Kelly McCloskey on The Chrissie Swan Show
Can Feng Shui Boost Your Fertility?
Set within a lively radio format, the The Chrissie Swan Show has an energetic, curious rhythm to it, with Chrissie and the team meeting feng shui with humour, openness and genuine fascination. What makes the conversation work is that Kelly never leans into mystique for its own sake; instead, she brings calm clarity to a subject many people think of as decorative or esoteric, reframing it as a precise, classical art grounded in mathematics, house orientation, timing and the relationship between a home and its occupants.
The emotional tone of the segment is warm, amused and surprisingly expansive for a short interview. There is a lot of laughter and curiosity, but beneath that is a real sense of recognition: the idea that homes can hold patterns, and that what feels “off” in life may sometimes be reflected in the spaces we live in. Kelly touches on her own path from real estate into feng shui, explaining that she began noticing the same kinds of outcomes repeating in certain homes, from separation to health issues and financial stress. That gives the conversation an intriguing emotional undercurrent, because it is not just about styling a home better, but about understanding why certain environments seem to support people while others quietly drain them.
At a high level, the episode moves between myth-busting and practical insight. Kelly explains feng shui as something highly specific rather than intuitive guesswork, describing how she works from plans, direction, build period and occupant astrology before ever stepping into a house. From there, the discussion opens into broader ideas about flow, clutter, presentation, doors, windows and the subtle ways a home can influence relationships, wellbeing, fertility, opportunity and ease. Even when the segment moves into more playful territory, including quick commentary on celebrity homes, the overall impression is that Kelly is translating an ancient system into something immediate, human and usable.
What lingers most is the sense that feng shui is being presented here not as superstition, but as a way of reading the emotional and energetic architecture of daily life. Kelly’s strongest moments are the ones where she makes the invisible feel tangible: explaining that even opening the right window can matter, that a beautifully presented home carries a different quality of energy, and that clearing clutter is often the simplest place to begin. In a short, high-energy segment, she manages to leave listeners with both intrigue and reassurance, suggesting that the home is not static background, but an active participant in how life unfolds.

