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Feng Shui Tips for Your
Home Office- Part 1
by Stephanie Roberts
Part I: Choosing Your Work Space
Many home offices are set up in
whatever space is available: in a corner of the bedroom, on the
dining room table, down in the basement, or upstairs in the attic
or in the guest bedroom. Some of these locations are fine places
for a home office; others are not so great. Here are some guidelines
to keep in mind when deciding where to set up your in-home workspace.
There are essentially two kinds
of home offices: home administration centers that are used for paying
household bills, keeping track of the family budget and other household
management tasks; and work spaces related to earning an income that
are located within the home. For home administration, a corner of
the kitchen counter may be sufficient. If you are working from home
professionally – even if part time – it is best to have a space
that is used only for that purpose in order to keep work and home
energies as separate at possible.
If you hold client meetings in your
home office, it is best if clients can use a separate entrance from
that used by your family. That way your clients can come and go
without having to pass through your living spaces, and both of your
energies will remain focused on business. Clients who walk through
your living space before getting to the office are likely to make
a subtle shift away from a business focus, and their confidence
in your professionalism or capabilities may subconsciously be weakened.
Make sure there is a clear pathway
to your home business entrance, especially if it is at the side
or back of the house, so your clients know which way to go when
they arrive for the first time. Because office and home functions
are different, your home office has its own Mouth of Chi, whether
that’s a separate exterior door or a door inside the home. All of
the guidelines for good doorway chi presented in Chapter 5 will
be equally important for your home office.
WHERE NOT TO WORK
Certain areas of the home are especially
ill-suited for home office use. Here are some locations that you
should avoid if at all possible:
Location: Center of the home
(tai chi)
Problem: Work will dominate over family life
Location: Bedroom
Problems: Work issues may cause or contribute to relationship
conflicts; thoughts of work may interfere with sleep; you may
feel drowsy and unfocused when trying to work
Location: Office in nook underneath
stairs
Problem: Oppressive overhead energy may cause headaches,
contribute to difficulty concentrating; unevenly shaped space
causes energy imbalance; impossible to work in the Command Position
Location: Next to bathroom, with
desk & toilet on opposite sides of the shared wall
Problem: Business chi gets flushed down the toilet
Some other situations to be alert
for are rooms with low or slanted ceilings, and poor lighting or
ventilation (all of which may affect an attic room). A low ceiling
in your office is not good because it suppresses aspirations and
keeps you focused on the details of the present rather than exploring
future possibilities.
Slanted ceilings create a similar
problem that is focused on one side of the room. If your office
has a slanted ceiling, place your desk on the taller side of the
room, and use the lower side for file cabinets, book cases, or other
storage. Plants and lights that shine upward (rather than down)
are good addition to rooms with low or slanted ceilings.
Basements often offer extra space
to create a home office without interfering with the rest of the
house. The problem with basements is that they are usually cool
and damp, either inadequately lit or with harsh overhead fluorescent
fixtures, and they often have poor ventilation. Windows, if there
are any, may be small, dirty, and positioned so high on the wall
that you can’t see out of them – not good for having a clear vision
of your future direction.
Don’t despair if it seems that none
of your home office options are any good. Feng shui is about doing
the best you can with the space you have. If you must work in the
bedroom, for example, you can set up the office in an armoire-type
unit and close it up when it is not in use. A folding screen or
a fabric curtain can also help to keep work and home energies separate.
And if your office space has design features that are less than
ideal, feng shui cures such as bells, crystals, and mirrors can
help to correct them.
Part
II: Setting up Your Work Space
Excerpted from “The
Pocket Idiot's Guide to Feng Shui” by Stephanie Roberts (Alpha
Books, 2004)
Copyright © 2004
Stephanie Roberts
STEPHANIE ROBERTS is the author of the popular
Fast Feng Shui book series, available at Amazon.com. Receive FR(EE)
Feng Shui tips in every issue when you subscribe to the Fast Feng
Shui newsletter. Visit http://www.fastfengshui.com
for details.
SEE ALSO:
Article: Clutter's Side Effects:
How the State of Your Home Affects Your Life
Sample Quick Tips: If Your Issue
is Career
Links & Resources: Career
Planning, Job Search, Work
from Home, Home
Office Storage & Organization (Amazon.com)
Products: Feng Shui Water
Fountains,
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