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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter April 2012

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Greeting to all who share the wisdom of feng shui! 

Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs!  (CFLs) 

Imagine that we are at Home Depot shopping for light bulbs!  The aisle stretches the full width of the store with a dizzying array of incandescents, halogens, CFLs and LEDs.  Once again we have to expand our vocabulary in the new jargon on light bulbs.  Today we will simply focus on CFLs and try to unravel the mystery of lumens, kelvins, CRIs, foot candles and color temperatures.  

Fully armed with our keyword, lumens, we have already stepped out of our comfort zone and are now looking for:  800 (75W) 1000 (100W) 400 (60W) 200 (40W) 100 (25W) lumens.  These are approximations since the manufacturers have been introducing energy efficient incandescents with higher light output for similar usage of electricity.  Thus if you start looking at GE’s Reveal and Philips Eco Advantage, you will simply be adding to the confusion.  Best therefore, once again, adjust your needs to lumens, and you can’t go wrong. By the way, did you know that there are also standard sizes for light bulbs with designations A19 (for the most common) A15 (somewhat smaller) and A21 (bigger), which will begin to matter for fitting a bulb into specific types of lamps.   

So far many consumers are not happy with CFLs for a number of good reasons: the light is too harsh, not bright enough, slow to light up, incompatible with dimmer switches and dangerous because of the mercury they contain. Manufacturers have started to address these issues resulting in a large selection of CFLs.  To make the proper choice, we need to learn a few more keywords.  

Our next keyword is color temperature which is expressed in degrees Kelvin (K) on light bulb labels.  Color temperature is a description of the warmth or coolness of a light source, but it is not an indicator of lamp heat. 

2700K CFLs produce a warm yellowish light, similar to that of incandescent bulbs.  They are good for rooms featuring amber or mahogany colors.  Warm light is preferred for living spaces because it is more flattering to skin tones and clothing.
3500K CFLs make rooms with bright reds or greens look their best. 
4100K CFLs make rooms with lots of birch or bleached wood look great.  Cool light is preferred for visual tasks because it produces higher contrast than warm light.
5000K CFLs (and 6500K) produce a bright light similar to daylight – particularly appropriate for rooms full of grays or slate.  There is some concern that they could interfere with sleep cycles more than bulbs lower on the color temperature scale.  Therefore, consider not using these bulbs near bedtime or in bedrooms if you have trouble falling asleep.   

In addition to color temperature we must consider the color rendering index (CRI) describing a light sources ability to accurately render the colors of people and things.  CRI is measured on a scale from 0 to 100.  The higher the CRI, the better the lamp will make things appear with a better visual perception of colors.

90 CRI 5000 K for an artist’s studio would render colors most accurately.
70 CRI 3000K, a light which is visually warmer would soften contours and surfaces and is appropriate for a kitchen and bath.  The lower CRI would shield people and food from too harsh an appearance.   

Bulb shape.  Most consumers don’t like the look of spiral-shaped CFLs, and they don’t work with clip-on lamp shades.  Therefore, bulb makers now offer a variety of cone-shaped bulbs that are also available for recessed fixtures and flood lights.    

Dimming ability is crucial if we want to adjust our ambient lighting.  CFLs are not dimmable unless the packaging tells you so.  To be compliant with the new regulations (once they are in effect), we need to replace our dimmer switches with new ones that are designed to be compatible with CFLs and LEDs. 

To complete our survey of light sources and measurement, we would like to mention footcandles (fc), which measure the light level of surfaces and reflections.  With a light meter as we used before automatic cameras and which is still the tool of professional photographers, we can take readings that will give us the following guidelines:

Outdoor light at noon                         summer 10,000 fc                winter 1,000 fc
Gathering rooms & hallsways                            25 fc
Bedrooms                                                                  12 fc
Kitchen and bathroom                                         50 fc
Task lighting                                                            50-100 fc  

Sort Through the Light Bulb Array
With Help from Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter May 2011

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

Volume 11 Number 5 May 2011

Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter issued by      

Feng Shui Universal – Editor: Gabriele Van Zon

904 273-2445  904 608-0906

Email: gabriele@fengshuiuniversal.com

Website: www.fengshuiuniversal.com 

Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui!

Google Alerts! 

Search engines such as Google direct us to the desired data in seconds.  Every day my inbox pops up with Google Alerts on feng shui topics. These are snippets of information spiked with links to articles and websites.  It occurred to me that this info feed is really a very yang activity, skipping and jumping from site to site and staying on the surface.

If you want to dig deeper, you need to go into yin mode, open the feed from a snippet and actually read an article or look at a website. No matter how much you want to settle in and focus on a topic, sidebars keep intruding with pop-up ads and related bits of graphics – thus, more yang to get you out of your yin concentration.

These info snippets are a dangerous means of getting your feng shui tips.  Unless you are fully trained in one of the feng shui schools, you cannot distinguish between pertinent and helpful advice versus flippant and conflicting information

These snippets are fleeting and disconnected pieces of information that you cannot capture for a unified whole.  How do you deal with surfing, phishing and scamming when e-books suddenly outnumber the tangible objects in your library? You’ve lost the eye-touch coordinator whereby you held a book and remembered that your important info bit was in the top corner of the page or under an illustration on the bottom right. 

Clicking through a series of hyperlinks I arrived at an article about “The Best Feng Shui Front Door Color.”  The advice offers two options that are contradictory but telling you that either one would be o.k.  Choosing between red, black or green, you are invited to decide between facing or sitting directions or the complex system of Chinese elements.  How can the novice make decisions based on such multi dimensional options? A temp file on your desktop could be a holding pen for snippets captured by your mouse with a quick copy and paste. 

Hyperlinks invite you to additional readings or video clips.  Thus you are led into multi readings that result in mass confusion The search is like a giant octopus with tentacles reaching for solutions that are somewhere in the clouds but cannot be captured for a cohesive system and meaningful conclusion. 

Info is floating and we need to find a way to harness it into a meaningful system of personal usefulness. 

Create Your Own System Today
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter August 2010

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui!

 Unplugged!

 It is still summer, and you deserve a day of rest!

In feng shui we try to strike a balance between the yang of activity-laden periods and yin, the calm and peaceful periods of relaxation.  All too often yin is short-changed with the overwhelming demands of yang.  Wired or not, we are still on call with all the devices that monitor what we do. 

When my housekeepers inadvertently unplugged the modem in my house, I unexpectedly experienced a leisurely day of peace.  I had no dial tone, no internet connection, and the cell phone was not charged.  Recognizing the sudden reprieve, I did not turn on the TV or radio and settled in for a day of reading and writing.  Being unplugged turned into having a day off from schedules and responsibilities.  There was nothing to check or reply to, there were no beeps and the phone never rang.  There was even time left over to tackle the pile of papers waiting to be filed. 

The only other time I felt this kind of peace was on a retreat in Bali, where the remoteness of Dancing Dragon Cottages had no connection to our wired world.  The panic we feel when we forget or lose our cell phone is the modern syndrome of a disconnect from a potential field of needs.  It is the constant tug of yang and its unknown dimensions demanding that we do something.  Allowing the seed of yin to expand and grow for a while is the antidote to the stress of being wired and plugged in. 

On a recent flight, the passenger next to me had on his lap, his I-Pad, his I-Phone, his Blackberry, and on top of it all, his Bose head phones for blocking out noises.  I always looked forward to flights as another mode of escaping it all for the duration of being on board.  Now I have to listen to business plans, marketing strategies or household issues.  Maybe I also need a set of Bose ear phones as my yin escape from the wi fi of other passengers’ yang addictions.     

Unplug for a Day
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

Announcements:
Feng Shui Certification Courses:  Level I – Saturday Aug. 21, 2010; Level II – Saturday Sept 25, 2010; Level III – Saturday Oct 30, 2010

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter June 2010

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui!

Rewiring!

When I couldn’t figure out how to program my new thermostat, the technician said, “ask your grandson.”  Does this infer our new generation gap?  I’ll be the first to admit my love-hate relationship with the computer, something my grandsons don’t seem to be afflicted with.  I live with a constant dichotomy of skimming the digital world with one foot while firmly planted in the morass of analog systems with the other.

Nicholas Carr in his new book “The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains” says that he’s been having the uncomfortable sense that “someone has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory.”  He argues that due to the frantic superficiality of the Internet, we have lost sustained attention.

Reviewers of his thesis argue that this is not true and that “the online world has merely exposed the feebleness of human attention, which is so weak that even the most minor temptations are all but impossible to resist.”

For me these debates have launched an avalanche of questions about brain mapping and circuitries that need to be explored and researched, perhaps with the notion that Pyramid’s scientific approach to feng shui can come up with some answers of how we best cope with the onslaught of information excess, circuitry misfiring.

Carr warns that the Internet is great for facts, but not so great for wisdom.  Where, if I may ask, is wisdom?  We know that reasoning and decision making happens in the neo-cortex, and that our emotional response kicks in from the limbic system, while our survival mode is fired in the brainstem.   Where then is wisdom?  In the heart?  In the gut?  If anyone has the answer, please email.

Electricians, i.e. cardiologists, can now zap your electric circuitry in the heart to rewire your misfired heart rhythm.  And all along we’ve been told that we have a second brain in the gut.  That’s where the gut feeling comes from.  But wisdom?  Maybe it’s in the soul!  But where is the soul?  And what does all of this have to do with feng shui?   If we take a serious look at the mapping process of the mind, the brain, and perhaps other sites in the complexity of humanness, we may conclude that feng shui offers a holistic model of support structure so that we may navigate all the highways and byways of daily living.

Rewire for a Better Day,
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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