Wu Lou (Gourd): Feng Shui Use & Placement Guide

Learn how to use a Wu Lou (gourd) in Feng Shui. Discover its placement for health and how its Metal element exhausts the illness star.

What Is a Wu Lou?

A Wu Lou is a traditional Chinese gourd characterized by its figure-eight shape. In modern feng shui practice, it is most commonly rendered in heavy brass or copper and is used as a health-focused remedy in spaces that feel weighed down, stagnant, or harder to recover in.

Why It’s Used in Feng Shui

The Wu Lou combines symbolic meaning with a very practical Five Elements logic. The shape is traditionally associated with collecting and containing difficult qi. More importantly, many illness-related annual problems are read as Earth-heavy, and Metal is the element most often used to weaken that kind of pressure. That is why brass and copper versions are preferred.

Where to Place It

  • On your bedside table: Placing it near the crown of your head while sleeping is one of the most common uses, especially when rest and recovery are the priority.
  • In the physical sector of the Illness Star: Placing it on a shelf or desk in the room where the annual Star 2 resides is a simple way to support that space without making it busier.

What It Addresses

  • Counters: Star 2 Black (Illness Star) because the heavy Metal material of the brass gourd is traditionally used to exhaust stagnant Earth energy.

2026 Placement Note

In our current 2026 chart, Star 2 Black is treated as occupying the North sector. If your bedroom or office falls there, a brass Wu Lou is one of the cleaner, quieter remedies to consider.

Choosing One

Look for a Wu Lou made of authentic, heavy brass or copper. Plastic or resin replicas may still work as symbols, but they do not offer the same elemental logic. A removable lid or open mouth is often preferred in traditional use.

Star 2 Black (/wiki/star-2-black): The flying star most commonly associated with this remedy.
Tian Yi Direction (/wiki/tian-yi-direction): Your personal health-supporting direction, often discussed alongside remedies like the Wu Lou.

Related Terms