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Hi, most people know to look for house with no missing sectors. But this is quite difficult to achieve.

What does it meanwhen the NE and SE sectors are both missing in the house? (See example of layout below).
To what I read, NE represents knowledge and SE represents wealth.
So does it mean that residents staying here will not enojoy good exam luck and wealth luck?

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These are some considerations:
1. Using the eye-ball method: Here, it is based on experience to roughly have a feel for the centre-of-gravity of the unit.
1.1. Thus, in my opinion, the centre-of-gravity could most likely be close to the attachment.
1.2. In such a layout plan, there will surely be things like : protusion and missing areas.
1.3. From past experience, many of us always visualise (in many instances) only the missing areas. But often, will not imagine that there are also protusions.
2. A more accurate method is to photo-copy the layout; cut out the outline; paste it on a cardboard; cut-out-the outline and balance it on a pin. When the pin balances, this should be the centre-of-gravity.
3. Did you get something like what I had illustrated? This is where roughly the missing area equals the protusion.

Quote
On 9/10/2012 11:46:10 AM, Anonymous wrote:
Hi, most people know to look
for house with no missing
sectors. But this is quite
difficult to achieve.
What does it
meanwhen the NE
and SE sectors are both
missing in the house? (See
example of layout below). To
what I read, NE represents
knowledge and SE represents
wealth.So does it mean that
residents staying here will
not enojoy good exam luck and
wealth luck?


Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net
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