How To Use Flowers for Feng Shui

Try this simple home decor boost using blooms.

As an Amazon Associate, Breathe Together Yoga earns from qualifying purchases.

photo_by_jennifer_walthers

Looking forward to autumn, toward continuing to work and learn from home, I’m drawing on my background in Feng Shui to bring as much support into our home environment as possible. One of my favorite tools for uplifting the energy at home is flowers. Flowers can be a powerful chi enhancer, especially useful in the public spaces of our homes. The places we gather together to eat, play, study, and work can all benefit from the addition of flowers.  

Humans have cultivated flowers for over 5,000 years. Blooms pack some serious symbolism. They’ve been used as a symbolic language to convey sympathy, remorse, romance, and celebration. Flowers have been used in religious and secular ceremonies, burials, and in self-adornment through fragrance, live florals, and representative patterns on clothing and jewelry. They’ve even played a starring role in a handful of reality TV shows.

Researchers have found that receiving and observing flowers improve our moods and sense of social connection. Another study found that workplaces enriched with flowers and plants saw significant increases in productivity in the areas of innovative thinking and creative problem-solving. Cultivating flowers and bringing them into the home are easy ways to enhance our emotional well-being, sense of connection, and productivity.

Using the five-element theory, flowers are also an easy way to balance the energy in our homes. The five elements of Feng Shui are wood, fire, earth, metal, and water. Creating a balance of these energies uplifts our own. Here are a few ways to bring the five elements home the next time you are considering a bouquet:

  • Flowers and plants are inherently representative of the wood element. For more wood energy, consider flowers with woody stems like peonies and lilacs. Choosing arrangements with greenery also strengthens the wood element.
  • To enhance the fire element, consider flowers with conical shapes, such as lupines and larkspurs. Colors in the red spectrum, ranging from pale pinks to deep burgundies, amplify fire. Pointed petals and foliage, such as the pointed leaves on roses, also boost the fire element. 
  • Earth element can be brought in through your choice of container by placing flowers in a ceramic or earthenware vase. Flowers in earth tones range from beiges, tans, yellows, and oranges and raise the earth element. Consider an arrangement with yellow or orange lilies.
  • To bring in more of the metal element, look for flowers and greenery with circular shapes or white and pastel colors. Flowers with a spherical mass, like hydrangeas, also bring in metal.   
  • Cut flowers will need to be placed in water to prolong their beauty. The water element can also be added by using a glass or cut-crystal vase for display. Deep, dark tones add to the water element. Purple tones found in anemones and irises, as well as the chocolate brown centers in sunflowers and black-eyed Susans, also bring in the water element.

As I start to wrap my mind around another season of sheltering in place, I’m planning to leverage some of the simple fixes for improving our chi at home. I’ll be placing fresh flowers where we do our distance learning and on the dining room table, in hopes that they lift our productivity and emotional well-being, and the chi will support and keep us a little happier at home.

Picture of Jennifer Walthers

Jennifer Walthers

Jennifer Walthers is a certified wellness educator, RYT 500, and avid researcher with an M.A. in Educational Leadership, who's worked with teens and adults as a social worker, classroom teacher, curriculum and instruction coordinator, and educational consultant. Recently, she's combed through the latest research on the nervous system, mindfulness, and wellbeing, curating the findings to share within the Mindfulness and Awareness Program at Breathe Together Yoga. When she's not teaching, you can find Jen planning a road trip (6 trips cross-country and counting), reading YA novels, or anywhere near water with her partner, 2 sons, and a boxer mix named Olive.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Shine Your Way to Firefly | Izumi Sato

We aim to improve the flexibility of hamstrings and shoulders, as well as the strength in the arms, thigh adductors, and the core. Variations are offered to develop the sense of balance on the arms. It is an exploration of your own expression in Firefly, whatever stage of life you’re in.

Introduction to the Buddhist Mudras | Izumi Sato

Mudras are highly stylized and symbolized as non-verbal communication. In this introduction to the Buddhist mudras, we will learn five Buddhist mudras and the mudras of the five wisdoms, or five Buddhas. After learning the forms and meanings of the mudras, it’s fun to observe the arts such as Buddha sculptures and paintings.

Chanting Gayatri Mantra With Mudras | Izumi Sato

In this mantra, the 24 Mudras are practiced while chanting the Gayatri Mantra which has 24 syllables. Gayatri Mantra is dedicated to Savitri, a Vedic sun deity. Among various translations of the mantra, I introduce the first line by Tias Little and the rest of the lines by Swami Vivekananda.

How Mindfulness Can Help You Navigate Social Media

Now that social media has become an extension of our own communities, a lot of negative perspectives and habits have made their way from the digital world to our real one. By becoming aware of your emotions and actions, you can get past the bad side of social media and enjoy the company of your social circle.

Joyful Flow | Christy Li

What brings us joy in our life? Do we bring it in on a daily basis? When we are not so happy, where does our power, thoughts, energy go? How do we bring it back? Is a mantra helpful? Let’s try one today on our mat as we do a Vinyasa Flow filled with balance postures, Half Moon Pose, seated twists, and more.