How to break Feng Shui when the bathroom is at the top of the corridor?

How to break Feng Shui in the bathroom at the top of the corridor? How to break it? Should it be blocked or not, otherwise it will always be a toilet?

What is Feng Shui? Expressed in modern Chinese: having better living conditions, survival advantages, convenience, benefit, safety, beauty, hygiene, conforming to mechanics and scientific principles, common sense and logic, it is Feng Shui. There is no such thing as a mysterious and puzzling Feng Shui!

The toilet solves the problem? ——1. The criteria for judging toilets are: whether they are necessary, not superfluous or unnecessary. In any case, regardless of any precious item, the criterion is that it is just right, not superfluous, and necessary; it is a treasure, not a disaster, not a difficulty, and not an evil. If there are many toilets, it will be a disaster; if there are no toilets, there will be difficulties. It’s just right, necessary, not superfluous, it’s a treasure. If it is not a disaster, a difficulty, or an evil, it does not exist to be resolved. 2. The toilet problem is ultimately a matter of hygiene and aesthetics. Paying attention to hygiene, cleanliness and beautification is the right and wisest solution.

The main door of my house faces south, and the main door faces west. In front of the main door is a north-south road. To the west of the road is the neighbor's toilet facing the main door. There is a main road between the main door and the toilet, which is good for my home's feng shui. Is there any impact? ——The toilet problem is mainly about hygiene and indecency. Pay attention to hygiene and indecency, and the rest should be fine.

The most important thing for a person is to have an upright mind, and be upright and avoid all evils.

For modern buildings, use the following criteria to weigh: whether it is necessary or not, and whether it is superfluous and useless. For example, toilets are necessary and happen to be there. If there is no disaster, no harm, and no evil, there is no need to resolve them. What would happen if there were no toilets? Another example is a door. If there is no door, there will be a dead end. If there is just one door, it is a living door or a living door. It is a treasure and does not need to be resolved. There is another way to test the door to see if transposition is more reasonable. If transposition is more inconvenient and unreasonable, then the current situation is the best and the most precious solution, and there is no need to resolve it. Another example is passages and roads. They don’t work, they are necessary, they are not redundant, and they do not harm Feng Shui, so they do not need to be resolved. Another example is the bathroom, whether it is necessary and unique. What is necessary, only, and useful is a treasure, and there is no need to dissolve it. Needs and musts are treasures. A treasure, no matter where it is, is still a treasure if it is misplaced and cannot cause disaster. Disaster is a disaster in any position and cannot be turned into a treasure. I have renovated a house in my hometown in the countryside, and I have personal experience. Many concepts are confusing. There are many doors to open in a room. We are fighting back and forth. We have reduced a few doors, but there are still many doors. There are still many doors in a room. In the decades since I built my house, I have only passed through it less than three times at most. It is indeed worth thinking about the redundant doors that do more harm than good.