your bedroom in one of your favorable directions.

You see, your house is passive energy while you are active energy. If you are an East Group person and your favorable energies are water, wood, or fire, you can find it taxing to spend time in areas of the home that are earth and metal, energy phases that are unfavorable for you. Likewise, if you are a West Group person and the energetic influence of earth and metal are good for you, but you live in a home were water, wood, and fire rule, that could weaken your energies after a while. Over a long period of time, the unfavorable directions in a house could have harmful effects on your relationships, health, or finances, but it's more likely that the effects of your personal directions and active energies will offset potentially damaging influences.

My personal experience bears this out. My husband and I moved into a home in 1999 that sits NW and faces SE. My husband is a ming gua 7, and I am a ming gua 4. Since my husband and the house are both West Group, and I am East Group, this should have made the surroundings more favorable for him and less favorable for me. That is not what happened.

Our home and the exits we most often depart from, the front door or the garage, face SE. SE for me is the Harmony direction, and for my husband it is the Loss direction. Less than three years later, my husband was "downsized," he lost his job. Within the same three year period, I worked at a wonderful job that was not too busy or strenuous, and the pay, while not enough to make a person wealthy, was enough to comfortably cover expenses – exactly what I would expect when going to work in my Harmony direction.

The sitting direction (the Harmony direction) of the house is NW, and that is where the kitchen is located. NW is my Accidents direction, and I tend to be a klutz around sharp objects, so there is great potential for Accidents in the kitchen with cutters, knifes and other sharp objects. Since moving in to this house, I have certainly had my normal share of cuts and burns while cooking. Apparently the Harmony of the house has not overcome my tendency toward Accidents in this direction. Not only that, I almost set the house on fire one night while making stir-fry…good thing my husband was working on the kitchen computer and was there to help me douse it! In over 30 years of cooking meals for my family, this was the first time I have ever had an almost-fire in the kitchen! So, I don't believe this direction in the house has a lot of Harmonious and balancing influence on my propensity for kitchen Accidents.

For my adult son who is also a West Group person but whose SE direction represents Obstacles, I observed that he often found something "in his way" when applying for a job or obtaining things he wanted. My conclusion after these experiences is that Eva Wong is right on when she says the directions for the person are more important than the directions of the building.

If you missed the first two posts on Eight House Bright Mirror Feng Shui, you can catch them here: Part 1 – Ming Gua and Part 2 – The Directions.

The next step in feng shui is the Flying Star style which evaluates the energies of your home over periods of time. Unfortunately, that topic is more complicated than I can properly cover in this space. If you would like to learn more about it, I very highly recommend Eva Wong's book Feng-Shui: The Ancient Wisdom of Harmonious Living for Modern Times

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Feng Shui Eight House Bright Mirror School Part 2 – The Directions

The first thing most people need to know about an Eight House reading is whether they are an "East House Person" or a "West House Person." This refers to the favorable and unfavorable directions I mentioned in the last post.

The East or West designation is determined by the following diagram. This is not the complete HeTu diagram; I've erased the center and drawn a dividing line so you could clearly see the East and West House groups by trigram and number.

The trigrams/energy-phase in the East Group include the symbols in the directions of east and south (the left and the top of the diagram respectively): water/water (7) and wind/wood (2) combined with thunder/wood (8) and fire/fire (3). The West Group is represented by the trigrams for earth/earth (1) and mountain/earth (6) in the direction of north (at the bottom), combined with lake/metal (4), and sky/metal in the west (on the left side).

In the cycle of the five phases of energy, the East Group contains the creative cycle energies of water (which creates) wood (which creates) fire. The West Group contains the creative cycle and energies of earth (which creates) metal.

You'll notice that if you sum-up the numbers in the groups, east+south and north+west, they will add up to 5, 10, or 15. If you subtract the same-side numbers, the result is 5. This shows favorability and harmony between the signs of each group since 5 represents heaven, 10 represents earth, and 15 represents the harmonious combination of the two. (Usually, the HeTu diagram has five white/yang dots in the center representing heaven, framed by ten black/yin dots representing earth. To see the complete diagram, see my previous post The Correct Orientation of the Yin/Yang Symbol)



For example, in the East Group, 7-2=5, 8-3=5; 2+3=5, 2+8=10, 3+7=10, 7+8=15.

In the West Group, 6-1=5, 9-4=5; 4+1=5, 1+9=10, 4+6=10, and 6+9=15.



Moving along, we're going rearrange the symbols from the HeTu to correspond to the annual cycles of earthly energy phases, and to correspond to the growth, climax, and decline of earthly yin and yang. To show these changes, a new diagram was created, the Luo Shu.

You will notice that, like a crazy game of musical chairs, all the trigrams and most of the numbers changed places! The thing that remains constant is the favorable trigrams – but not the numbers!













You saved your ming gua from last time, right? If you did, skip down to "Ready to continue?" If you didn't save it, or if you didn't read the last post, don't worry! Here are those instructions again:

First, determine your birth year. I know, that sounds a bit like a no-brainer, but the cycle used to determine annual energy in feng shui begins on February 4th or 5th depending on the position of the sun. For people born on a date from January 1 through February 3, you will use the number for the previous year: i.e. if your birth date is January 14, 1972, you will use 1971 as your year of birth. If your date of birth is February 4 or 5, you will need to find out the solar calendar new year date for that year.

Once you have your proper year of birth:

First, add together the four digits of your birth year: 1 + 9 + 7 + 1 = 18

Second, if needed, continue adding until you have a single digit: 1 + 8 = 9

Third, for a woman: add 4 to the number from step two: 4 + 9 = 13. If this results in a two-digit number, add those together to get a single-digit number: 1 + 3 = 4.

Third, for a man: subtract from 11 the number from step two: 11 – 9 = 2.

Fourth, for men and women, if the calculations in step three result in 5, women use the number 8 as your ming gua, and men use the number 2 as your ming gua. We transform the number 5 into either 2 or 8 because 5 is reserved for the center and is not assigned a direction or a trigram.

Ready to continue?

In the table immediately below, find your ming gua in the top row. This will also tell you your Harmony direction, your trigram, and your personal energy phase for the purposes of feng shui.

The first four numbers, 1, 3, 4, and 9 belong to the East House Group; the last four numbers belong to the West House Group. You may notice that even though the numbers have changed, the trigrams have stayed with their East or West Group affiliation as originally shown in the first diagram above, the HeTu: water-wood-fire, and earth-metal.

Ming gua >

Trigram&phase

Influences V

1 N

water

water

3 E

thunder

wood

4 SE

wind

wood

9 S

fire

fire

2 SW

earth

earth

6 NW

sky

metal

7 W

lake

metal

8 NE

mountain

earth

Wealth

SE

S

N

E

NE

W

NW

SW

Health

E

N

S

SE

W

NE

SW

NW

Longevity

S

SE

E

N

NW

SW

NE

W

Harmony

N

E

SE

S

SW

NW

W

NE

Accidents

W

SW

NW

NE

E

SE

N

S

Obstacles

NE

NW

SW

W

SE

E

S

N

Loss

NW

NE

W

SW

S

N

SE

E

Exhaustion

SW

W

NE

NW

N

S

E

SE

The directions are standard abbreviations:
E – East, SE – South East, S – South, SW – Southwest, W – West, NW – Northwest, N – North, NE – Northeast.

From most favorable to least favorable (though there is some debate on the proper order of Accidents, Obstacles, and Loss), the influences the directions have on you are listed down the left side, and the directions spread across the row in the table. For example, say your ming gua is 3 and you want to know your Wealth direction. Follow the row for Wealth until you intersect with the column for 3 and you will see that S (south) is your Wealth direction.

Say you are a ming gua 2 and you want to avoid your worst direction: follow Exhaustion across the row until it intersects with your ming gua from the top row; a 2 person is going to want to avoid the direction North! (You sure aren't going to want to activate any energy, or even spend much time in that direction!)

Now for your house!

You need to use a compass and find the direction your house faces. There are some exceptions, but generally speaking the wall that contains your front door is the "face" of your house and is called the "facing" or "faces" direction; the back or opposite side of your house is called the "sitting" or "sits" direction.

Set aside your jewelry while you do this. Stand with your back to the front door but away from the door frame or beams so the metal or nails don't affect the compass reading of the direction you are facing. (If your front door were your home's eyes, you and your house should be looking in the same direction, facing the same way.) Write down the degree number on the compass; i.e. if your home faces due south, the compass should read close to 180 degrees. You may also take a couple more readings from different places along the front of your home, but facing in the same direction, just to make sure there is nothing affecting the compass reading. You will use the number and direction from the reading to determine the areas and energies of your home.

If the compass reading is between 22.5 and 67.5 your house faces NE and sits SW
If the compass reading is between 67.5 and 112.5 your house faces E and sits W
If the compass reading is between 112.5 and 157.5 your house faces SE and sits NW
If the compass reading is between 157.5 and 202.5 your house faces S and sits N
If the compass reading is between 202.5 and 247.5 your house faces SW and sits NE
If the compass reading is between 247.5 and 292.5 your house faces W and sits E
If the compass reading is between 292.5 and 337.5 your house faces NW and sits SE
If the compass reading is between 337.5 and 22.5 your house faces N and sits S

Ok? Now comes the interesting part, matching you with your house.

Get some 10-squares-to-the-inch graph paper and draw your house using the scale one foot equals one square and cut around the edges so you have just your house. Then, click on the circle below and print it out. When you're done, click the back button to return to the article.



















Write into each section of the "pie" you just printed the meaning that area has for you as outlined in the table above according to your ming gua number. (i.e. if your ming gua was 1, you would write "Wealth" in the southeast section, "Health" in the east section, etc. As closely as you can, placing the center of your house on the center of the "pie," match the facing direction of your house with the degree around the outer edge of the circle. (If the compass reading was 163, do your best to set your graph-paper house on the circle so it is facing the 163 degree mark.)

Now you evaluate!

In what area of the "pie" is your front door (or your garage door, or the exit you most often use)? Where is your bedroom? These should be in one of your four favorable directions. See if the areas you spend most of your time in are your favorable or unfavorable areas (see explanation below). If you find that you are often in unfavorable areas, you should consider leaving home in the morning from a door in a better direction if possible, or changing bedrooms if your sleep area is in an unfavorable location.

Here is what each direction means:

Wealth: This area is the highest-energy area. It is a good direction for your front door if you work outside the home, or a home office if you work at home. The energy of this area has the potential for above-average good fortune in all areas of life, especially money. However, it also has the potential to make you work too hard or too long! This area may be too energetic for your bedroom or area where you like to relax.

Health: This area has the potential to keep you healthy, or to help you recover from an illness. It is a good area for any sort of self-improvement or health maintenance, mental and physical. This is a good area for your bedroom and should bring restful, regenerating sleep.

Longevity: The potential of Longevity is favorable over time; want a long life, a long marriage? How about staying a long time in your job, or improving communications between yourself and others? If so, you want your bedroom or front door in this area.

Harmony: The potential of this area is pretty quiet and relaxing. If your bedroom is here, you will most likely enjoy overall good health and have a harmonious marriage. If your front door is here, you probably will make enough money to live comfortably, but not earn great wealth; you will probably have a job you like, but won't work too hard.

Accidents: The potential of this area is for "things" to happen; annoying things but not overly awful things. You get a nice bonus at work and then the car breaks down and guess what – the cost of repairing the car eats your whole bonus. People misunderstand something you've said and get mad or annoyed at you causing arguments or backbiting. If your bedroom is in this area, you may have trouble sleeping.

Obstacles: This is a "bad luck" sort of area. If your front door is in this area, you could experience bad luck in financial or legal matters. No matter what you try to do, something is always getting in your way, keeping you from getting ahead at work or at home with your family. If your bedroom is in this area, you could experience frequent illness and sleep problems.

Loss: Just what it says: loss. If your front door is here, you could experience loss of job, loss of wealth, loss of business. The losses could be through natural disaster like a fire or flood, or human intervention as when your boss "downsizes" you or a thief robs you. This area is very poor for heath, so you don't want your bedroom here.

Exhaustion: This is the worst area, with the potential for serious misfortune in wealth and luck, serious illnesses, early death, tragedies and injuries, accidents, loss of family. You definitely do not want a door or bedroom in this area, and shouldn't spend much time here.

To recap: It is good to have your front door and bedroom in one of your four good directions, especially for the primary wage earner. If you would like to increase your wealth, exit your home from a door in your Wealth area, but be prepared to work harder! Have your bedroom in one of the other three favorable areas.

Try to avoid having a front door in any of your unfavorable directions. These are more suited to the bathroom (where you don't spend a lot of time) and the kitchen where the heat from the stove is said to symbolically "burn off" the harmful energies.

If you would like a detailed, professional Eight House Bright Mirror reading done for you, please contact me at phoenix_qi@yahoo.com I do excellent work and my rates are very reasonable!