Foundational Guide
Five Elements Feng Shui | The Complete Wu Xing Guide
The Five Elements in Classical Feng Shui are not five physical substances. Wu Xing (五行) more accurately means five phases or five movements of Qi, each describing a different quality and direction of energy in constant transition. Understanding these five phases is essential to understanding how Classical Feng Shui works, how Flying Stars remedies are prescribed, and why the material of an object matters more than its shape or colour.
This guide covers the complete Wu Xing system as it is applied in Xuan Kong Flying Stars analysis.
What Wu Xing Actually Means
Five Phases of Energy, Not Five Static Substances
The term Wu Xing (五行) is commonly translated as Five Elements, but this translation misrepresents what the system describes. The character Xing means movement, passage, or phase. A more accurate translation is Five Phases or Five Movements. The system describes five phases of Qi in constant transition and interaction, not five static physical substances.
This distinction matters practically. Wood in Wu Xing is not the physical substance of timber. It represents the upward, expansive movement of energy associated with growth and spring. Water in Wu Xing is not the physical substance H2O. It represents the downward, conserving movement of energy associated with stillness and winter. Each phase is a quality of Qi movement, not a material category.
In Classical Feng Shui, every Flying Star has an elemental phase. Every compass sector has an elemental phase. Every remedy is an application of the elemental cycle logic. The Five Elements are the language in which the entire Classical system communicates.
The Five Phases in Full
Each Element Defined with Its Complete Associations
Each phase carries a precise set of associations used across Classical Feng Shui analysis. These are not decorative associations. They are the framework through which sector assessments and remedy prescriptions are made.
Wood (木) — Upward, Expansive, Growth
Represents the vital energy of growth, new beginnings, and upward movement. Associated with the vitality of spring.
- Directions
- East (Star 3), Southeast (Star 4)
- Colours and Shapes
- Green, blue-green. Columnar, vertical, tall forms
- Season and Organs
- Spring. Liver and gallbladder, tendons, eyes
Fire (火) — Upward, Outward, Transformation
Represents radiant, active, expansive energy. The element of manifestation and transformation. In Period 9 (2024 onwards), Fire is the reigning element.
- Direction
- South (Star 9)
- Colours and Shapes
- Red, orange, purple, pink. Triangular, pointed forms
- Season and Organs
- Summer. Heart and small intestine, blood vessels, tongue
Earth (土) — Stabilising, Centring, Grounding
The only element represented in three palaces of the Luo Shu (Stars 2, 5, and 8), making it the most prevalent element in the nine-sector grid. It represents the transitional energy between seasons.
- Directions
- Northeast (Star 8), Southwest (Star 2), Centre (Star 5)
- Colours and Shapes
- Yellow, brown, terracotta, earth tones. Square, flat, rectangular forms
- Season and Organs
- Late summer, seasonal transitions. Spleen and stomach, muscles, mouth
Water (水) — Downward, Conserving, Still
Represents the deepest, most yin quality of energy. Governs the career and life path sector. Must be placed with care: Water activates whatever Flying Star occupies a sector, including inauspicious ones.
- Direction
- North (Star 1)
- Colours and Shapes
- Black, navy, dark blue. Wavy, amorphous, flowing forms
- Season and Organs
- Winter. Kidneys and bladder, bones, ears, hair
The Three Cycles
How the Five Phases Interact
The Five Elements are not a static classification. They interact through three distinct cycles. These cycles are the working mechanism of Classical Feng Shui remedies. A practitioner does not simply place the same element in every problematic sector. They select which cycle to apply based on the specific star combination, the strength of those stars in the current period, and what is practical within the space.
Productive Cycle
Sheng cycle — each element nourishes the next
- Wood feeds Fire
- Fire creates Earth (ash)
- Earth produces Metal
- Metal carries Water
- Water feeds Wood
Destructive Cycle
Ke cycle — each element overcomes another
- Wood absorbs Earth
- Earth dams Water
- Water extinguishes Fire
- Fire melts Metal
- Metal chops Wood
Weakening Cycle
Exhaustive cycle — a child element drains its parent
- Fire weakens Wood (consumes it)
- Wood weakens Water (draws from it)
- Water weakens Metal (exhausts it)
- Metal weakens Earth (is extracted from it)
- Earth weakens Fire (absorbs its heat)
In Flying Stars analysis, the Destructive Cycle is used when a stronger counter is needed, typically for the most inauspicious stars. The Weakening Cycle is used when a gentler approach is more appropriate for the space. The Productive Cycle is used to enhance and activate auspicious sectors. A practitioner applies all three depending on the specific consultation.
Elements and Compass Sectors
How the Five Elements Map to Your Property
In Classical Feng Shui, every compass direction corresponds to an element through the Luo Shu nine-palace grid. Each of the nine sectors carries a base Flying Star number and an associated elemental phase. This is the base elemental map of any property before the Flying Stars natal chart is overlaid.
| Sector | Direction | Flying Star Number | Element | Life Area |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North | N | Star 1 | Water | Career and life path |
| Northeast | NE | Star 8 | Earth | Knowledge and study |
| East | E | Star 3 | Wood | Family and health |
| Southeast | SE | Star 4 | Wood | Wealth and abundance |
| South | S | Star 9 | Fire | Fame and recognition |
| Southwest | SW | Star 2 | Earth | Relationships and marriage |
| West | W | Star 7 | Metal | Creativity and children |
| Northwest | NW | Star 6 | Metal | Helpful people and travel |
| Centre | C | Star 5 | Earth | Overall balance of the property |
This base grid is the starting point. When the Flying Stars natal chart of your specific property is cast using its facing direction and construction period, additional mountain and water stars land in each sector. These visiting stars have their own elemental natures which interact with the sector's base element through the three cycles. The remedy for each sector takes into account both layers. This is why the Bagua map and the Flying Stars chart must be read together, not separately.
Five Elements as Flying Stars Remedies
How Elements Are Applied in a Consultation
In Xuan Kong Flying Stars, remedies are elemental applications prescribed after the natal chart reveals which stars occupy which sectors. The three most commonly encountered inauspicious star situations and their elemental remedies are as follows.
Star 2 (Illness Star, Earth element) — Metal Remedy
Star 2, the Illness Star, carries Earth element energy. The remedy is Metal. Metal weakens Earth through the Weakening Cycle: Earth produces Metal, being gradually exhausted in the process. A six-rod metal wind chime, a solid metal Wu Lou gourd, or six Chinese metal coins are commonly prescribed for sectors occupied by Star 2. The object must be made of actual metal. A resin or plastic object carries no Metal element energy and produces no effect.
Star 5 (Misfortune Star, Earth element) — Metal Remedy
Star 5, the Yellow Misfortune Star, is considered the most inauspicious star in Xuan Kong analysis. It also carries Earth element energy. The remedy is also Metal, applied through the same cycle logic as Star 2. However, Star 5 demands a stronger Metal presence because of its greater inauspicious strength. A solid metal five-element pagoda, heavy metal coins, or a substantial metal object is preferred. Star 5 must never be activated with Water or Fire, both of which amplify its misfortune energy. This is the most critical elemental rule in Flying Stars analysis. See how Lee uses Flying Stars to identify and remedy Star 5 in a consultation.
Star 3 (Conflict Star, Wood element) — Fire Remedy
Star 3, the Conflict Star, carries Wood element energy and is associated with quarrels, legal disputes, and misunderstandings. The remedy is Fire element applied through the Destructive Cycle: Fire consumes Wood. A red-coloured object or a fire-element item in the sector addresses Star 3 energy. Unlike Stars 2 and 5, colour alone has more relevance here because Star 3 responds to the Fire element's transformative energy, which colour can partially represent alongside material.
Your Personal Element
How BaZi Connects the Five Elements to You Personally
The Five Elements in a property analysis address what the space needs. The Five Elements in a personal BaZi chart address what each individual occupant needs. These two analyses are cross-referenced in every full Classical consultation, which is what makes the recommendations person-specific rather than just property-specific.
Every person has a personal elemental profile derived from their BaZi chart, specifically from their Day Master. The Day Master is the Heavenly Stem of the day of birth and reveals a person's core elemental nature. From this, the practitioner identifies which directions, sectors, and elemental configurations are beneficial or unfavourable for that specific individual.
In practical terms: which bedroom is most suitable for which family member, which sleeping direction supports each person's energy, which work desk orientation is most favourable. The same bedroom sector can be beneficial for the husband and unfavourable for the wife depending on each person's Day Master and elemental profile. This is why generic feng shui advice such as "face North for wealth" cannot apply universally.
The Flying Stars chart provides the elemental map of the property. The BaZi chart of each family member provides the personal elemental map of each occupant. The intersection of both is where the consultation produces its most accurate and useful recommendations.
Common Mistakes
What Goes Wrong When Five Elements Are Applied Without a Chart
Placing a water feature without knowing the Flying Star in that sector. Water activates whatever star is present. In a sector with Star 5 or Star 2, a water feature amplifies inauspicious energy. This is one of the most consequential DIY errors in feng shui.
Using resin objects and expecting elemental results. Shape contributes to elemental association. Material carries it. A resin Dragon Turtle has the shape but not the Metal element energy. No elemental effect is produced regardless of where it is placed.
Adding Fire element to a sector with Star 2 or Star 5. Fire produces Earth. Adding a Fire element object to a sector with an inauspicious Earth star (2 or 5) strengthens that star through the Productive Cycle. The inauspicious energy worsens.
Using colour as the primary elemental remedy instead of material. Colour carries a partial elemental signal. Material carries the full elemental energy. Repainting a wall the colour of an element does not substitute for placing an object made of that element's material in the sector.
Common Questions
Questions About the Five Elements
Colour carries a weaker elemental signal compared to actual material. In Classical Feng Shui, the physical material of an object carries the elemental energy. A solid metal object in a sector carries Metal element energy regardless of its colour. Painting a wall white does not introduce Metal element into the sector. Colour can support a remedy but cannot substitute for it.
Both systems use the same Wu Xing framework but apply it to different contexts. Chinese medicine uses the Five Elements to map organs, body systems, emotions, and diagnostic relationships. Classical Feng Shui uses the same elemental relationships to map compass sectors, Flying Star energies, and environmental remedies. The cycle logic is identical in both systems.
This requires a Flying Stars analysis of your specific property. The Flying Stars natal chart reveals which stars occupy which sectors and each star carries an elemental nature. The remedy for each sector is determined by the elemental relationship between the visiting stars and the three cycles of Wu Xing. There is no generic answer that applies to all homes.
Yes. Excess of any element creates imbalance. Too much Metal energy in a space can create rigidity and emotional contraction. Too much Water energy can amplify the negative qualities of inauspicious water stars. The goal in Classical Feng Shui is to identify which elements are needed in which sectors based on the Flying Stars chart, not to saturate a space with a single element.
It can worsen the energy of that sector. The most common example: placing a water feature in a sector occupied by the inauspicious Star 5 (Earth element). Water is destroyed by Earth, but the act of introducing Water also activates that sector, amplifying the Star 5 misfortune energy. This is one of the most frequent and consequential DIY mistakes in feng shui and the reason Lee does not recommend any elemental placement without a proper Flying Stars chart of your property.
Continue Learning
Related Guides in the Classical Feng Shui System
The Five Elements connect to every other Classical Feng Shui system. These pages show how.
Find Out Which Elements Your Property Actually Needs
The Five Elements cannot be applied correctly without a Flying Stars chart of your specific property. Lee's consultation identifies exactly which elemental remedies your sectors need and which to avoid.