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Ms. Feng Shui

Feng Shui Your Home Office for Increased Productivity and Success

With more people working from home, we need to know how best to maximize our efforts for success by using feng shui.

Feng shui is an ancient Chinese practice that involves the arrangement of objects and space to create a harmonious and balanced environment. By following some simple feng shui principles, you can create a home office that supports your work and helps you achieve your goals.

  1. Choose the right location for your home office. The ideal location for a home office is a room or corner that is quiet, private, and separate from the rest of the house. This will help you focus and minimize distractions. If you don’t have a separate room for your home office, consider creating a designated work area in a quiet corner of a shared space.
  2. Make sure the home office is well-ventilated and well-lit. Good ventilation and lighting are essential for a comfortable and productive work environment. Make sure there is plenty of natural light coming into the home office, and consider installing a fan to circulate the air.
  3. Keep the home office clean and clutter-free. Clutter can be a major distraction and can block the flow of positive energy in the home office, so it’s important to keep the space clean and organized. Regularly wipe down surfaces, sweep and mop the floor, and get rid of any unnecessary items.
  4. Incorporate the five feng shui elements. The five feng shui elements – wood, fire, earth, metal, and water – are believed to balance and harmonize the energy in a space. To bring these elements into your home office, try incorporating natural materials such as wood or stone, using the color red to represent fire, adding plants or artwork to represent earth, incorporating metal accents such as desk lamps or hardware, and using water features like a fountain or aquarium.
  5. Choose the right colors for your home office. The colors you choose for your home office can have a big impact on the overall energy of the space. Soft, calming colors such as green, blue, and purple promote a peaceful and focused atmosphere, while bold, vibrant colors like red and yellow can bring energy and excitement to the space.

By following these feng shui principles, you can create a home office that supports your work and helps you achieve your goals. Using these tips can help you create a positive and harmonious energy in your home office, but be sure to read my previous post about how to feng shui your desk.

What now? Well, learn more about Feng Shui on my website.

If you are interested in improving your life through Feng Shui, I can help.

I am a 3rd generation Feng Shui expert and have helped thousands of people add harmony and balance to their homes and offices without making it look like a Chinese restaurant exploded.

I can help you attract the life that you deserve with Feng Shui.  Contact me today!

Be sure to register for my email newsletter or like me on Facebook to stay up-to-date with my latest posts.

Feng Shui in Quarantine

Use Feng Shui to lose the overwhelming, uneasy or overworked feelings that can come with working from home

Probably like you, I went from driving to school, to the office, to visit clients, back to school, and to the kids’ practices, to now setting up work meetings, my kids’ distance learning and virtual practices, all from the “comfort” of my home via videoconference, while giving in to provide snacks seemingly every fifteen minutes to the kids.  That run-on sentence captures how this new normal can make us feel.  For the first two weeks at home, I felt overwhelmed, frustrated, angry, sad, and just wanted to be left alone, which are not typical personality traits of mine at all.  And then I was reminded of the solution while on a videoconference with a home builder client.

The modern practicality of the 3,000-year-old practice of Feng Shui consistently amazes me.  Most people only think of Feng Shui for its placement of objects and the use of colors, but it’s also about the placement of ourselves within our environment, whether-or-not we have an expansive home office.  Working from home is a challenge because the environment is designed primarily for relaxation, not laser focus on work when others are also home.  The good news is that Feng Shui helps us integrate better with our environment, even in times like these.

In a famous incident a few years ago, BBC World had a live video interview of a political analyst from his home office which was crashed by his two small children before his wife could drag them out, knocking books off the bed on the way.  Since the quarantine started, such incidents now seem normal.  Our efforts to find a quiet place to work or conduct videoconferences have resulted in multiple examples of poor office Feng Shui, which also happen to have real-world implications, even for a videoconference.

The client videoconference I alluded to had many examples of bad Feng Shui.  One person had her back to a window, darkening her face in the video and overwhelming her with energy.  Another had their back to the office door, just like the political analyst, where we saw kids running down the hallway and probably giving that person an anxiousness of people watching over their shoulder.  Yet another had a poster behind him of large waves crashing onto a lighthouse, symbolism that probably manifested into a feeling of unease that would explain the bags under his eyes.  I even saw someone working from her closet, probably the only way to provide segmentation between home- and work-life.

It was this video call that reminded me of my bad Feng Shui positioning that needed to be remedied.  In an effort to give my husband space for his video calls in our home office and to be close to the kids to help with their distance learning, I unwittingly placed myself in a position on the dining table near a fireplace where my back was to the patio door.  Once I realized my error, I moved to a location at the table where my back was to a solid wall and I could see all of the doorways to the room.  My mood immediately improved.  Though I still juggle my work, a flood of emails, the kids’ distance learning, and snacks every fifteen minutes, I no longer feel stressed out, trapped, or overwhelmed. I now have natural light hitting my face and perspective over the entire room.  It also prevents my kids from videobombing my calls, allowing me to preserve my professionalism.  I feel in control of my domain again.

Next Steps

If you feel overwhelmed, uneasy about your work environment, or simply can’t stop working at all hours, try to implement these tips for your workspace, however small that workspace may be:

  • Keep your back to a solid wall where you can see all windows and doors in the room.
  • Ensure proper lighting is in front of you, rather than only behind or directly above you.
  • Make sure only calming pictures and elements surround you.
  • Eliminate clutter from your home.
  • When work is done for the day, hide it from view however possible, even if that means covering your computer with a blanket or storing your documents in a closet at night.
  • Ensure you always have good posture at your computer workstation.
  • These same principles also apply to your workspace at your office, so make sure to apply them when restrictions are lifted.

Learn more about Feng Shui on my website.

If you are interested in improving your life through Feng Shui, I can help with a virtual consultation.

I am a 3rd generation Feng Shui expert and have helped thousands of people add harmony and balance to their homes and offices without making it look like a Chinese restaurant exploded.

I can help you attract the life that you deserve with Feng Shui.  Contact me today!

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Be sure to register for my email newsletter or like me on Facebook to stay up-to-date with my latest posts.

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