In Dear God! What's Happening to Us?, New York Times best-selling author Lynn Grabhorn introduced the concept of Planet Two -- a place very much like our Earth, but vibrating at a sixth-dimensional frequency, and immune to most of the negative influences that have overrun us here. In Planet Two, and in the same upbeat and lighthearted style of Excuse Me, Your Life Is Waiting, Lynn artfully explores what we'll find on this "new Earth," providing wondrous information about the look and feel of the place, the people who live there, and the kind of lives they live (with almost all of our same conveniences -- and more -- except 80 percent better). Featuring a fun Q & A format, Lynn not only gives us the sights and sounds of this extraordinary place, but why it's there, how to get there, and why that's so very important. While many live there now, millions of others from our Earth are raising their frequencies, and will be moving to this newly appearing paradise in the near future. In Planet Two, Lynn gives us the essential steps and information we need to join them.
I don't know how this book got past an editor. The writing is terrible, and if she had thrown some actual science in here, the concepts would require much less suspension of disbelief - because these are really 'out there' ideas. They are also super dated and very sexist - even though the author is a woman and this was only in 2004. It's also very Anglo-centric and anti-Middle East.
It's a small book, but I can't help but feel like it could have been condensed to 1/3 of its size to get the information across. There is a lot of fluff.
Anyone who knows anything about the paranormal and other side of things knows that time is a human construct and that we can't put dates on things. She talks about 2012 (which, obviously nothing major happened there) and 'two hundred years'. Between the crappy writing (was it intended for an audience that can only read at an elementary school level?) and the unsupported ideas, this author has no credibility with me. It seemed like they were in such a hurry to get it published that they didn't bother to gather any evidence to support the ideas she put forward.
To summarize: there is a second planet earth, just like ours, and if we raise our frequency/vibration, we can get there and basically live the life we are living now or better and live forever, but there will be far fewer people in the world and the environment will be significantly improved thanks to advances in technology. Everyone will speak English and religions won't matter. Only XX of people will be able to get in and everyone else left on the current planet earth will eventually die out.
I don't doubt her claims that she was given all this information, but I think her own experience limited her ability to properly convey what she was being 'told' to write. This would have been far more convincing if it had been written by someone with more sophisticated language.
This book was recommended to me by a friend and now I'm questioning why.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.