61: Feng Shui Your Way with Janine Lowe and guest Suzanne Roynon61: Feng Shui Your Way with Janine Lowe and guest Suzanne Roynon
UK Health Radio Podcast
Janine Lowe and Suzanne Roynon talk about how Buddha statues, clutter and artwork may quietly shape health, money and relationships. They also explain how virtual Feng Shui walkabouts work and why generic or AI-generated advice might mislead people.
39:00•29 Jun 2026
Buddhas, Clutter and Love Lives: Feng Shui Secrets with Janine Lowe and Suzanne Roynon
Episode Overview
- Treat Buddha imagery as a revered spiritual symbol, not casual decor, and avoid placing it in bedrooms or bathrooms.
- See clutter as an energetic "clot" and clear key areas such as under-stairs cupboards and health or wealth zones to support wellbeing.
- Check artwork and ornaments for lonely or negative themes that may be reinforcing singleness, conflict or low mood.
- Keep relationship areas and bedrooms focused on you and a partner, avoiding images of in-laws, pets, children or religious figures.
- Use professional, personalised Feng Shui guidance rather than generic online charts or AI tools, which can give inaccurate and unhelpful advice.
“"A clutter is a clot in your house."”
How can compelling narratives motivate and inspire others? This chat between Feng Shui consultant Janine Lowe and interiors therapist Suzanne Roynon brings that question into everyday life at home – right down to your fridge magnets and Buddha statues. You’ll hear Suzanne explain why casually placing Buddha imagery around the house can quietly affect love, money and mood.
She shares that Buddha was a celibate spiritual teacher, so stacking Buddha heads in a dining room or putting a statue by the bed might symbolically invite loneliness, distance in relationships and financial strain. As she puts it, he’s "not there to prop the bathroom door open".
The pair then talk about clutter, with Suzanne’s memorable phrase: "A clutter is a clot in your house." She links piles of stuff, overfilled cupboards and junk under the stairs to stuck energy around health and wealth, and suggests that clearing these hotspots can ease anxiety and lift low mood. Art gets the same scrutiny.
Single women wondering why they’re still alone often have homes full of solo figures: the woman on the jetty, the lone figure on a bridge, the champagne girl on a birthday card. Janine and Suzanne swap stories of clients whose love lives shifted once they removed images of solitude, cat litter trays and in-laws from the relationship area and bedroom. For anyone curious about Feng Shui but short on time, Suzanne explains her low-cost video walkabouts.
Starting at the front door, she looks for leaks, clutter, unhelpful artwork and subtle symbols that may be undermining health, relationships or career. They both warn against relying on generic online charts or AI tools for Feng Shui, stressing how wrong advice can make things worse. If your home told the truth about your life, would you be happy with the story it’s telling right now?

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