Armed with my newly bought Lilian Too book, I drove to Filinvest’s Festival Mall and straight to Marivic’s suki William, who managed the feng shui charm store at the end of the building. A few items on my "must buy" list were a nine-eyed Dzi, a trinity of protectors (Chi-Lin, Fu Dog and Pi Yao), a mystical knot and a golden Ru Yi.
And then it hit me, staring at the assortment of items. All the stuff were so... yellow gold, so glossy, so... oh how can I say it? I couldn’t put those things in my house, they would clash with everything! My Western-trained aesthetic sense assaulted my newfound Eastern fancy. Form or fortune? The three-footed toad would awash me with money but was there enough money in the world to compensate for the agony I would have in placing a three-footed toad in my living room?
Imposed on my person would be these allies: Rooster and Ox as well as my "secret friend" the Monkey. My heart sank as I saw the dark looking medallions that bore these animals’ images. Couldn’t they have been made using white gold? Maybe I could fashion tennis bracelet charms using 20-k gold.... Oh gawd! The agony of marrying luck with luxe!
As the day closed, as all dilemmas usually end, I settled on a compromise. I did buy a pair of Fu Dogs (small ones. VERY small ones!) and placed them on top of a stack of European coffee table books (facing the door as I was instructed). I did buy the nine-eyed Dzi but had the plastic beads removed and asked a friend to spare me a thin strip of leather (genuine!) in their place. I am seriously looking into pulling out one leg of Sanrio’s adorable Kerokerokeroppi (can frogs pass for toads?) and having Balinese Rooster and Ox wooden figurines sit on my minimalist shelf.
Have I offended the feng shui gods to appease Thom Felicia and Nate Berkus? Time will tell. I shall keep this column to inform you dear readers of my Year of the Boar adventures. Till then  have a Boar-loving year ahead!