Friend,
Feng Shui Cures are objects used to correct chi or enhance the life areas in your home.
It's important to choose the right cures for your home, because if you choose the wrong cures, they end up lowering your vibration.
Traditional isn't always best
Some traditional Feng Shui Cures look strange in modern Western homes, or they elicit negative feelings in you or your visitors.
Examples:
1 - A woman places a laughing Buddha in her foyer because a friend told her that it will attract money to her home. However, she's a Christian, and every time she walks by it, she feels like she's doing something wrong by placing an idol from another religion in her space.
2 - You get a three-legged frog because you read that it is a good Feng Shui cure for money. You like it because the tale of the three-legged frog is a story of compassion and generosity. However, when you have guests, they wonder why you keep a sculpture of a handicapped frog on your entry table.
Use symbols that have a good meaning in your culture
Symbols may mean one thing in one culture, but a different thing in another culture.
When choosing objects to enhance your home, make sure that they have a good meaning in your culture.
For example, if you live in a Western country, a live healthy plant with rounded leaves and upright branches (a symbol of growth) is a much better Feng Shui cure for wealth than 3 Chinese coins tied with a red ribbon.
Three ways to Feng Shui your home
Feng Shui Cures that give out bad messages are one Feng Shui problem that can be found in a place. There are hundreds of other issues that can affect the feel and energy of your home.
It's important to know what those issues are are and how to fix them because your home influences your luck.
When applying Feng Shui to your home, do it with guidance. There are three ways in which you can work with me to Feng Shui your home. Go here to learn more.