
Horizontal Qi tracking by a mainland Chinese practitioner
Feng Shui is about receiving Qi, amassing Qi and tapping of (specific) Qi. Without a detailed Qi map, how is one supposed to amass Qi and tap Qi?
This is an example of Qi tracking of a FLOOR in a building by a fellow practitioner in China. And, this horizontal Qi map is only a part of this practitioner’s Qi tracking for a commercial Feng Shui audit.
The preliminary work in any audit is to trace Qi from macro to micro environment, layer by layer down to one’s bed, stove, desk, and door. A detailed documentation and thorough analysis is required before executing changes and formations.
In macro environment, Waterways, terrains, buildings, and structures demarcate Qi. In micro environment, Qi is demarcated by fencing, stairways, lifts, shape and volume of building. Qi spirals and moves from smaller volume of space to bigger volume of space. From higher grounds to lower grounds. It may change its directional spin i.e. from anti-clockwise to clockwise and vice versa when meet with obstacles and ‘crossroads’.
However, such fundamental in appreciating Qi and tracing Qi is sorely missing in contemporary Feng Shui courses.
Over the earlier years of my Feng Shui learning, I have attended a number of formally organised commercial courses with 8 teachers. All but one failed to teach such basics on Qi map.
The only one who taught Qi tracing gave a vague session, claiming it is a special and specific lineage technique. I was to learn it is the contrary from a casino Feng Shui specialist of the same lineage. There isn’t any issue within the lineage on teaching Qi tracing because it is not a lineage specific technique.
Qi tracing and mapping is a general technique for both both San He and San Yuan applications. Above photo was extracted from an open case discussion amongst practitioners.








