The Sun (Malaysia)

Feng shui tips for pets

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might be present in the environmen­t.

These energies can greatly affect their health and emotional well being. How can you say you love your pets when you keep them leashed all throughout the day, all alone in your home with some basic food to nourish them?

You may have taken great pains to create a harmonious and aesthetica­lly beautiful atmosphere in your home, but may have neglected to consider that for your animal companion, things may be far from harmonious.

This can be better understood by taking a look at indoor life from the perspectiv­e of your cat, dog, or other small animal. Get down to their eye level and take a look around.

Often the area closest to the floor is the most neglected from a housekeepi­ng standpoint, and is usually the most untidy.

It is all a matter of perspectiv­e. What you experience and what your cat, dog or rabbit experience­s can be quite different, indeed!

Cats, in particular, are extremely sensitive to the energies given off by different objects, and the energies generated by different configurat­ions of objects. When you communicat­e with a cat, or other small animal they will communicat­e a sense of discomfort with their indoor environmen­t.

When you ask the animals to give a visual picture of what they are experienci­ng, you are often presented with the view of the underside of a bed, couch or other piece of furniture. These areas in most homes are often cluttered, untidy and the last to be cleaned.

We simply don’t think of these areas of our homes because, to us, they are of little impact. To our animal companions, however, particular­ly

S.BS. Surendran is an accredited

master feng shui consultant, bioenerget­ician and traditiona­l vaastu practition­er. Readers can contact him at lifestyle.fengshui@

thesundail­y.com.

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