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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter July 2011

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui!

 Summer Slump?

Have you ever experienced midsummer slump? Mood swings and the lows of midsummer doldrums, heat fatigue, post partem blues (even after a splendid vacation), and – could it be possible – boredom will get you down and begging for a change.

With feng shui tools we can diagnose the basic syndrome and come up with a cure.  A vision board with mood-lifting images might be one.  Another could be the happy tunes of a favorite show, like Mamma Mia for example.  Icecream may not be the answer if extra pounds are part of your summer struggle.   A small piece of 70 % dark chocolate may stimulate the taste buds, as well as provide the extra phenylethylamine for a quick pick-me-up. 

Perhaps you noticed that we are talking about qi (chi) and the senses.  Another, often underestimated mood make-over is the qi of our olfactory experience.  Sniffing something pleasant is a faster way to cheer up than looking at a treasured souvenir or hearing a favorite song. 

Charles Wysocki, PhD, a behavioral neuroscientist at Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia says that “the olfactory system is like an interstate highway connection to the emotional part of the brain, while our visual and auditory systems are more like country roads.” 

Research shows that the cheeriest scents may be citrus.  One study at Ohio State University found that sniffing lemon oil can improve your mood-regulating hormone.  Citrus is also recommended to overcome those dreaded 3 pm slumps because the pick-me-up scent of citrus can increase your energy.  Stimulating the olfactory nerve inside your nose activates the limbic system of the brain which is associated with mood.

“Citrus scents boost your mood” says Alan Hirsch, MD, director of the Smell & Taste Treatment & Research Foundation in Chicago.  He suggests that “age may be in the nose” since women wearing a grapefruit fragrance were perceived by men as being an average of 6 years younger.

The struggle with those extra pounds can also be overcome with scents like green apple, banana or peppermint.  Smelling these scents several times a day may cut cravings according to Dr. Hirsch in a study on weight loss where participants lost 30 lbs. in 6 months.

Smell Those Slumps Away
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter February 2011

Monday, February 14th, 2011

Volume 11 Number 2 February 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!

 St. Valentine’s Day!

 Think feng shui and Valentine is our holiday!  All feng shui basics come into play.  Vertical Tao connections lead all the way back to Roman Times and the Middle Ages when the Pope declared St. Valentine’s Day.  Legend has it that a certain third-century priest named Valentine persisted in performing marriage ceremonies despite a ban by the Roman emperor Claudius II (Claudius was persuaded that single men made better soldiers for his army). Thrown into jail, Valentine formed a relationship with his jailor’s daughter (some say he cured her blindness) and he signed his last message to her “From your Valentine,” a phrase which still gets a lot of mileage.

Horizontal Tao connections relate to faint stirrings in nature and popular myth when birds were thought to mate in February.  The Qi (Chi) of Valentine engages all the senses with intoxicating aromas of red roses, melting truffles on the tongue, love tunes from the clouds, fancy designs and love poems in the mail, and the loving touch of your Valentine. 

Love symbols are the visual essence of celebrating Valentine’s Day, but in Pyramid Feng Shui we go deeper than the simple tokens of pinks and pairs in the Relationship corner.  Let’s not dismiss the Bagua, however, and instead think of the many ways this holiday connects to all the other sectors. 

 Earth as the dominant element anchors relationships as the source of all connectedness.  In Pyramid Feng Shui cros-dynamics, we look at Self-Cultivation and Wisdom as basic to how we relate to others.  The nurturing gua is Fire, which brings passion and color into the trigram of love.  A nurturing relationship builds a strong platform for Creativity, ideas and DescendantsCompassion is key to helpful support in any relationship, whether platonic, professional or passionate.  A strong sense of Self on the “path of life” is prerequisite to entering a relationship.  With powerful ties to the one and only, we spread our wings and connect to Community and procreation, spreading love in myriad capacities.  Feeling the strength of a healthy and supportive relationship, leads to a sense of Empowerment and success.  

Our journey through all Tao connections would not be possible without the hub that turns the wheel with all the spokes in the creative cycle.  Health is the Tai Ji, the grand ultimate, in the center of the Bagua.  It is the point of transition for all other guas.  With Earth as the receptive element, health and love is the essence of Valentine.  

What Better Way
Than to Declare
Valentine
A Feng Shui Holiday!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter December 2010

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Volume 10 Number 12 December 2010  

Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui! 

Holiday Eating Habits! 

It’s time to bag the old habits of shoveling in the calories and create new patterns of holiday eating habits.  If a fixed roster of likes and dislikes governs our taste buds, perhaps we should me more adventurous and add something new.  Even rearranging the old standbys could add zest and stimulate the brain cells. 

Basic feng shui tools could be the organizing principles for your shopping list.  Connect to nature and the Tao with more veggies.  Think color!  An element casserole is a visual feast with alternating rows of broccoli for wood, cauliflower for metal, red peppers for fire, and carrots or squash for earth.  A béchamel sauce adds water and a sizzling au gratin topping adds a tasty sensation.  

To stimulate a sluggish metabolism, add yang with fire foods like jalapenos and spices, but simmer down with yin and comfort foods of rice and pasta.

Add liquids for balance!  More Champagne?  More bubbles?  Be playful but moderate!  Remember, alcohol and caffeine are stimulants, although, personally, alcohol puts me to sleep.  Yet, those champagne bubbles seem to oxygenate the system and keep me awake.  Drop fresh pomegranate seeds into the glass for more of the healthy Tao and an extra dosage of symbolic abundance.   

In our age of cyber reality, we suddenly hear about virtual eating.  Scientists have experimented with M & M’s and discovered that your mind can play amazing tricks on you.  By visualizing eating M & M’s versus just moving them around, you will then munch a lot less when presented with the real thing. 

 A more elegant visualization would to imagine that there has to be enough room in your stomach for qi (chi) – our vital energy – to do its digestive work, and not become stagnant and sluggish with an overload of too much food.  A glass of water before a meal may allow for that extra space.

 For extra R & R, hold a cup of hot cider or any other favorite hot beverage to the center of your chest and feel the comfort of warming your heart.   

 Make Old Habits Go Away
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter November 2010

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Volume 10 Number 11 November 2010

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!

Holiday Habits!

Where do we draw the line between habits and traditions.  One is comfortable like an old shoe, while the other one is cultural and formal.  Holidays, more than any other time, are governed by habits, some of which are held in high esteem through generations.  Rituals and ceremonies add meaning to life; and objects, treasured for their once a year unveiling hold memories of events and celebrations.  They are collectibles imbued with family values of togetherness, and thus are precious symbols of the earth element.

Getting reacquainted with objects on a once-a-year basis is like visiting an old friend.  The joy we feel in unwrapping forgotten ornaments make me wonder whether we shouldn’t also store away other objects and memorabilia, only to be revived for happy reunions when the time is right.

Seasonal changes of decorative possessions create environmental renewal  and a feeling of freshness.  Change is stimulating and triggers creative powers.  Therefore, perhaps even holiday habits should be updated; something new could be added and the old rituals could be refreshed with a new rite for increased awareness.

Sensory experiences need to be refreshed in order to stay current and memorable.  A song could be added to the old stand-bys, and a new recipe could surprise the adherents to the old menu.  A new string of LED lights will usher holiday trimmings into the 21st century.  Lights are of the fire element as they bring joy and warmth and shine into the hearts of holiday celebrants.  The wood element is always well endowed with holiday greenery, lots of it, with our trees, wreaths, garlands and swags. 

The metal element gets its due with all the silver and gold of ornaments that are round and shiny.  Thus, what about water?  Those of us who are buried in snow needn’t worry about missing this element of depth and mystery.  But we, who are not in northern climates, must take extra care to bring symbols of this important element into our environment.  Snowflakes in your décor, steaming mugs of hot cider, or Santa arriving on a sled (on a picture of course or a decorative object) is a vivid image of water attributes. 

Then again, change per se has a whole lot of affinity to the water element with flow and flexibility.  Flush out stale habits with newness and freshness, indirectly creating water to feed the wood of future growth and expansion. 

Decorate your Holiday
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Pyramid Feng Shui Newsletter January 2010

Friday, January 15th, 2010
Greetings to all who share the wisdom of feng shui!

Sounds!

The soundscape of human beings has changed dramatically over the years and is about to change even more.  Apple has purchased the Web music service called Lala and may thus be pointing the way to the future of music.  Done are the days of owning LPs, tapes, CDs and sound systems.  Music will be streaming from cyberspace as the earthly version of music from the spheres.  This will be in the form of cloud music services that one can subscribe to.  There will also be a new network of sharing music and play lists with friends.  We may no longer need our storage devices and thus create all kinds of clutter free space. 

This is a major paradigm shift in our auditory experience if not an invasion from cyberspace.  In balancing what we experience in our surroundings, we need the yin of silence as much as the yang of noise.  Instead of being wired and WiFi’d, we could listen to the sounds of nature, or at least those we consider endemic to our environment.  Will song birds, ocean waves and crunchy snow become second to the streaming “anytime, anywhere media” from the clouds?

Sound, together with noise and auditory sensitivity are more than entertainment for the human ear.  It is the first and primary connection humans have to the physical world as the fetus develops in a plethora of noises.  Hearing is a 360 degree experience and serves as an early warming system since it is the fastest of human senses. 

An experiment in Ohio schools revealed that providing classrooms with surround sound speaker systems dramatically improved the grade averages of pupils sitting in the back row.  They suddenly heard a clearer version of what the teacher said.

What we hear influences our psyche as well as our physiological responses.  Don Campbell, in his best-selling book The Mozart Effect, writes about the biological influence of music on our breathing rate, heart beat and pulse rate.  Music and sounds can also change one’s perception of space. 

In the complexity of modern life with increased exposure to external stimuli, feng shui provides helpful tools for controlling the Hulu’s and Lala’s of advanced technology.  With the help of feng shui tools, you can adjust the personality of your space by balancing yin and yang, the elements and qi. 

Control Your Lala and Hulu Every Day
With Pyramid Feng Shui!

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Categories : Hearing, Senses