Sauvage Feng Shui World

This is our very popular daily blog about matters feng shui and astrology of the day.

What has Mahatma Gandhi to do with the fire horse?

Vicki Sauvage - Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Well here I am back in front of my computer and ready to go again. Got a full month in front of me! Hope you are faring as well as I am in this clash month.

A quick reminder about the pendulum dowsing course on Saturday. It is going to be excellent and help you select foods and make choices in situations when there is more than one choice - you know those times. Book in now.Pendulum Dowsing

Today is a very hot day. We have yang fire sitting over the horse which is yin fire. It makes a strong affectionate liaison with the tiger to form the part frame of fire. Fire is the emperor of the day, so fire is very strong. It is supported by good wealth, excellent resource and adequate power.

Remember power is necessary to implement plans and grow wealth. Wealth is not just one's amassed fortune and assets it is also our social capital. Wealth without benevolence is greed! If you are building your wealth and your asset base then please make sure that you share some of your prosperity. You can give money or that most precious resource TIME.

I am reading a biography of that amazing man Mahatma Gandhi! What a character, what a leader and what an inspiration. This man even into old age walked his talk - literally walking everywhere, refusing to fly (in fast moving machines) and eating very sparingly, believing that he could not rest whilst India was not free and that whilst India had an underclass then modern India could not exist. Why am I talking about Gandhi in this context? Because of his amazing humanitarianism and that he gave so freely of his time with not salary, with no thought of personal wealth and at personal physical cost. His pro-bono work was extraordinary and started when he left England and went to South Africa to do, mostly pro-bono legal work for the oppressed and 3rd class citizens (indentured Indian workers) of South Africa. Much of his work was funded by wealthy Indians - they had no trouble with the thought of sharing their wealth to support benevolent acts.

So your challenge today is to look to your ability to contribute to the building of society, to charitable and humanitarian projects. We must make time to build our societies which have been hemorrhaging our social capital. The election results on the weekend indicate that the community want to be engaged with real policy and real change and not short term fear issues.

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