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“Essential” High Frequency
 
by Robyn Openshaw • Oren, UT

 

Herbs—the dried stems, roots, or flowers of medicinal plants—were the gold standard in natural healing for many years until recently, when the properties of essential oils were studied and found to be many times more potent than the dried whole plant.

The essential oil is the very essence of the plant, wherever its highest frequency is—and that is found variously in petals, stems, roots, or other parts of the plant.

More than 98 percent of essential oils in the world are produced for flavorings or perfume, and they do not have a therapeutic effect. As use of oils becomes more popular, I believe we will see fewer false “certifications” and higher quality standards, due to more competition in the marketplace, and more organics will come to market.

I believe that essential oils are so popular because they’ve been marketed as an alternative to pharmaceuticals. (And America’s honeymoon with the pharmaceutical industry is over. We’ve watched drugs claim lives of folks close to us and cure almost nothing. We’re looking for something better.) They’re a quick, fairly inexpensive-per-drop way to aromatically or topically (or even internally, in some cases) raise our vibration.

Do your homework and know what is in your essential oils. Many claim to be “pure” when, in fact, independent labs show they have many synthetic chemicals in them. Those who sell them simply repeat the marketing information given to them by the manufacturer. Finally there are certified organic oils coming to market, and anything different than certified organic is nothing more than marketing claims.

Gary Young, widely considered the father of the modern essential oils movement, was measuring the vibrations of essential oils long before talk of vibration hit the mainstream. He measured basil oil at 52 Hz of energetic frequency, while other oils are even higher, including rose oil at an amazing 320 Hz. I am unaware of any other physical substance on earth with such a high frequency.

Organic essential oils, then, may be a part of your strategy to raise your ViQ (Vibrational Quotient). With high-vibe plants as your primary food sources, you may want to consider having on hand organic high-vibe plant oils as medicine as well.

The plant world holds the keys to many natural anti-inflammatory compounds, grounding compounds, and even cell-selective cytotoxic compounds that kill cancer cells but not healthy cells. The world of plants provides many solutions that human beings and other living things can leverage to solve problems and to maintain health. After all, the father of modern medicine, Hippocrates, said, “Let food be thy medicine, and medicine thy food.” We’ve strayed far from the idea that plants are our medicine, since the discovery that chemically altering a plant substance can make you a billion dollars.

(It is also true that synthetic drugs, virtually across the board, harm your vibration, as they are not natural substances and have very low frequencies. Your body does not assimilate or eliminate chemicals efficiently or completely, and residues build up in your organs and tissues and cause health issues.)

The essential oils industry is currently at $5 billion and is projected to be $12 billion by 2025. I do have a concern that, collectively, we’re moving from a belief that a synthetic drug will solve our every problem to a slightly revised belief that a bottle of oil will solve our every problem.

Our base-level focus must be on an organic, mostly plant-based, whole-foods diet. Many among us, in the age of quick fixes, simply want something that requires no effort on our part. So, while essential oils can be helpful, I hope you don’t see them as the new “pill for every ill.”

The 320 Hz rose oil is very expensive, of course, and makes a lovely perfume. But essential oils range from 50 Hz to more than 300 Hz, according to Young’s research, and since oils are the highest energetic part of the plant, it’s a concentration in high vibration and may be a useful part of your goal to improve your grounding and your high, consistent, steady frequency.

 

Alan Cohen

Robyn Openshaw is the author of 15 books, including bestsellers The Green Smoothies Diet and 12 Steps to Whole Foods. Her latest book, the USA Today and Amazon #1 Bestseller, is Vibe: Unlock the Energetic Frequencies of Limitless Health, Love & Success. Robyn is a former psychotherapist, university professor, and has lectured in over 450 cities in the 6 years after launching her popular site GreenSmoothieGirl.com in 2007. She's a single mom to four children who are now flying the coop. She skis and plays tennis competitively, and believes that everything is possible if you leverage the highest frequencies in the Universe. You can find her podcast, Your High Vibration Life, on iTunes. Also look for Green Smoothie Girl on Facebook, and visit her website GreenSmoothieGirl.com.