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Feng shui the Sharon Hay way includes less clutter so the energy flow is better in the home and condo. That is not an event but a lifestyle.
“The more you de-clutter the more comes in and opportunities and other things fall into place,” sata Feng Shui consultant Sharon Hay. Hay says there are nine stations of life and different elements enhance aspects of life. Each element has a colour and a shape. “I get their [clients’] year of birth which gives me which directions are best for success,” Hay says. “I find out how many bedrooms, how long they’ve been living there how old the building is…what’s been going on in their life, if they just got married, if they just changed careers? We go forward to remove any blockages and enhance with the elements.” Landscaping inside and outside the home is important in organizing the feng shui way. Artificial trees, pictures and plants help to avoid the negative environmental influences. Even with a condo you would need more pictures of flowers and vibrant colours of plants and trees. “Too much red is too stimulating, too much fire energy,” says Hay. “If someone has a lot of kids they have to keep it fairly grounded. Oranges, beiges, taupes, yellows and things in square patterns. You can have square pillows on the couch. It gives a lot more of a feeling of security. [The parents] have to try and keep the toys under control and if things are out in the hallway and picking the rubber ducky off your kitchen counter – things become chaotic, hard to think, hard to focus, the relationship gets stressed.” Hay says a lot about organizing is going with your gut feelings. Holding onto things you do not need can make you lose money or lose out on opportunities. “The more you let go, the more new fresh vibrant energy comes in. It’s been handed down through generations – give it away.” As Nada Thomson, professional organizer with Artful Organizers was preparing to set her parking time on her cellphone over breakfast she added her experience to organizing a new dream home or condo. “It was a beautiful home in Oakville…a beautiful new community there and the home was just sprawling and lovely and architecturally interesting and there was a lot of storage available in the kitchen,” Thomson said. “They put a lot of thought into how they were going to organize the kitchen – what cabinets they were going to order. So I helped them with the unpacking of their move. I wasn’t around for the packing – they were coming from another city. They brought me in to help them unpack all of their stuff.” Thomson was at work with her clients to help them to use the space. She had to ask them many questions. “Are they bakers, do they love to cook, what age group are the guests, do they have sleep-over guests, do they need a home office? All of these things I needed to know about in order to plan the storage use for them.” Thomson mentions there are two ends of the scale when it comes to storage space that is so important in organizing your new home. There are some places that do not have enough storage and others that have more than enough. The home she worked with in Oakville had more than enough. “I’ve seen in other homes that have had an excess amount of storage space that there’s really very little thought that goes into unpacking things. So there’ll be baking material all over the kitchen, they’ll be food all over the kitchen and in every cupboard. There’s no flow. It takes time to find things and then things get cluttered up because people don’t know where to put things back and then the next person can’t find what they’re looking for, and the process goes on.” Thomson found baskets at Canadian Tire that come in three different sizes to use for storage space. “They were about three inches deep and they come in three sizes and they’re actually perfect for deeper shelves,” Thomson said. “We could put all the snacks into one and all of the dog treats into another one and canned goods so it becomes this drawer that they could pull out so they have the freedom of using the drawers without having to have custom drawers made on each shelf.”
The copyright of the article Organizing with Feng Shui in Mind in Using Feng Shui is owned by Donna Kakonge. Permission to republish Organizing with Feng Shui in Mind in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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