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State
licensed & Federally approved Mortgage Loan Officer/Real Estate Broker
which involved long term sales relationship development, field sales,
customer retention, complex situational management, and personnel
management.
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A mythical bird that never dies,
the phoenix flies far ahead to the front, always scanning the landscape
and distant space. It represents our capacity for vision, for collecting
sensory information about our environment and the events unfolding within
it. The phoenix, with its great beauty, creates intense excitement and
deathless inspiration."
- The Feng Shui
Handbook, feng shui Master Lam Kam Chuen
The phoenix was a fabulous mythical Arabian bird, said to be as large as
an eagle, with brilliant scarlet and gold plumage and a melodious cry. It
was said that only one phoenix existed at any one time, and it was very
long-lived - no ancient sources gave it a life-span less than 500 years.
As its end approached, the phoenix made a nest of aromatic branches and
spices, set it on fire, and was consumed in the flames. From the ashes
(according to some sources, from the midst of the flames) miraculously
sprang a new phoenix.
The ancient Egyptians linked the myth of the phoenix with the longings for
immortality that were so strong in their civilization, and from there its
symbolism spread around the Mediterranean world of late antiquity. At the
close of the first century Clement of Rome became the first Christian to
interpret the myth of the phoenix as an allegory of the resurrection and
of life after death. The phoenix was also compared to undying Rome, and it
appears on the coinage of the late Roman Empire as a symbol of the Eternal
City. It was also portrayed on early US coins, but later replaced
with the Bald Eagle.
In
Chinese mythology, the phoenix is the symbol of high virtue and grace, of
power and prosperity. It represents the union of yin and yan. It was
thought to be a gentle creature, alighting so gently that it crushed
nothing, and eating only dewdrops. It reflected the empress, and only she
could wear the phoenix symbol. Jewelry with the phoenix design showed
that the wearer was a person of high moral values, and so the phoenix
could only be worn by people of importance. The Chinese phoenix was
thought to have a large bill, the neck of a snake, the back of a tortoise,
and the tail of a fish. It carried two scrolls in its bill, and its song
included the five whole notes of the Chinese scale. Its feathers were of
the five fundamental colors: black, white, red, green, and yellow.
It
is my inspiration. |