Alarm Clock Egg
Alarm Clock Egg

Fung shui??
I want to know if my room has fung shui
When you walk in the bed is on the oppisote wall and it is turned so it is sideways like a day bed. The table is behind and off to the left of the bad and it has a lamp, candle, jewlery box, and alarm clock on it.
on the other side of the bed is another table that has 3 shelves and has other items on it.
Beside that is a tv stand with a tv on it. And then on the other wall there is a bean bag chair and a blue hand chair [its shaped like a hand] and I have a purple flower rug on my floor and my walls are robins egg blue and my carpet is grey/blue
Please help
OK ITS FENG SHUI JUST TELL ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Here is a really great guide for how to feng shui your bedroom:
http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/dc_design_feng_shui/article/0,1793,HGTV_3371_5634809,00.html
From your description, I can really visualize the placement of yoru furniture, but I can tell you to either lose the TV or have it in a cabinet where you cannot see it. A TV in the bedroom is bad feng shui.
The Urban Fable About a Roosters’ “cock-a-doodle-doo”
One of the most long-held urban fables in existence has to do with the distinctive “cock-a-doodle-doo” of a barnyard rooster. Popular belief has it that cocks call out only at daybreak, supposedly to wake up farmers and other people who need to be up early in the morning. A number of readers — city dwellers, perhaps — probably think that this yarn is actually true.
Sorry to burst any bubbles, but it isn’t entirely true. While barnyard rooster crowing usually does begin at the break of dawn, it can, and oftentimes does, continue throughout the day — and the reason they do so has absolutely nothing to do with being a feathered alarm clock. In truth the piercing, high-pitched ululation serves as a challenge to other barnyard roosters, to attract female chickens and as a warning signal.
How this fable got started is a matter of historical debate, but one of the earliest references to the rooster and its distinctive cry can be traced back to Greek mythology. According to the legend, Alectryon — the ancient Greek word for “rooster” — was a youth who was ordered by Ares, the God of War, to stand guard outside his door while the he carried on an adulterous dalliance with goddess Aphrodite. Unfortunately, the youth fell asleep at his post, and Helios, the Sun God, caught the amorous couple. Spitefully, Ares turned Alectryon into a rooster, which always remembers to announce the sun’s rising in the morning.
Other tales have sprung up around the shrill bird: in old central European folk tales Satan is believed to flee at the first crowing of a rooster. A medieval myth says that the Basilisk, a giant snake who kills with a single glance and is hatched by a toad from a hen’s egg, will perish instantly if it hears a cock crowing.
In contemporary times, even business tools like online Yellow Pages feature the name rooster as it remains a popular commercial appellation, for businesses from poultry processing plants to retail chicken establishments.
Chickens are both entertaining and useful to keep. They are cheap to raise and they earn their keep by laying eggs for you. Checking at random through local laws around the country, it is interesting to note how they deal with raising fowl:
Portland, OR: Three hens allowed without a permit, but no roosters. Westfield, MA: Chickens not allowed. Falls Church, VA: Chickens not allowed. Topeka, KS: Unlimited chickens allowed, but they must be penned 50 feet from any neighbors house. Seattle, WA: Can have a total of three small animals, more if the lot is large. Portland, ME: Chickens not legal. Minneapolis, MN: Unlimited allowance, but chickens must be penned. Boston, MA: All residential zones in Boston forbid “auxiliary keeping of animals”, which includes poultry and other livestock.
So there you have it — the truth about the tale of the roosters cock-a-doodle-do and its historical context, as well as some contemporary information on how various cities control the presence of fowl within their borders.
About the Author
Matthew Paolini is a consultant with Citybook Online Yellow Pages in Chicago, IL.
Chicken Alarm Clock-Can lay an egg alarm clock
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