Xuan Kong Flying Star Feng Shui Advanced Home Study Course By Joey Yaprar Jun 2026
The story of the advanced home study course is not just about home design; it is a story of breaking ancient secrets and challenging a grim destiny . The Fortune Teller’s Curse
You gain access to Joey Yap’s proprietary insights and case studies without the need for international travel to his live workshops in Malaysia or Singapore. The story of the advanced home study course
: A detailed modern interpretation of the 81 star combinations and their 64 hexagrams, used to forecast aspects of life like wealth and health. Time-Based Analysis : Moving beyond static placement, the course emphasizes how Qi (energy) Time-Based Analysis : Moving beyond static placement, the
Mei Lin found Joey Yaprar’s slim course book on Xuan Kong Flying Star tucked in a drawer beneath yellowed receipts and a pressed jade pendant. It smelled of camphor and ink. She turned the pages that night by a single lamp and felt the old house breathe with her. The diagrams were precise, the charts austere, but the words between—history, memory, the way energy shifts with time—felt like a map to something living. The diagrams were precise, the charts austere, but
The course dives into the technicalities of the Luo Pan (Compass) measurements, teaching students how to avoid common pitfalls like "Empty Lines" or "Death and Emptiness" lines that can render a property’s energy unstable. Course Highlights: What’s Inside?
programs) is designed to transition students from basic theory to professional-grade property auditing. It focuses on the precise tracking of
But the course had a deeper chord. In the chapter about time, Joey wrote about a “hidden star” that appears when people remember. It was a poetic aside: the house keeps memory and memory is a force that can tilt a star. Mei Lin began to listen—not only to compass readings but to stories embedded in floorboards, to laughter trapped behind wallpaper, to lullabies muffled in attic trunks. She invited Aunt Lian to tell childhood tales in the parlor. She laid out her grandmother’s tea set and combed through letters tied with blue string. Each story was offered like incense; the house accepted them. The red thread in the center tightened as if stitched by an invisible hand.