Kelly McCloskey on Not Super. Woman
Understanding Feng Shui
On Not Super. Woman, Kelly’s appearance is framed as an accessible, from-the-ground-up conversation: the kind of episode that invites listeners in gently rather than assuming prior knowledge. Set within a show built around reflective, explorative interviews, the discussion appears to carry a curious, open and reassuring energy. Rather than treating feng shui as something obscure or overly mystical, the episode positions it as a subject worth slowing down for, unpacking with honesty, and bringing back into everyday language.
What gives the episode its emotional shape is Kelly’s own story. The conversation is anchored by her background in Melbourne real estate and the moment she began noticing repeated patterns in certain homes, from illness and divorce to declines in wealth. That origin story gives the episode a more thoughtful weight: it is not simply about explaining feng shui, but about tracing the lived observations that led Kelly to study it deeply and connect property knowledge with energy, balance and the felt experience of home. The result is a tone that feels reflective, grounded and quietly compelling.
At a high level, the episode seems designed to separate myth from method. Kelly is introduced as someone helping listeners understand what is westernised misconception and what belongs to the true philosophical foundations of feng shui, especially in relation to the home. That makes the appearance feel less like a quick-fix design chat and more like a calm reframing of how a home can influence wellbeing, relationships and daily life. The overall impression is of a conversation that is both intimate and clarifying, with Kelly bringing warmth and credibility to a topic that many people sense is important but do not always know how to approach.

