Rodika Tchi has worked with private clients worldwide for over two decades. Her focus is on the one variable most approaches never reach: the spaces people live in, and whether those spaces are supporting their life or quietly draining it.

Her clients come with different goals but the turning point is always the same: clarity about old patterns locked in the space, and what those patterns have been costing them. Changes are often immediate: spaces feel calmer, lighter, and finally like one's own. Homes sold faster. Businesses shifted.




"I was trained to read what mostly goes unnoticed. That became my life's work."

Rodika's writing extended the reach of this work further. Her two published books, media interviews, international clients — each came from someone finding and reading her articles. It is through her writing that the Pulitzer Prize–winning composer Aaron Jay Kernis found her, asking to use it for a piece performed at the National Opera Center in New York.

For nearly twelve years she was the sole author of the substantial body of work on feng shui and spatial environment for About.com, writing hundreds of articles and a weekly newsletter reaching millions of readers. She has been interviewed by Psychology Today, Business Insider, and Elle Décor.

Rodika has trained professional consultants in her methodology and led programmes at the University of British Columbia and Hollyhock. In addition to professional training, she has developed several online courses and digital publications on spaces and how they shape us.

She holds a master's degree in journalism, a bachelor's in the theory of theatre arts, and professional certification in feng shui and geobiology. Her work is deepened by studies in bau-biologie, psychology, and permaculture, sharpening her ability to read the invisible logic of any space.

Raised in Europe and educated in the United States, Rodika lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, at the edge of ancient rainforest.

Work with Rodika

"I am feeling wonderful in this home where until little while ago I felt I could not live here anymore."

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