Spiritual healer gives talk on home decoration
SPIRITS are everywhere so even if your home is next to a cemetery,  you should be able to sell it if the price is not too high, said  spiritual healer Master Ong Q 
Leng.
She was speaking during the  question and answer session after her talk themed ‘Protecting Your  Property From 
Bad Energy’ at the Star Property Fair 2010.
 Master Ong giving feng  shui tips to the crowd
 Master Ong giving feng  shui tips to the crowd 
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“Spirits are everywhere all the  time, day or night, you just can’t see them.
“There are people  who are not superstitious and they will be willing to buy the property,  especially if they can make a profit from it,” she said, when asked if  it was okay to leave an apartment empty if there were cemetery plots on  both sides of the property.
“If a property does not sell, it is  not necessarily because of bad 
feng shui. You may be asking too       high a price. A buyer will already have scouted the area for the  right price. Try lowering the price, and you might be able to sell it  off.”
To a question on colour schemes, Ong said certain people  suited certain colours and people should observe how they felt or how  things fared when they chose a certain colour to wear.
Asked if  it was really 
suay (unlucky) to wear all black or black and  white, Ong said that it was true that the colours did not suit many  people:
“Try it for one or two days, if it does not feel good or  things go wrong, then the colours are probably not suited to you,” she  said.
Speaking in 
Hokkien and Mandarin, with 
English translation  provided by master of ceremonies Por Joo Tee, Ong also advised the crowd  to try not to wear red or  use too much red.
A couple then told  how they fell in love with a painting of a tiger and bought it for their  home only to be told by a medium that the tiger would “eat up” all  their fortune.
Ong said paintings of animals had no bearing on  people but reminded them to place them only in the hall and not in the  bedrooms, and that the paintings had to face another wall and not the  main door or balcony.
“It is only a painting, and cannot harm us.  But if you feel unhappy after putting up any decoration, then just take  it down,” she said.
Asked on the best stance or image to choose  when buying      idols of deities, Ong said what mattered more was the  idol’s condition.
“If after some time praying to the idol, you  feel that things are going well, then it should be fine. If you feel  that things are falling apart, then it’s probably not right,” she said.
Asked if the idols of 
Hok Lok Siu (three 
Chinese deities  representing good luck, status and longevity) could be placed inside the  house, Ong said they could only be placed as decorative pieces but not  as idols to pray to because they were only supposed to reside at temples  and not at houses.
She also told the audience to pray from the  heart and not out loud and face the sky with eyes closed and hands  clasped together, preferably between 6am and 11am, and to say please  when praying.
“Don’t be too greedy but remember to pray for your  own health and strength first before praying for your loved ones,” she  added.
Ong’s talk received a great response from the large crowd.
Source: Starmetro 
Tips on harmonising bad vibes
TECHNICALLY, there is no house with bad feng shui, according to spiritual healer Master Ong Q Leng.
“Even  houses with the worst chi (vital energy) can be corrected,” claimed  Ong, 34, who offers healing, spiritual cleansing, feng shui tips and  general consultation services.
 Ong: Her talk will be in Hokkien and Mandarin.
 Ong: Her talk will be in Hokkien and Mandarin. 
 
She said some old houses had bad chi because of spirits that co-habited the space over the years.
“There  are three types of spirits - those that are wandering as they could not  move on after death, those that chose not to move on though they could,  and the bad ones that go around causing trouble,” she said.
Ong  added that proper cleansing had to be done to appease the spirits that  caused distress or unrest to those who occupied the house.
“When I  enter a premises with bad chi, I use my sixth sense to get a clear  picture of the situation and instructions from my spiritual master, and  take it from there,” said Ong.
She will share her thoughts on a  combination of feng shui and paranormal phenomena during her talk on  ‘Protecting Your Property From Bad Energy’ at 4.30pm on Sunday at the  Star Property Fair 2010.
Her talk will be in Hokkien and  Mandarin, with a smattering of 
Bahasa Malaysia and English. There will  be a translator on standby to help with the question-and-answer session.  The talk is for non-Muslims only, and admission is free.
Ong  will also be giving tips on auspicious locations within a house,  choosing colour schemes and how best to arrange certain furniture.
The  talk will be among the highlights of the three-day fair to be held at G  Hotel and 
Gurney Plaza from 10am to 10pm starting today until Sunday.
More  than 20 major developers, including some from Kuala Lumpur and Ipoh,  will offer an array of property launches, special packages and  attractive rebates during the event, organised by Star Publications (M)  Bhd in collaboration with Henry Butcher Malaysia Penang.
 
Spiritual activity heightens
THE seriously ill are more susceptible to death during the 
Phor Thor or Hungry 
Ghost month, according to spiritual healer Master Ong Q Leng.
Ong,  34, said in the recently concluded seventh lunar month, a few of her  patients, who were on the road to recovery, simply gave up and succumbed  to their illnesses rather than burden their loved ones who had to care  for them.
“One patient was progressing well. The colour had  returned to her cheeks but she had a change of heart and told her  daughter who was bathing her one morning to hurry up as ‘they’ were  waiting for her.
“She suddenly passed on in the middle of her  bath,” said Ong, who also noted that there had been many cases of murder  and suicide during the period.
She said those, who had seriously ill loved ones, should provide them with more love and care during the seventh month.
“You  can tell that it is time for them to depart if they can no longer eat  and sleep, the face has turned pale and yellowish, and the eyes are  lifeless,” she added.
The Hungry Ghost month had always been a busy time for Ong, who offers services of healing, spiritual cleansing, 
feng shui tips and general consultation.
“One  client sought my services after friends spotted two young children in  the back seat of her car. It turned out that she had two previous  abortions and the boy and girl spirits were her two children.”
Ong  said spirits were at their most powerful during the seventh month but  those released from the gates of hell were not harmful.
“The harmful spirits are the wandering ghosts that roam the earth freely throughout the year.”
During  the Hungry Ghost month, she said it was best that children, aged below  five, stayed indoors after 7pm, and adults low on luck did the same  after 9pm.
She also advised people not to consume too much  alcohol or speak nonsense during the seventh month, and not to quarrel  or fight at home as that would attract an “audience” to watch the drama.
“Don’t scold but be more loving to your spouse and children, and smile more to avoid misfortune,” she said.
Ong  also advised those who observed the Hungry Ghost festival to burn  smaller offerings for their departed loved ones during that month.
“When you burn too many things, it will attract greedy evil spirits who come and snatch the offerings from your loved ones.
“Smaller amounts attract less attention and that means more chances that your loved ones will receive them.
“You  only need to burn offerings for someone once a year and it should be  done during the day, that is between 8.30am and 7.30pm,” she said