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Does christmas tree has good feng shui?


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Sir,
I want to know whether christmas tree has good feng shui, since its leaves are extremely pointed. I have read at many places that plants with pointed leaves donot have good feng shui. ?If we follow this advice than we have to do with many many good looking plants.
Thanks.
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Sorry your question is very general.
These are some considerations;-
1. Is the tree inside a home or outside of a home?
2. Under symbolism in Feng Shui, a Christmas tree is like an "UP" arrow. To some it looks like progress.
3. Many Christmas trees need little or no maintenance. For example, the bougainvillea needs constant trimming and depending on it's species many of it's species have nail hard torns - unlike soft "needles" of a Christmas tree.
4. Under Flying Star Feng Shui; one has to be more carefull of sectors with star #3 and often a tree (or any other tree) is not favourable.
5. If Christmas trees are potted; it does not grow too large or too tall. Even if it grows quite tall; it is not as imposing as a matured Mango tree which can extend its foliage very wide; making the area below it very very yin or dark. Of course a Christmas tree grown on the grown can equally mature but in my opinion far less "real estate" space taken than say a mango or rambutan tree or a chiku tree (locally)

Quote
On 10/7/2010 9:42:23 PM, Anonymous wrote:
Sir,I want to know whether
christmas tree has good feng
shui, since its leaves are
extremely pointed. I have read
at many places that plants
with pointed leaves donot have
good feng shui. If we follow
this advice than we have to do
with many many good looking
plants.Thanks.


Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net
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  • 9 years later...
  • Staff

Under Flying Star Feng Shui; under certain circumstances, best to avoid too many "greens" at a specific location:
 

Extract of Case Study 25: Avoid too many plants at the living room balcony

Legend:
A = Balcony at SE has inauspicious Flying Star "bad wood" elements which represents Conflicts and Quarrels. Client insists on some plants. Told to avoid too many plants, there.

B = This review was done in 2015. Client was also told the signficance of the current double aupicious #8's will expire from 2024 onwards. But for the moment, client wanted a water position. So asked where to place at marking C (see below).

C = Client wanted to place a fountain. Marked the location for her. 

X and Y = Avoid opening the panel at location marked as Y. Since not practical for a partition.

2108534866_AVOIDWOOD.png.6b284285fce2a023ab1106273f9e4be6.png

 

Source: 

 


Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net
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  • 8 months later...
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ST LIFE 30/1 2021 
 
With Chinese New Year round the corner, home owners are snapping up lucky plants such as pussy willow, bamboo saplings and chrysanthemum.
But, fengshui master Cecil Lee points out, the practical benefits of greening the home are more important than superstitious beliefs.
“If buying a plant – whether it is real or artificial – makes you feel happy, then according to fengshui principles, you benefit from positive energy,” says the founder of Geomancy.net, who is in his 60s.
Especially with pared-down celebrations this year, Mr Lee, who has been giving geomancy advice since 1996, notes that buying a lucky plant or two can help lift spirits.
During the periods of isolation last year, Singapore and several other countries saw a botanic boom as many turned to plants to cope with pandemic- induced stress.
Mr Lee says: “Fengshui principles state that there are three types of good fortune – heavenly luck, which is endowed at birth; earthly luck, which is gained through fengshui; and Man’s luck, which is obtained through actions such as buying plants that make one feel good.”

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net
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