男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Feng shui, a trend for young Chinese overseas
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-03-14 14:50

Wearing low-cut jeans, a tube top and a funky hair style, Au Tak Lam projects as cool an image as any of her trendy Singaporean peers. Her hip dress sense, however, is visibly influenced by an ancient Chinese trade.


Au Tak Lam projects as cool an image as any of her trendy Singaporean peers. Her hip dress sense, however, is visibly influenced by an ancient Chinese trade. [AFP]

Instead of basking solely in the bling-bling of modern fashion accessories, Au, a computer engineer student, matches her swanky outfits with jade amulets, while colourful crystals adorn her nimble fingers.

"Crystals emit positive energy, while wearing jade produces a calming effect and enhances wisdom," said the 24-year-old, who works on the weekends at a shop selling feng shui ornaments in one of Singapore's bustling malls.

"It never ever hurts to have auspicious symbols by your side."

The knowledge of feng shui, or geomancy, had, until the early 20th century, been closely guarded by scholars and the Chinese Imperial court, with its practice limited to only the wealthiest families in feudal China.

With the "Middle Kingdom" now firmly positioned at the economic and cultural crossroads of an increasingly globalised world, this ancient practice has found its way into the lives of many overseas ethnic Chinese youngsters such as Au.

"There is no doubt that feng shui is becoming more and more popular amongst the young and trendy," Philip Lim, the editor-in-chief of Malaysian-based Feng Shui World, one of Asia's most widely read feng shui magazines, told AFP.

According to a survey conducted by the magazine last year, 58 percent of readers were aged 35 and below. Close to a quarter were between 20 to 25 years old.

"These days, it's increasingly being approached as a metaphysical science, rather than a religious practice, making it much friendlier to modern crowds," Lim said.

Helping to dispel the myths behind this practice, which dates back thousands of years, is the Singapore Fengshui Centre, a local feng shui research institute that conducts three-month feng shui courses at Singapore Polytechnic.

According to its founder, Vincent Koh, 20 percent of the centre's students over the past year were aged 30 and below, a far cry from the course's first intake in 1997, which comprised almost exclusively middle-aged men and retirees.

"We have examples of 17-year-old students coming in simply to learn more about the trade, and end up practising professionally," said Koh.

"The benefits are there for all to see," added the former real estate agent. "Feng shui, like traditional Chinese medicine, has gained credibility even among Singaporean youths, who don't usually care about such things."

Indeed, institutionalizing what is now often termed "the science of feng shui" has injected fresh impetus into an industry many previously had associated with age-old superstitions and dogmatic rituals.

It seems that in a practice propagating the positioning of objects based on the flow of "chi" (energy), it is this new generation of feng shui enthusiasts who are most well-placed to fan the winds of positive change.

Roy Sung, a 26-year-old freelance geomancer, for instance, sometimes earns up to 10,000 Singapore dollars (6,060 US dollars) a month offering his services to singles and couples in their 20s and 30s.

Sung said he sees an average of 10 clients a week, with his clientele coming mainly from an online feng shui forum he moderates.

"Young people generally know that feng shui is beneficial, but can't really communicate with the older feng shui masters, whom they see as old-fashioned and superstitious," he said.

"I don't force my customers to change their homes' interior designs to suit the advice I give them, but instead provide suggestions catering to their own home concepts."

Feng Shui World editor Lim estimates that there are at least 100,000 people in Singapore who consult feng shui practitioners each year.

Charges can swing wildly from 38 to 3,888 Singapore dollars per session, depending on the consultant's reputation and scale of work, according to Lim.

With such a lucrative market up for grabs, traditional feng shui consultants are, unsurprisingly, fiercely critical of the radical approaches of their younger, more modern counterparts.

Brandon Chua, 37, said he came up against opposition from traditionalists when he abandoned a six-figure annual salary as a regional sales director to become a full-time feng shui consultant three years ago.

He said he was once told by an established colleague to "toil the trade for 10 more years before you ever say anything", advice he promptly ignored.

"There is a big debate between classical feng shui, which adheres strictly to what's written in the books, and modern feng shui, which is more application-based," he said.

Chua remains unfazed. The self-proclaimed "non-conformist" plans to offer his services from a small home office, abandoning a city shop to move away from the cut and thrust of his prolific traditional counterparts.

"Feng shui, having long been part of Chinese culture, has superstitions intertwined with scientific belief," he said.

"Most people take it as a magic trick, but really, it's all about the simple philosophy of living in harmony with your environment."



Quality actor Liu Ye to release photo album
Tom Cruise tops living stars list
Maggie Cheung in a commercial filming
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

China's top legislature enacts historic law for peace

 

   
 

Anti-Secession Law adopted by NPC (full text)

 

   
 

Olympic torch expected to run through Taiwan

 

   
 

Law for peace wins worldwide support

 

   
 

German gets compensated for fake paintings

 

   
 

N.Korea says to develop more nuke weapons

 

   
  Accuser told Dean Jackson did nothing
   
  Office workers earn less in Shanghai
   
  Jay Chow's 'Snail' recommended as patriotic
   
  New Silk Alley Market to open this week
   
  Single-child couples foresee feeding burdens
   
  Tom Cruise tops living stars list
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Chen Ning Yang, 82, to marry a 28-year-old woman  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 桐柏县| 红安县| 宁化县| 察雅县| 独山县| 肇州县| 西昌市| 北碚区| 广东省| 宁夏| 女性| 民权县| 白银市| 延庆县| 芦山县| 肥城市| 周口市| 克东县| 晴隆县| 轮台县| 屯留县| 营口市| 漠河县| 广灵县| 麻江县| 明溪县| 永康市| 张家川| 丰城市| 岗巴县| 临颍县| 凭祥市| 岑溪市| 宽城| 乐业县| 鄯善县| 巨鹿县| 泾源县| 辽源市| 梅河口市| 安义县| 澎湖县| 略阳县| 平昌县| 贵溪市| 山西省| 龙井市| 卓资县| 蕉岭县| 通榆县| 万州区| 宁明县| 横峰县| 鸡西市| 英德市| 广饶县| 德庆县| 京山县| 南投县| 仁布县| 石首市| 中西区| 延长县| 桦甸市| 海城市| 民权县| 衡南县| 邢台县| 郸城县| 格尔木市| 黄石市| 襄城县| 赣榆县| 洪湖市| 九台市| 石柱| 仲巴县| 堆龙德庆县| 三都| 西藏| 大关县| 连州市|