Money and the Five Elements

Money and the Five Elements

Five_elements

“Transformations of the traditional Chinese five elements: wood (green), fire (red), earth (yellow), metal (white), and water (black).” Originally uploaded to Chinese Wikipedia by zh:User:用心阁. Image used here was uploaded by Nnh.

Money and the Five  Elements

I teach money as water. 

But lately I’ve been thinking about money as all five elements: wood, fire, earth, metal, water.

This came about because of reading a wise woman moneyworker’s practical admonition that, “Money wants to be counted.”

And I though: “Not my money. My money wants to move.”

And then I realized both were true. Money isn’t one thing. It’s a transformational energy that moves through what can be seen as five phases, just like the five elements.

Different people can work with it quite differently and all can be successful.  So mapping this new way of thinking about money here with you I propose that:

  • Money that wants to be counted is money as earth.
  • Money that wants to flow is money as water.
  • Money that is seen as abundance or Source is money as ether (or metal). Every element originates in this element–it is the least material and the most etheric.
  • Money that wants to be always growing is money as wood (or air).
  • Money that devours and ripens is money as fire.

 What do you think? There are a lot of ways of thinking about money. Many metaphors. Many of them “stink,” quite literally–there is a stench: filthy lucre, for example. But I think it is not worthwhile considering money in that limited way. So I am out for new ways and these are some of them.

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