Featured in Yahoo Lifestyle: A Classical Feng Shui Consultation in Nashville, TN
Most people think Feng Shui is about decorations, furniture placement, or symbolism.
Classical Feng Shui is something much older and much deeper.
At its core, it is the study of how environments influence stress, movement, relationships, focus, health, retention, and human behavior through terrain, structure, flow, pressure, and spatial interaction.
Recently, journalist Amelia Edelman interviewed me about a consultation involving a family experiencing tension, conflict, and emotional exhaustion within their home environment. What made the experience meaningful was not simply rearranging objects, but observing how the structure and flow of the home itself was influencing the way the family interacted daily.
Since that interview, I’ve continued documenting classical Feng Shui field studies throughout Nashville using traditional San He landform methods, directional analysis, and environmental observation drawn from classical texts such as the 《撼龍經》 (Han Long Jing / Shaking the Dragon Classic).
The deeper I study these systems, the more I realize that environments are constantly shaping human experience in ways most people never consciously notice.
Some locations naturally gather people, opportunity, and momentum.
Others disperse energy, attention, and stability.
Roads, terrain, entrances, water flow, rail lines, surrounding structures, and directional pressure all influence how a place feels and functions over time.
This is why two businesses on the same street can experience completely different outcomes.
Why some homes feel restorative while others create tension.
Why certain spaces naturally encourage focus, connection, and retention while others feel draining or unstable.
Classical Feng Shui attempts to observe these patterns systematically rather than superstitiously.
Over the coming months, I’ll continue publishing Nashville-based field studies, landform observations, and environmental analyses as I further document how classical Chinese environmental systems intersect with modern life, architecture, business flow, and human experience.
If you’re curious how your home, business, or environment may be influencing your daily life, you can learn more here: