Start with the real situation
Imagine standing at the entrance of a Montreal condo, clinic, shop, or office and sensing the same problem your clients feel before they can explain it: the door does not pull people in, the room looks fine but never settles, or the daily route quietly creates stress. That is where a real consultation starts.
Feng Shui in a Canadian multicultural home has to work with rentals, condos, winter light, shared habits, and mixed design preferences. The goal is not to reproduce a traditional house model, but to make the real home easier to live in.
What a practitioner actually checks
- Winter light patterns, dark corners, heating dryness, balcony use, and whether the entrance becomes a storage zone during snow season.
- Condo or rental limits: no drilling, fixed kitchen, limited furniture movement, shared walls, elevators, and noise transfer.
- Family rhythm: work calls, children's routines, cooking, sleep, guests, and whether one room carries too many roles.
How it becomes advice
- Use reversible adjustments first: movable lamps, screens, rugs, plants, storage, and furniture orientation.
- Create visible boundaries between rest, work, food, and storage so the home does not constantly pull attention in different directions.
What the client can use
The client learns which changes are culturally meaningful, which are practical, and which can be sustained without fighting the building rules or the family routine.
Professional boundary
This is educational consultation content. It can support observation, planning, and decision clarity, but it does not replace medical, legal, financial, engineering, psychological, or licensed professional advice.