Saturday, March 28, 2009

From Flying Star To Crashing Bird



When I first attempted to write about the Mud Cow in early January, I was reluctant to predict of the followings: -

“…Dry is the spell of a confused weather conditions to places where it supposed to be wet and the reverse effects may spell the same for the otherwise dry places. Calamities of earthquakes, eruption and landslides are obvious. Significantly it may also spell for air disasters…”

The reason I do not think it will materialise so soon especially with the effect of the change in the JiaZi. However, current events had proven that weathers are unpredictable and planes are crashing from landing into the water to bursting in flames in the Japanese runway.

I find the explanation in Flying Star predictions by some to reengineer the forecast is a novelty such as the followings: -

First, JiChou is a solid earth pillar, imagery speaking as an earth pile against the earth. Because it is wet, it does not pile but otherwise, cluttered not even sticking up on the wall. It is full of water. Chou being the graveyard of water and the storage of metal means unless something clashes into it, these hidden elements will not surface. In the same year star 2, Kun Gua landed itself in Dui palace, 7, forming a 2-7 combination. Very yin indeed, however, 2-7 is a HeTu combination, meaning it is meant to be together ab-initio. How could that be bad?

If the chart is read as though 2-7 forms fire and that additional fire will produce more earth to burry the Dui 7 metal palace, instead of producing the Dui 7 metal palace, such argument are indeed novelties.

If one understands the concept of Host and Guest, the central palace with 9 is a host and 2-7 as the guest, we will say the guest being fire is compatible with the 9 annual star, growing the host palace which is earth. Therefore, it is auspicious. How could that be bad?

Even if there is too much earth, what is the ideal threshold of earth in the centre palace? Would it not be that the definition of Yuan Kong as the smallest of a speck of sand to the largest of the universe?

Even if Si You Chou form a metal frame, for whatever reasons, this reasoning is entirely SanHe methodology, not a Flying Star SanYuan component. That is why I find it as another novel idea indeed.

You Earth Branch could have been a rooster only applicable for the non-metaphysicist, but in Gua image for Flying Star it is a Xin metal equivalent to a jewel, where does the bird comes from? Xun Gua gives a better representation of a bird but that was entirely out of topic as it governs the SE palace of the LoShu path.

Ultimately when we view such imagery as flying bird crashed and burnt into metal graveyard, this is very misleading on 2 counts, being one, Dui Palace is not a bird, second, Chou is the graveyard of water and not metal. These puzzling assumptions are indeed a novelty.
If we understand deeper, these airplane mishaps had minimum casualties, why? Perhaps you may tell me…

4 comments:

Chris Chan said...

eerrrr...I'm flying around a lot my friend! Maybe, I'l let you book my trips! :-)

DAVID YEK TAK WAI (email:yektakwai@hotmail.com) said...

Ha ha ha...

Will do. Just click the donate button and I will do the rest, just kidding.

Cheers

Chris Chan said...

hahahahahah.....don't worry, I'm good for the money. :-) You should know.

Anonymous said...

Greetings from one FSA to another.

Perhaps the title of your post should read "From Crashing Star to Flying Bird". A flying bird is a natural phenomenon, whereas a Xuan Kong flying star is a human construct that needs interpretation and we can interpret, or "re-engineer" as you mentioned, any way we wish. So it is quite easy to crush a star onto a flying bird and make it sounds as though it always meant to be. We need to remember, plane crashes is an observation, whereas the interpretation of a star chart is just one person's theory (or interpretation or "re-engineering") of what is happening.

HC, FSA

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