Can Spring Cleaning Land You A Job? It just might says feng shui expert
by Anonymous
CUERO, TEXAS, February 26, 2004--Spring! Ahhhhh! Open the windows and take a deep breath… and then feel the dread. Home owners everywhere look forward to spring, but lament the old ritual – spring cleaning.
If you are searching for the motivation to get cracking on window washing and baseboard dusting, just remember this: a clean house just might help you land a new job.
How so? Feng shui expert, Kathryn Weber, says that feng shui is the “original spring cleaning,” and that the Chinese believe that a clean home is a lucky home. Weber, the publisher on an online feng shui e-zine, The Red Lotus Letter (http://www.redlotusletter.com), explains that dust and old, broken junk in the house collects negative energy.
“When we clean, we rid our homes of negative energy — the kind that could be holding back new and better relationships, improved health, or, yes, a new job,” she says. “Luckily, the feng shui of a home is improved more quickly with elbow grease than it is with some kind of lucky charm.”
Very often, cleaning parts of the home can impact different aspects of our lives depending upon the area that is cleaned or freshened up, says Weber.
Where does one clean to get a better job or a new opportunity? Head to the north corner of the house she says. “This is the part of the home that corresponds with jobs and career, and the simple act of cleaning removes old energy and infuses the area with new, fresh, and clean (read: lucky) energy.”
If you don’t own a house, then clean the north corner of your office, cubicle, or desk, she advises. “Cleaning the north corners allows new energy – and possibly a new job with it – to enter your life.”
Feng shui, often referred to as the “Chinese art of placement,” is an ancient technique for improving environments by harmonizing colors, elements, and objects. Besides providing a method for creating a harmonized environment, feng shui is also gaining ground as way to help propel people ahead in their businesses, careers, relationships, or in their financial status.
Kathryn Weber publishes the feng shui E-Zine, The Red Lotus Letter (http://www.redlotusletter.com). She is also a feng shui master practitioner whose witty, no-nonsense style appeals to audiences and she is often called by media to explain feng shui in down-to-earth terms. Kathryn Weber is a bit of an anomaly herself – a woman preaching feng shui out in the middle of Texas cattle country… sort of “East Meets Western.” For more information on this story, or information related to feng shui, contact Kathryn Weber.
This article is courtesy of http://www.fengsuiworld.info
You may freely reprint this article on your website or in
your newsletter provided this courtesy notice, the author
name and URLs remain intact and clickable.
Submit
Your Article