Sunday, 19 September 2010

Feng shui your life: Harnessing 'good energy' at work


Where's the best place to sit at work? It's a simple question. But when I asked a local feng shui expert, I didn't get a simple answer. More on that in just a moment.
Feng shui literally means "wind water" in Chinese. It's the ancient belief that energy flows through your surroundings and it is up to you to harness the "good energy." Several years ago, I was intrigued enough by this philosophy that I took a beginner's feng shui class in Texas, where I was living at the time.
I quickly realized it was complicated. Not only do you have to use your birthday and a formula to determine your element, there was also something about a tortoise shell, compass directions and  more calculations. I don't remember anything from that class except that my element is "wood" and I need to avoid placing fire elements (e.g. red vase or red carpet) in my home. Red symbolizes fire and fire burns wood.
Fast forward to today. I live in Hong Kong, where people take feng shui pretty seriously. You only have to look around the city to see that architects often include feng shui in their design. In Repulse Bay on the island's south side, there's a well-known apartment building with a large hole in the center. The hole is to allow the dragon (the Chinese symbol of good fortune) access to the sea to drink water.
You can also apply feng shui to your office.
That brings us back to the question, where's the best place to sit at work? Feng shui Master Raymond Lo says that first, a feng shui expert needs to come to your workplace to evaulate the energy flow. He emphasizes the boss needs to sit where the best energy is.
"If the boss is happy, the company makes money," Lo says. Then the middle managers should be assigned the next most "auspicious" spots in the office. Lastly, the rank and file take up the remaining floor space. Lo also says there is also something called "money energy" - and no one should place their desk where money energy intensifies. This is where the conference room should be - a place where strategy is planned out.
To make things even more complicated, Lo says good energy is dynamic and moves around. So over time, the most auspicious energy can migrate to different locations in your office. I told you, feng shui isn't easy.

Source: CNN

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Three dead in accidents linked to Typhoon Fanapi

Three people died Saturday in accidents linked to Typhoon Fanapi's approach to Taiwan's eastern coast, where it was expected to make landfall Sunday, Taiwan's official news agency reported.
Early Saturday, a 76-year-old woman who was trying to harvest her crops before Fanapi's arrival apparently fell from a terraced hill into a river in Pingsi Township in Taipei County, the Central News Agency reported. She was found drowned.
Two junior-high school students in the northern county of Taoyuan died Saturday morning, CNA said.
They were among a group of seven students who were visiting the flooded Taoyuan Canal when a girl slipped off the bank in the rain, CNA said, citing police.
Three boys jumped into the water to rescue her. Only two of the would-be rescuers made it to safety; the other and the girl died, it said.
As of 5 a.m. Sunday (5 p.m. Saturday ET), Fanapi had strengthened with sustained winds of 121 mph (195 kph) and gusts of up to 149 mph (241 kph), according to the U.S. Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center. It was forecast to further intensify -- but only slightly -- before making landfall in central Taiwan Sunday between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. (10 p.m. Saturday ET to 2 a.m. Sunday ET).
As of 2 a.m. Sunday (2 p.m. ET Saturday), Fanapi was centered 121 miles (105 nautical miles) southeast of Taipei.
According to CNN models, Taiwan can expect 3.1 inches (80 mm) to 9.8 inches (250 mm) of rain, with isolated amounts reaching close to 19.7 inches (500 mm) of rain in the coming 48 hours.
Schools in Taitung, Yilan and Hualien counties suspended classes as of Saturday night, and Nantou County evacuated some residents, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency said.
Taipei's Maokong gondola, a cable-car transport system, has halted operations, Xinhua said.
Tsengwen Reservoir, Taiwan's largest, began discharging water Saturday at noon so that it would be able to accommodate Fanapi's rains, the news agency reported.
TransAsia Airways, Mandarin Airlines and Uni Air canceled some Sunday flights and fishing boats in Taitung County returned to harbor, it said.

Source: CNN