What is positive (sheng) and negative (sha) Feng Shui Qi (Chi)?

13th May 2022

With period 9 fast approaching in February 2024, you will need to understand what sheng and sha Qi is and also, the different states of qi and how it interacts with the Xuan Kong flying stars and, in particular, the #9, #1, #2, #8 and #6 stars as these are the ones that can bring great results but even more important are the #3, #4, #5, & #7 as these can be deadly if not dealt with using the correct annual cures and enhancers

The most practical way to experience Qi, good or bad, is to contact yourself regularly with the natural forces of the elements in our environment. Practically, this could mean taking a walk when it is windy or stormy or taking a walk in the rain and provided you are up for it, allow yourself to get wet, cold or feel the wind on your face!

Go out on a freezing, windy or frosty morning or experience the mellow stillness of snow when it has settled. Get out in the sunshine, and expose your skin to the sun from time to time, albeit for a short period. Take a walk in the woods or a forest and experience the stillness and the driving Qi that sends the pine trees to pierce the canopy of woods. There is so much evidence that walking in the woods or a forest (aka forest bathing) reduces blood pressure and eases anxiety; follow this link for more details https://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/90720.html.

I have wanted to buy a forest for many years, but Josephine and Daniel keep talking me out of it as in the UK to have to commit to looking after it, and that can take a lot of time up, so maybe in a few more years when I retire.

Walk on a beach and feel the Qi.

 

A walk on the beach, kick off the shoes and feel the sand or the pebbles between your toes—paddle or swim in the sea or a river. Take a walk in the hills or quietly read a book by a river. Begin to notice already what you feel you have an aversion to doing, as that can indicate where your Qi is at the moment. Notice, for example, the difference in Qi between a dog and a cat.

A cat is quiet, serious, stand-offish, self-contained – very affectionate when hungry, whereas the dog wears its Qi very much more on the surface. Essentially a pack animal, they wear their heart on their sleeve, expressing how they feel openly, and I love it when my grand-dogs come over as they exert so much positive sheng Qi energy.

It is easy to see the Qi of a wild young toddler within a family compared to the reflective, quieter nature of the grandparents. Look at the Qi in the faces of people who have been working hard all week and are letting their hair down on a Friday night; compare that with their Qi on a Monday morning as they frequently scuffle half-heartedly back to work!