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Feng Shui for the Soul:
How to Create a Harmonious Environment That Will Nurture and Sustain You by Denise Lynn Mirror, anchor, template for spiritual growth: What is Home to you? Your home can be your greatest ally in helping you to achieve your potential. This is true because your home is not only a reflection of you, but in its deepest sense, it also has the power to mold you and shape your future. When you implement changes in your home, you will notice that your life is also transformed: instantly, dramatically and permanently.Your home fulfills functions in your life. On the physical plane, it provides shelter from the elements and offers you protection and privacy. Beyond this, it is also place where you can relax and be yourself. It can serve as a canvas for your self-expression. Your dwelling is also an outward expression of your inner being, and on a very profound level it is also a place where you can grow spiritually. A Mirror of Yourself When you want to find out what someone is like, all you need to do is look around his or her home. The spindly teenage boy who plasters his bedroom walls with images of Arnold Schwarenegger and Sylvester Stallone is subconsciously saying "I want to look like a body builder." The data processor who decorates her home with photos of unspoilt wilderness, carvings from Africa and an animal-print duvet cover on her bed dreams of having some adventure in her life. A house with natural fabrics, hand-carved wooden toys strewn on the floor and biodegradable laundry soap on the shelf speaks of a belief in living naturally and organically. If you want to discover your subconscious dreams, fears and beliefs, just look around your home. You will find them represented in every nook and cranny. Our homes also chronicle our personal history. Our past experiences form a framework that gives structure and context to our lives. We use the past to define ourselves. Our history is carried into the present through the symbols with which we surround ourselves. Our past is displayed in the photos on our walls and in the objects we treasure. The teapot from your great aunt, the baby blanket from your childhood and the silver napkin rings from your mother are all physical relics embedded with memories. They all say something about the way you define yourself, based on your interpretation of the past. An Anchor to the Earth A Template for Spiritual Growth Your soul is drawn to what it needs. In traditional feng shui, a home at the top of the mountain is usually considered bad feng shui because it is too exposed. The bottom of a valley is also inauspicious feng shui because it can be too cloistered and constricted. However, living on the top of a mountain may suit your soul because the vast open expanses other people, living down in the valley, may find this environment perfectly meets their requirements for seclusion: its constrictions might help them to focus their otherwise somewhat frenetic energy. There are no wrong homes. Each home offers you unique opportunities for spiritual growth. The so-called feng shui imperfections of your home may well be exactly what you need for polishing the rough edges of your soul. For example, a man I once knew lived in a rented home that had a very low entrance door. This is usually considered bad feng shui. Henry was a tall man, and every time he entered his house he had to incline his head. Sometimes he would hit his head on the door lintel, which made him angry. Sometimes he would yell at the door. Occasionally he banged his fists on it. One day he came home, looked thoughtfully at the door lintel, humbly bent his head and walked in. It was a moment of truth, a moment that changed his life. Henry was often in confrontational situations. Many people found him arrogant, because he was always trying to prove that his point of view was right. The instant he bent his head at his threshold, he was filled with an indescribable peace. In that moment, he realized that he could navigate around the obstacles in his life. Afterwards, whenever Henry walked through the front doorway, he bent his head in humility saying to himself, "I accept my life with love and compassion," and he found more harmony unfolding in his life. Sometimes problems encountered in feng shui bring to mind the classic question about the chicken and the egg. Which came first? Do we subconsciously choose homes that contain metaphors for the issues that we need to work on? Or do we experience blockages in our life because of the bad feng shui of the home? Although the answer is probably some of each, I generally feel that we subconsciously choose homes because they have something to teach us. On a soul level, there are no bad homes. Every home is filled with lessons and opportunities for spiritual growth. Sometimes the soul is drawn to a house because it has energy that will help activate hidden potential. Shortly after my husband and I were married we moved into a ramshackle little house by the sea. We did not have much money, so I decorated our home with things found in the thrift stores and with treasures washed up on by the sea. I framed paintings with driftwood, and placed on the windowsill pieces of glass from the shore that looked lovely in the afternoon sun. Our shabby little house began to glow, igniting an incredible creativity within me unlike anything I has ever experienced before. With our the limitations of our income and this tiny home, I might have never discovered this side of myself. What is Home to You? Some people's sense of home will be linked to a certain kind of geography, such as the moors of Scotland, the lakes of Sweden, the mountains of Switzerland, or the great plains in the middle of the United States. Whenever these individuals find themselves in this kind of terrain, they feel at home. It is useful to ask yourself, "Where do I feel at home?" When you discover just what the word home means to you, then you can begin to create the kind of environment that has this sort of energy in it. I once has a feng shui client, named John, who was a perfect example of how this process can work. When he considered what the idea of home meant to him, John realized that he felt most at home whenever he was in the mountains. I suggested that he place paintings and photos of mountains within his home and office to help create the feelings of mountains in his space. He reported that after doing this he felt much more at home with himself and his life. For some people, ideas of home can be tied to the traditions, heritage or religion of a particular culture.They feel at home when they are surrounded by things that symbolize these associations for them. For example, one of my clients found that he felt at home in environments filled with things from the Japanese culture. He wasn't from Asia and hadn't grown up in an Asian culture, but nonetheless he found that including Japanese objects in his home filled him with a great sense of peace and contentment. Another client found that she felt truly at home among relics and icons reflecting Spanish Catholicism. She said that she felt so serene after placing antique carved statues of Jesus and various saints around her home. These yearnings to be surrounded by objects from a particular culture may be the product of early childhood experiences, ancestral memories, the collective unconscious, symbolic associations, or even former-life memories. What does matter, however, is honoring the preferences if the soul. Something that may seem trivial, illogical or even somewhat silly to the conscious mind often fills a deep need on an unconscious level. Listen to the prompting of your soul. It will lead you home. Excerpted from the book Feng Shui For the Soul: How to Create a Harmonious Environment That Will Nurture and Sustain You, by Denise Linn. It is published by HayHouse and is available at all bookstores or via the website at www.hayhouse.com. |