Inside the zone of tranquility, there should be a balance between wind and
water.

The art of Fengshui in its earliest recorded context specifically refers to
the School of Forms. Terrestrial features serve to block the wind, which
captures qi and scatters it, and channel the waters, which collect qi and
store it.

Fengshui may literally indicate "wind and water," but this is merely
shorthand for an environmental policy of "hindering the wind and hoarding
the waters." The science of Fengshui, therefore is "windbreak-watercourse
qimancy."

The art of Kanyu, on the other hand, the precursor of the Compass School,
relies strictly on astrology and numerology as a means of fathoming qi on a
cosmic scale.

While Fengshui is local, Kanyu is universal. Since the medieval period in
China, masters of qimancy were versed in the environmental science as well
as the occult art. The term we have coined, Yaqui Vastu, applies to both
Vastu and Fengshui.

Example of a Yaqui Vastu dwelling:

[image: Inline image 1]


On Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 2:52 PM, Richard Williams <pundits...@gmail.com>wrote:

> It's all a matter of positioning and placement.
>
> Geomancy is at least half a million years old, dating from early Homo
> Sapiens. Images of 'Mater' dating from 30,000 B.C.E. were placed in small
> wall recesses in homes, in order to insure vitality and abundance.
>
> All traditional cultures have their own systems of geomantic placement.
> There are many solutions that nature has provided in the way of housing,
> such as cocoons, shells, webs, nests and dens, which are but a few examples
> of natural geomancy.
>
> Thus, geomancy is inherent and vital to life and survival. In human
> society, geomancy is a part of our animal heritage and the result of
> continuing improvement in human dwelling construction.
>
> People have always developed shelters and homes in concert with nature.
> Tree houses, caves, cliff dwellings, and commanding views are some examples
> of universal geomancy.
>
> Buckminister Fuller 'Dymaxion' House at the Henry Ford Museum:
>
> [image: Inline image 1]
>
> Geomancy can be defined as "The skillfull use of the best available
> knowledge in order to create the most suitable conditions for living and
> working." Geomancy involves the awareness of how the ways of construction,
> orientation, and placement affect our environment and thus our own daily
> activities and relations.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dymaxion_house
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Oct 12, 2013 at 2:15 PM, <emptyb...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>> **
>>
>>
>> The Yanqui all natural terra-form home from West Texas.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, <sharelong60@...> wrote:
>>
>> dear Richard, well may your entire home be a Zone of Tranquility (-:
>> thanks for another lovely photo.
>>
>>
>>    On Friday, October 11, 2013 2:45 PM, Richard Williams <punditster@...>
>> wrote:
>>
>>  We are thinking about a modest home - one with an interior courtyard
>> garden for the Zone of Tranquility.
>>
>> Spanish style house exterior courtyard front door:
>> http://www.cococozy.com/<http://www.cococozy.com/2010/06/see-this-house-spanish-revived-for.html>
>>
>> [image: Inline image 2]
>>
>> Spanish style house exterior courtyard front door:
>> http://www.cococozy.com/2010/06/see-this-house-spanish-revived-for.html
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 10:46 AM, Share Long <sharelong60@...> wrote:
>>
>> **
>>
>>  Thanks, Richard, nice topic. You may remember that some of the FF vastu
>> homes are made of straw bales; some off the grid; some just eco friendly. I
>> love this idea of building in harmony with the surrounding land.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>   On Friday, October 11, 2013 10:40 AM, Richard Williams <punditster@...>
>> wrote:
>>
>>  Years ago I was very impressed with the home designs of Buckminiter
>> Fuller. I once visited Colorado to see solar, self sufficient homes.
>>
>> http://www.livingearthconstruction.com/
>>
>> There's a nice house in San Antonio designed by the famous architect
>> O'neil Ford:
>>
>> [image: Inline image 1]
>>
>> http://www.mysanantonio.com/outside-in-in-an-O-Neil-Ford-1369441.php<http://www.mysanantonio.com/real_estate/article/Spaces-Bringing-the-outside-in-in-an-O-Neil-Ford-1369441.php>
>>
>> Several years ago we drove up to Fairfield to look at some of the vastu
>> designed homes. I've also looked at homes that employ Asian Feng Shui
>> designs and we drove to New Mexico and Arizona to look around at places
>> that have a Southwest design.
>>
>> According to what I've read, there's a lady down in Brazil that is
>> building her house out of concrete. Has anybody ever wondered how much
>> their home weighs? Go figure.
>>
>>  Most people don't get to design their own dwelling - they buy or rent
>> already built homes or apartments. I know a guy up in Austin that lives in
>> a daub and wattle shack out on the road to erewhon - ever since his wife
>> left him he does't even care about where he throws his dirty socks. LoL!
>>
>> So, Rita and I are designing our own house. It's going to be based on
>> Yaqui Vastu principles. It's not complicated.
>>
>> The first thing you have to do is find a suituable place to build and
>> then follow the natural flow of the physical terrain, so that you find a
>> good balance of man-made and the natural landscape. The second thing you
>> have to do is decide on pier and beam, or slab foundation. It's all about
>> placement and positioning.
>>
>> So, what is Yaqui Vastu?
>>
>> Yaqui Vastu teaches alignment, placement, and the relationship of
>> physical space in relation to man and nature. How we build our homes and
>> how we set up the interior of our shelters has a dramatic impact on our way
>> of living.
>>
>> An essential part of any vastu living home is a zone of tranquility.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>    
>>
>
>

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