Jump to content
About Feng Shui at Geomancy.Net
Sponsored Link
 

Recommended Posts

I have an aquarium with Goldfish in the health and family area of my living room, which is on the west of my apartment. I have this crazy idea of having tropical fish instead of Goldfish, but I'm afraid something might change. I am craving the speed and color of this tropical fish.
I also have a small aquarium in the Wealth area of my home office, which is in the north west side, and I have tropicals there.
What would you recommend I do?
I am doing fairly well in my business, although I could be doing better. My social life stinks, so does the romance department. (Just so you know)
Thanks

Link to post
Share on other sites

Sponsored Link
 

Dear Rebeca,
There are a few considerations for a fish tank:-
1. Currently there are two methods at looking at the number of fishes to
`rear'.
Method 1:
========
The most common method is based on general good numbers of fish i.e. fishes
should be numbering e.g. 5, 6, 8. (9 is still acceptable).
Method 2:
========
The other method is based on your kua number ie. if your kua is Li or South,
you should rear 9 fishes. If your Kua number is Kan (North), you should rear
1 fish, if your Kua number is Chen or East, then you should rear 3 fishes.
Ideally, this is based on the breadwinner's Kua number
2. A good guideline is to take note of the colour of the stand you are
using.
For example at the North wall, it is adviseable to use a stand that is
Black in colour or blue or grey.
For the East, the stand can be brown or dark green or green.
Use the colours at http://www.geomancy.net/fs/colours.htm as a guide.
3. The shape of the fish tank is important. The best shapes are rectangular
or round. Avoid a square tank or a triangle tank.
In your case, it would be best to follow the guide above i.e. use method 1
in rearing the number of fishes.
There are two other considerations as your fish tank is at the West:
1. The element at the West location is Metal.
2. Under the Five elements concept : Metal enhances Water element.
3. West is a Yin location.
4. Too much water will create an imbalance as it is considered too YIN. But
fortunately not to worry unless it is (estimated) to be greater than 33.3
percent of the entire volume or floor area of the room (depending on which
comes first).
Avoid having a large fish tank at this location. A regular 2 feet fish tank
would do.
I am unable to fully advise you further because gold fishes especially, Red
or orange .. to pink ones are consider more of a Fire element and this helps
to balance the `situation'. If you rear other coloured fishes e.g. black
or dull colours, it would be of the Metal element and further enhance the
water element . Metal enhances Water.
Silvery fishes such as some tropical fishes are considered of the Metal
element and this may further enhance the water element.
However, at this point, you may have to use Trial and Error Feng Shui ie.
First, based on your intutition and monitior the fishes. A tell tale sign is
if the fishes continue to be healthy then all is fine if they die quickly,
then is is a bad `omen'.
Warmest Regards,
Cecil
-----Original Message-----
From: Listmanager
To: Recipients of 'free-advice' suppressed suppressed>
Date: Wednesday, June 02, 1999 1:29 PM
Subject: Gold Fish-Tropical

Quote
From: "Rebeca Rambal"
This message is sent from "free-advice" Mailing List.
I have an aquarium with Goldfish in the health and family area of my living
room, which is on the west of my apartment. I have this crazy idea of having
tropical fish instead of Goldfish, but I'm afraid something might change. I
am craving the speed and color of this tropical fish.
I also have a small aquarium in the Wealth area of my home office, which is
in the north west side, and I have tropicals there.
What would you recommend I do?
I am doing fairly well in my business, although I could be doing better. My
social life stinks, so does the romance department. (Just so you know)


Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net

Master Cecil Lee, Geomancy.Net-->
Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...