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Feng Shui GardensLandscape design is not just a matter of putting up a building, planting trees and flowers, or building an artificial mountain. It is a means of revealing one's attitude of life by displaying landscape esthetically. Landscape needs to be restrained, gentle, and understated. We should modestly hide, not boldly dominate as is fashionable in the West. This enables a more intimate experience and sense of fitting into the environment. The Chinese way of thinking follows a clear path: Respect experiences. A Chinese will search for compromise while a Westerner wants a Yes or No answer. This constitutes fundamentally different approaches to landscape design. In Western thought we oscillate between total belief in a Creator (ignoring real life) or a full belief in human power to explore and dominate the world (which in many respects also ignores real life). Westerners measure their world in human dimensions, with the formal garden recognized as a symbol of human power and achievement. Humans in Western thought are conquerors and improvers of nature, so people want a walled-in and controlled copy of Paradise (perfection beyond real life). By enabling and worshipping human power, we lose our fear of wildness. We conquer nature, sanitize and "improve" it. And these ideas are intrinsically Western, coming as they do from Plato and Christian theology. There is an attitude of profit regarding land in the West. The practical and utilitarian trend is Western, which historically was restricted in the East. In the East the attitude encompasses humility and respect for the forces of nature and heaven. It is very rare in Chinese design history to place geometrical forms on hilly land, as is common in Western countries. Only in the Chinese Emperor's gardens were geometric forms acceptable, because for Chinese they are symbols of respect for natural forces (heaven and earth). You will find nothing about improvement of the
land, no modification of perceived imperfections or a need to control or
dominate the landscape. Even the Son of Heaven would not assume he had the
authority to do such a thing. The four
landscape elements are: Mountain Water Plant Building Yin and Yang in the landscape consist of: Stillness and movement Feng shui patios and gardens are closer in spirit to rock, English or low-maintenance gardens than to formal, artificial and overdesigned European gardens, which are characterized by unnatural features such as severe corners, angles and straight lines. Whether you live in a condo or a mansion, whether you are positioning a potted plant on your patio or having many acres professionally landscaped, putting everything in its right place according to feng shui principles will help create a healing, harmonious and natural environment.
Energy flow (wavy or curvy is beneficial; straight lines are negative) Balance of yin (dark, soft, passive) and yang (light, hard, active) Generative and destructive relationships of the five elements: wood, fire, earth, metal and water. Here's how to apply basic feng shui principles in your spot of earth. Stand in the center of your outdoor space. Use a compass to determine the eight directions.
Northeast East Southeast South Southwest West Northwest
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