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many clients as possible and earning as much as he can before he emigrates before 1997.'
Why does a person engage a geomancer? Normally it is because, for whatever specific reason, life is not 'right'. A person may feel unwell. There may be a looming, or, if one is in business, a corporate, danger. Why did my competitor do better than me? Perhaps his father's grave has better fung shui?
Case Study Two
Believing that, if a person wants to write about rickshaws he or she needs to pull a rickshaw, at least for a day to get the feel of things, the following is an account of a visit paid by the author, in the company of a fung shui consultant, to business premises. Much fung shui lore for the home also applies to other types of accommodation. Incidentally, rather unlike being a Buddhist or Taoist priest, it is highly respectable to be a fung shui specialist. They are held in high esteem and fit neatly into the overall social and hierarchical pattern. Most practise on a part-time basis. This largely male profession is regarded as an avocation or almost as a hobby by many, and, in the past, they were transported in sedan chairs. Even today they depend to a considerable extent on hospitality and gifts, instead of fees. Nevertheless, practising fung shui can be quite remunerative.
Returning to our second case study: the consultant has been engaged to advise the owner of these business premises on a regular basis, usually visiting shortly after every Lunar New Year. On this particular visit, however, the fung shui master was summoned specially. Business had not been good. The master had to advise what could be done to rectify the situation. On such visits the date and time of birth of the owner of the premises are taken into account in some calculations.
When the author and the master arrived the latter was carrying his loh poon (geomantic compass) () of which there are variations (Baker,1980:65). It is beyond the scope of this paper to describe in detail exactly how this instrument is employed. It is, however, divided into a number of (the maximum is about 38) concentric rings and segments. These are inscribed with symbols which are physical representations of the cosmos with its array of interrelated real and imaginary creatures, forces and phenomena.
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many clients as possible and earning as much as he can before he emigrates before 1997.'
Why does a person engage a geomancer? Normally it is because, for whatever specific reason, life is not 'right'. A person may feel unwell. There may be a looming, or, if one is in business, a corporate, danger. Why did my competitor do better than me? Perhaps his father's grave has better fung shui?
Case Study Two
Believing that, if a person wants to write about rickshaws he or she needs to pull a rickshaw, at least for a day to get the feel of things, the following is an account of a visit paid by the author, in the company of a fung shui consultant, to business premises. Much fung shui lore for the home also applies to other types of accommodation. Incidentally, rather unlike being a Buddhist or Taoist priest, it is highly respectable to be a fung shui specialist. They are held in high esteem and fit neatly into the overall social and hierarchical pattern. Most practise on a part-time basis. This largely male profession is regarded as an avocation or almost as a hobby by many, and, in the past, they were transported in sedan chairs. Even today they depend to a considerable extent on hospitality and gifts, instead of fees. Nevertheless, practising fung shui can be quite remunerative.
Returning to our second case study: the consultant has been engaged to advise the owner of these business premises on a regular basis, usually visiting shortly after every Lunar New Year. On this particular visit, however, the fung shui master was summoned specially. Business had not been good. The master had to advise what could be done to rectify the situation. On such visits the date and time of birth of the owner of the premises are taken into account in some calculations.
When the author and the master arrived the latter was carrying his loh poon (geomantic compass) () of which there are variations (Baker,1980:65). It is beyond the scope of this paper to describe in detail exactly how this instrument is employed. It is, however, divided into a number of (the maximum is about 38) concentric rings and segments. These are inscribed with symbols which are physical representations of the cosmos with its array of interrelated real and imaginary creatures, forces and phenomena.
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