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Freeman Cebu Lifestyle

Reinventing luck in burial

NO-NONSENSE FENGSHUI - The Freeman

Yin feng shui is the highest level of feng shui. Feng shui of burial places – maosoleums, tombs, columbaries, urns at the family altar.

It is never too late to deal with yin feng shui.  Why? In feng shui, there is such a practice as the second burial.  This accounts for grave resiting in order to make it auspiciously lucky for the descendants.

The family member who cares for an ancestor's grave will be first in receiving the dead's blessings  from the afterlife!

Unknownst to many, movie queen Susan Roces is half Chinese (a cousin of the Gotianuns actually) and well-versed in traditional feng shui customs inclusive of burial feng shui.  About a semester after FPJ's death, she asked me if I do burial feng shui and my track record in this regard.  When I affirmed by sharing with her what I did for George Ty's dad, Norberto Ty, and stepmom, Dona Salustiana Ty's mausoleum at Manila Memorial Park, she engaged me for the Poe mausoleum redesign for renovation using feng shui principles. 

Results of which have been so rewarding for her and family, a peaceful resolution to estate problems obtaining back then and even a legal win over a long contested estate case in Bacolod City whose judicial decision came about the time of FPJ's death anniversary.  More so, to the progressive prospering of loved ones, especially now Senator Grace Poe-Llamanzares, and to wit, the admission of guilt to FPJ's being cheated of the presidency in the height of the Ampatuan case!

On the way to the North Cemetery, Susan asked: “Aldric, is there a truly malas person since birth?”

Even in her mourning grief then, she laughed heartily when I related to her a feng shui story affirming such a person.  Why ?  It was a true-to-life feng shui movie of a person so jinxed that when he endeavoured to trace his bad luck with a feng shui master, he discovered that the grave of his mom was overlaid by a comfort room in the public cemetery and right under the septic tank!  No wonder his life was full of shit.  When he relocated it auspiciously, he was able to reinvent his fortunes for good!

But the most memorable in that consultation was the custom to eat in a restaurant after a visit to a grave!  At Chinatown's Bestfood in Banawe, Quezon City, office employees having lunch started to ask her for souvenir pictures!  My youngest son, with me, asked her when she returned to our table in all his tabula rasa mind being only eight years old, "Tita, sikat ka ba? (are you famous?)”

Susan engaged him gleefully, "Bakit mo nasabi yan, hijo? (Why do you say so, son?)"

My son replied innocently: "Kasi dami nagpapapicture po sa inyo!"  So we ate happily and heartily ever after she winked and smiled at the rest of us!

Let your life be reinvented from the grave of your dearly departed!  Start gold digging now.

 

For questions interactive to the foregoing topic or any topic on feng shui you want to be taken up, you may email masteraldric@ gmail.com so that these can be answered accordingly in succeeding column articles. you may add FengShui Aldric on Facebook, as well as visit www.punsoy.com.

vuukle comment

ALDRIC

AT CHINATOWN

BACOLOD CITY

DONA SALUSTIANA TY

FENG

GEORGE TY

MANILA MEMORIAL PARK

NORBERTO TY

NORTH CEMETERY

SHUI

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