About Feng Shui
About
Us
Affiliations
Contact
Free
Reading
Products
In the
News |
|
from: The Globe and Mail
Newspaper (Toronto, ON)
July 2008 
How to bring Feng Shui
into the office Craig Silverman, July 24, 2008 at 12:18 PM EDT
Last fall, Canon Europe decided to hire a Feng Shui consultant to redesign
their offices in order to help address "high levels of employee office stress
and rage."
For those not familiar with Feng Shui, the report explains
that it "uses natural laws to explain how the life-force energy of the planet
(called "Qi") operates in the physical environment in relation to time, space
and individual human beings."
In practical terms, it offers "specific
guidelines on how to site, orient, design, and decorate the buildings where we
live and work so as to harmoniously capture this planetary life-force energy
and use it productively to support our health and well-being, improve our
lives, and attain the goals we so industriously pursue."
Feng Shui can
be applied to the colours, light, furniture, and materials used inside an
office. The report also advises people to spend time in nature, meditate, get
lots of sleep and to consider taking up yoga or a similar form of exercise. For
businesses, Feng Shui is used to increase productivity, reduce stress, and help
the bottom line.
The report concludes with 10 tips for bringing Feng
Shui into the office. I've included them below.
TOP 10 FENG SHUI
OFFICE TIPS
1) Reduce the use of glaring florescent lighting to a
minimum. Natural light and fresh air are always preferable. To reduce excessive
exposure and "fish-bowl-effect", use window treatments.
2) In locating
a desk, whenever possible, always provide direct views to an entrance. Avoid
placing an employee in a direct line with the door of an office or a cubicle.
3) Colors like green, blue-green, and blue will do well. Avoid the
extensive use of white on walls. Avoid patterns, especially multiple or
clashing patterns of colors or textures.
4) Plants and water in general
will do well in highly stressful environments, as long as they don't create
more clutter (and more stress).
5) De-clutter and organize desk and
storage spaces - including digital - and create more storage space whenever
necessary.
6) Place desks in the "power position", with the back to a
solid wall rather than an open space. All desks should be "floating", rather
then facing the wall, when doing most of your work.
7) In a cubicle,
the main working surface should be positioned facing toward the hallway,
separated with a medium-height partition.
8) For the open plan, I
suggest using medium height partition or bookshelves to reproduce the "power
position" behind the employees' back.
9) Use advanced Feng Shui
techniques to activate specific supportive directions based on date of birth or
building orientation.
10) To reduce stress and promote well-being,
practice a moderate and balanced lifestyle. Remember: stress shouldn't be an
excuse for poor behaviour inside, or outside, the office.
|
|