Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Almanac inquiry - What is Tang Ming in Feng Shui?

What is Tang Ming in Feng Shui?

Tang Ming is a broad term, which represents the piedmont area and should be analyzed according to the field. Home feng shui has an inner hall and an outer hall. The outer hall refers to your yard and the building refers to the living room. Waimingtang refers to the open space outside the housing base.

Generally speaking, Tang Ming in Feng Shui refers to the place where mountains surround caves, water bends and life gathers. Miao Xiyong's "Buried Wings" says: "Those who are in the Ming Dynasty gather in front of the cave." Tang Ming can be generally divided into Tang Xiaoming, Zhongmingtang and Daming Hall, and there are differences between inner Tang Ming and outer Tang Ming. Any place that can bring great wealth and great wealth must be a place where both inside and outside are cultivated.

In order to be able to keep out wind and collect gas, Tang Ming must be surrounded by water. If there is no tendency to gather, there should be a water gate to stop it. It is heavily locked. The size of Tang Ming is also closely related to the dragon's potential. If the dragon is strong, the hall should be wide. On the contrary, if the dragon is nearby, the hall should be small. If it is in the valley, then the hall is best to be wide, and if it is narrow, it is difficult to grow. If it is in a wide ocean, it should be narrow, and wide makes life easy to drift. Don't be too empty and unreasonable. If the obstacle is vague, it is like nothing. Narrowness is limited to those who do not excessively persecute the humble. If it is too narrow, it is like sitting in a well and watching the sky, and it is difficult for children to become magnificent people. Tang Ming should be flat and square, avoiding long and narrow oblique shapes, and avoiding piling up rocks and hills and planting thorns.