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Dear Anon,
Generally, if one does not want to go further into `Professional Feng Shui' e.g. using the Flying Star to analyse the birth chart of the house:
1. The Main Entrance Door & windows at the frontage of the house
The Main Entrance Door is the most important door to be `protected' from poison arrows. Where possible, the edge of a building should not be aimed at the main entrance door.
The best `test' is to stand at the main entrance and take alook at the area. There should not be a lone lamp post slicing thru the main door (like a knife slicing through butter) i.e. tangent to it or perpendicular to it.
You should also stand inside the house looking out of the window. Similiarly, there should not be any poison arrows aimed at the windows.
2. If you have two doors in the home, do analyse both doors in relation to the
Eight House. Here, check what intangible force is influencing the sector of the door.
If the `death or disaster' intangible force is at the main entrance, this is considered the most unsuitable house (especially for the breadwinner).
What this means is that if the house has good or excellent Flying Star, which implies that the birth chart of the house is good. But the house is `average' or unsuitable for the individual.
One way of viewing it is that this house would not generate great `wealth' but one live day-by-day or normally.
This is why some people resort to tilting their main door to face an auspicious sector or to avoid the NE (devil's gate) or SW (devil's backdoor).
Please see below:-
On 2/20/00 8:54:00 PM, Anonymous wrote:
>i am very new to fengshui and
>would be grateful for advise
>on door. i would like to know
>which door should be used in
>fengshui. i stayed in an
>apartment with one door facing
>east (entrance door) and
>another door facing south to
>the balcony. which is the
>right door?
>
>What are fengshui effects on
>hospital staffs who stay in
>the hospital compound. what
>precautions can one take to
>avoid any bad elements from
>the hospital? is it advisable
>to move out from this hospital
>quarters?
Contrary to popular belief, a hospital has lots of activity. If it is a common corridor, you can see a flurry of people moving along it.
If one notice, the hospital corridors are bright. It is in the bedroom where rest is encouraged that the rooms are `kept' quiet.
One should not have a `negative' feelings staying in an apartment in the hospital.
The only `worry' is to avoid staying close to the mortuary. Other than that, in my opinion, this should not pose any problems.
Warmest Regards,
Cecil
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