Q&A Sunday: What to Expect from a Feng Shui Consultation, Part 2

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

How does a feng shui consultation work?

In last week’s Q&A Sunday, I shared how I prepare for a feng shui consultation, which is a really important part of the process. As I shared last week, my preparation helps me to be a conduit for what my client needs during our time together. Today, I’m going to talk about what the actual consultation looks like. 

During a feng shui consultation, I spend a lot of time listening to my client, and what it is they want to work on. I’ll ask very targeted, focused questions that help me determine what it is we can adjust in their home. I also might bring up questions I noticed in the feng shui. For example, if I noticed something about the location of their bedroom, that might guide me to ask certain questions. Or, if someone wants to work on their relationship, I might take a really deep look at what’s happening in the relationship area of the home and bedroom, as well as some other specific factors, and see what stands out.

Instead of going through a checklist, I let things arise during a consultation based on what the client needs, and then I listen. Next, we walk through the home, either in person or virtually. We might look at pictures, or we can go through the floor plan. It depends on the situation. Then I give recommendations and adjustments, answer questions, and transmit any personal qi adjustments or meditations that they should work on. Typically, if I have time at the end of a two-hour consultation, I close with some kind of space clearing or blessing. 

There might be other things that come up in your space depending on the skill set of your consultant. For example, somebody asked me about where to put a bathroom when renovating a home. In general, a feng shui consultant might have suggestions about ideal locations for the bathroom, however they may not have the knowledge of other things that need to be considered, like the sizes of things or location of the plumbing. If you do need this kind of expertise, or if you need help decorating and picking paint colors, look for a consultant with those skill sets. Some of our Mindful Design graduates are designers or architects in addition to feng shui experts. 

Even if you’re not renovating or redecorating, a feng shui consultant can still help you in your space, because feng shui is really energy work. A feng shui consultant will help you work with what you have, and also see what comes up that might need to be addressed. Sometimes, a very small and simple tweak can make a lot of changes in your home. 

I hope that creates some clarity around what a feng shui consultation is actually like! If you’re curious and want to experience a consultation, I have many skilled graduates all over the world with different backgrounds who are available for feng shui consultations. I also offer a few discounted consultations each year that my students audit - if you’re interested in hearing about those when they are available, make sure you’re on my mailing list!

by Anjie Cho


If you’d like to learn more about feng shui, check out Mindful Design Feng Shui School at: www.mindfuldesignschool.com

Throughout The Pandemic, Designing A Space Became A Form Of Self Care

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

Anjie Cho was featured on Lonny

In February of last year, people were working at their offices for eight hours a day, commuting, and squeezing in happy hour sometime between it all.

Then the pandemic hit and those fleeting moments at home became constant. The commute was cut down to 30-second walks downstairs, the office now a dusty desk in some forgotten corner, happy hour within the confines of the kitchen. Home became everything, literally.

It's understandable that after being cooped up for so long, people started to see their space from a different perspective — and in turn, how important their physical environment really was.

“A lot of people think that their home is just where they hang their hat,” Feng Shui teacher and designer Anjie Cho explains. “But, in fact, your home is a symbol for you. It represents you, and you're interdependent and interconnected to your home environment.

So, as people reckoned with this new reality, they turned to interior design — hoping to create more functional, comfortable, and restorative spaces to live in. In fact, while many industries struggled to gain footing during the pandemic, design studios saw an unusual surge.

.…read full article


If you’d like to learn more about feng shui, check out Mindful Design Feng Shui School at: www.mindfuldesignschool.com

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Q&A Sunday: What to Expect from a Feng Shui Consultation, Part 1

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

Photo by Anjie Cho Architect PLLC

How does a feng shui consultation work?

I often get asked about how a feng shui consultation usually works. One thing to remember is that a feng shui consultant is not necessarily an architect or interior designer, although they could be both. I’m also an architect, for example! Many people assume that feng shui consultations include design, and it might if your consultant has those qualifications and skills - but that’s not always the case.

Another thing to know is that every practitioner is different, and there are also dozens of feng shui schools that are all equally correct. Think about how many types of bread recipes there are. Just because there are many doesn’t mean that one is right or wrong, but it also depends on the experience and the skillfulness of the person making the bread, and the taste and needs of the person who’s going to eat the bread. 

That said, I’ll share a bit about what I do and what I teach my students at Mindful Design Feng Shui School. In general, the client first reaches out, and then we ask for a floor plan of the home. This is one of the most important pieces of information to provide to a consultant, because it’s a map of your home, and it represents you. Even if the consultant is coming in person to your home, we still would really like to see the floor plan. Sometimes if a client really has a stumbling block to providing the floor plan, you can hire someone (sometimes the consultant) to do it. However, there’s a lot of information that can be conveyed through a floor plan created by the client. Also, the energy and effort you put into the floor plan will reflect upon how accurate your feng shui consultation is. 

Next, I usually ask for three wishes the client wants to work with. I also have an optional intake form to get more information. We’ll also need your address, either to know how get there if we’re going in person, or to look up details of your home’s location online. If your consultant is using astrology, they’ll also need your birth date. Not all consultants use astrology, so it depends who you work with. 

I start working before the meeting. I lay the bagua on the client’s home, and I consider any red flags in the floor plan, as well as what is coming up for the client. Next, one of the most important things I do before meeting with a client is a meditation to make sure that I’m not coming in with my own energy, but instead I’m a conduit for what is required for the client. I do this because I don’t want to go into the consultation with my own baggage and my own ego. By doing a meditation beforehand, I open myself to what it is a client needs. 

Finally, I actually meet with the client! For more about what the actual meeting looks like, stay tuned for part 2 next week! 

by Anjie Cho


If you’d like to learn more about feng shui, check out Mindful Design Feng Shui School at: www.mindfuldesignschool.com