User talk:CANTONG--FENGSHUI

International country academic number of teacher Mr. Yang Shentong birth of Hetu's the birthplace of Luoyang, the new century in view of the confusion in feng shui technique, is committed to the promotion of traditional Chinese culture, and strive to be the number of hard to learn the national academic through science and technologymeans so that the public is more user-friendly, in order to promote the heritage of Chinese traditional culture. Due to his unique talent, as well as its fusion of Eastern philosophy and Western scientific view is enriched feng shui theory, for feng shui to judge both the quick and quasi. Often hit the nail on the head, difficult to clear all. Insiders recognized as a pioneer of the New National Study, known as the modern Yang Yun Song. Feng shui (i/ˌfʌŋ ˈʃweɪ/ fung-SHWAY,[1] formerly /ˈfʌŋ ˌʃuːi/ FUNG-shoo-ee;[2] Chinese: 風水, pronounced [fɤ́ŋ ʂwèi]), or Fung shui, is a Chinese system of geomancy believed to use the laws of both Heaven (Chinese astronomy) and Earth to help one improve life by receiving positive qi.[3] The original designation for the discipline is Kan Yu (simplified Chinese: 堪舆; traditional Chinese: 堪輿; pinyin: kānyú; literally: Tao of heaven and earth).[4]

The term feng shui literally translates as "wind-water" in English. This is a cultural shorthand taken from the following passage of the Zangshu (Book of Burial) by Guo Pu of the Jin Dynasty:[5]

Phrasing Questions You can ask yes or no questions, but there are better ways to phrase your questions. The I Ching does not contain a kua or a line that answers "Yes" or "No." But, if you ask a question that requires a yes or no answer such as, "Should I marry now?" and you receive as an answer the kua of "Strong Restraint," your answer would be clear.

A more meaningful answer can be obtained if you ask, "What can I expect if I marry now?" Depending on your answer, you might then want to ask, "What can I expect if I marry later?" Intelligent, well thought out questions will be the most rewarding. Study Many people find it good idea to print out and keep their questions and readings in a journal. As events transpire this can be useful for later study and reflection. You will find that your question and the date appear on the same page as the reading to facilitate your understanding of the way of the I Ching. I Ching Basics Fu Hsi (pronounced foo shee), the great Chinese sage to whom the I Ching system is attributed, constructed his answers in the form of sixty-four figures, the six linear lines stacked one above the other, either undivided, or divided, called kua.

The top three lines and the bottom three lines of each of the kua are called trigrams.

Following the law of eternal change, the lines are always in motion, always moving upward. As a new line enters from the bottom, it pushes the five lines above it upward, thereby displacing the line at the top. The movement is always in time to the rhythm of the universal heartbeat, always mirroring the universe itself. Taken together, the kua and their lines represent every conceivable condition in heaven and on earth with all their states of change.

Each of the sixty-four kua can change into one another through the movement of one or more of the six lines that form the kua. This requires extra attention be paid to the changing line or lines. The transformation of the changing line to it's opposite results in a supplementary reading to the original kua formed. There are 4,096 possible combinations (64 x 64), which is said to represent every possible condition in heaven and on earth.

Each of the sixty-four kua, with their combined total of 384 lines, represents a situation or condition. Each situation or condition contains the six stages of its own evolution: