Little Feng Shui Things Say a Lot

In feng shui, the tiniest move can have the biggest effect

© Kathleen Wilton Klein

Feng shui can bring harmony to your life with the smallest movement of physical items. The act of moving one piece of furniture in your home can bring miraculous changes.

You’ve heard it. Maybe you’ve said it. Size really doesn’t matter. And I mean that in the most non-sexual way. Many of us have heard and perhaps grown up hearing those age old sayings: “Good things come in small packages,” “It’s the little things that mean the most,” or “It’s the thought that counts.”

In feng shui, even the smallest of movements can make a world of difference in your life. If you feel in a slump or perhaps that you’ve exhausted all of the possibilities in a particular situation, take inventory of the light bulb situation in your house. If you have any lamps or light fixtures that are empty, get some light bulbs in them right away. By having empty sockets, you are allowing precious, unchanneled energy to slip away.

The tiny act of replacing a burned out light bulb can be the difference between having a bright idea about where to look for work or feeling in the dark about a job search. The act of moving a lamp to a different corner in your home, even a move of only a few feet, can mean ending an insignificant argument with a family member that somehow got out of control. The smallest move on your part can be just what is needed to mend a treasured relationship and shed light on a situation that you felt was lost to darkness.

The theory of feng shui can sound daunting. Many times people in the Western world see Eastern philosophies as so different from what they have been taught. To paraphrase a well known pioneer into unfamiliar territory: One small move of a piece of furniture in the front room, one large move toward bringing peace and harmony to each of us.


The copyright of the article Little Feng Shui Things Say a Lot in Feng Shui is owned by Kathleen Wilton Klein. Permission to republish Little Feng Shui Things Say a Lot must be granted by the author in writing.




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