Monday, May 21, 2012

发微论 Fa WeiLun of A Mall









Reading landform classics is not that easy. The classic, 发微论 by Cai YuanDing, 蔡元定, is not an easy script to digest. The YangGong old school did not look highly upon Cai YuanDing, 蔡元定, as a genuine FengShui master. 

They claimed that, “…“Fa WeiLun (发微论)” by Cai YuanDing, together with “ZhaiJin” by Yellow Emperor are not FengShui classics, so due to… misinterpreted The Burial Classics by GuoPu, who is the ancestor of FengShui studies, thus it lead to misunderstanding…” 

However, 发微论 talks about balancing YinYang, which is the first layer of landform consideration that many overlooked. Balancing YinYang may appear to be simple but within Yin there is Yang and vice-versa, complicates matter. So undoubtedly, 入地眼 or Entering Earth Eye, is still the preferred choice for the mechanics of landform. 



The art of effective FengShui is simple in its purest form. If properly apply, even using Zhen WuXing or direct 5 elements, one is able to see result. There is always something common among all the successful outlets. It is the role of the practitioner to distill its truth, even if it means reverse-engineering. That is the learning path to understand FengShui minus all the theories which sounded good in paper but awkward in applications.



The recently opened mall in the suburb was flooded with people. It was designed with FengShui in mind and the master who does that was apparently a SanYuan expert. Water is used extensively on the external unlike the Sand Mall in Singapore, drawing Qi into its main entrance. Balancing YinYang is apparent throughout its Qi distribution techniques making every outlet a fair share to receive Qi. Yet, there is no black turtle and white tiger presence. A worthy mall to examine, FengShui wise and not forgetting, it has no Tilted Doors!

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