| Feng Shui for the  Bedroom  Ensure you have more Yin features in your bedroom as this aids in health,  longevity and relationships, says Joey Yap The  idea behind having a   bedroom with optimal Feng Shui is fairly simple - instead  of active   Yang, we need to consider the receptive Yin. We like our bedroom to  be   slightly more Yin than Yang. Why is that so? Whereas wealth pursuits   require  activity and creative power, health and longevity rely on   stability and  recuperation. Hence, the condition of your main door, a   Yang feature, governs  your wealth aspects. The condition of your   bedroom, a Yin feature, governs  health and relationships. From  this you would be able to   instantly deduce, for example, that a bedroom with  too many doors or   windows, is undesirable. Multiple openings mean multiple  movements,   resulting in a pre-dominantly Yang condition. Not enough Yin means  not   enough rest. This also applies to bedroom with too much sunlight - a   source  of Yang Qi. While in most Feng Shui cases, ample sunlight is   important, too  much sunlight is not required in the bedroom. External Views Matter  A  good bedroom is one that   calms and allows rest to occur. Externally, having a  mountain view is   also favourable. Mountains and hills are natural Yin features  that lend   stability to the room and its occupants. What we do not want to see    outside the bedroom are pylons, highways (overly Yang), rivers (a   natural Yang  feature), dead trees, lamp poles, and other merciless   features. If you have  these outside your bedroom, block the view with   thick curtains. Keep the  windows closed at most times, so as not to   receive the (negative) Qi from this  direction.  While  you do not have to worry   too much about the colour of your curtains or sheets,  you do have to   ensure that your bed is properly placed. Always, the head of the  bed   needs to be placed against a solid flat wall. This is the stability   (Yin)  factor that supports the bed. What you should not do is to place   your bed in an  angled position - even though it faces one of your   favourable directions. Even  at advanced levels of Feng Shui practice,   observing physical forms always  supersedes formulae. Hence, having your   bed head situated at the sharp 90  degree angle where two walls meet   is, in fact, is placing your head at a point  of volatile Qi. Good   health and good relationships will be hard to sustain. There  should not be any beams running above your bed   as well. This is especially  detrimental if the ceiling beam is right   above the head of the bed. Install a  false ceiling to allow Qi to flow   smoothly around the room (Yes, Qi flows  upwards as well!). Other common   forms to observe in Feng Shui is to ensure that  the room door is not   directly aligned to the bed - that the door does not ‘open  directly’   towards the bed. In such cases, Qi that flows into the room spears    directly onto the bed (force of Yang).  Last  but not least, colours do   not play a significant role in Feng Shui - However,  painting your room   entirely blue and black, for example, may be a case of being  extremely   Yin.  |