Robyn Openshaw has written a book on vibrational frequencies and the part they play in our health, healing, and general wellbeing.
Matter produces energy. We know that things like water, sound, and light have energy, and the vibrations from various energy fields can be studied scientifically. Vibe tells us that our frequency is our personal electrical energy. She refers to it as our ViQ, our vibrational quotient, and it’s supposed to be high.
Just as an angry person can walk into a crowded room and change the energy in the room, or a happy person can walk into a crowded room and change the energy in that room, our emotions and moods do often affect others. Openshaw believes that we can do certain things that will raise our ViQ, helping us to experience harmony, healing, and peace. She even says our emotions have a vibrational pattern that can be seen on an ECG.
For me personally, the main danger from this belief system occurs when we believe that vibrations and frequencies are spiritual. The New Age belief is that vibrations have healing powers and that we can attain healing, better health, happiness, peace, and wellbeing from things that will cause us to have higher vibrations. The Law of Attraction is part of this teaching.
Practically, I love what Openshaw writes in her book about health: green smoothies - awesome. Stop eating junk food; start eating more plant-based food - great. Forgive those who have hurt us - yes. Think and say positive, encouraging, uplifting words to ourselves and others - absolutely. But these are said in the context of doing them to increase our vibration.
If this book were just about practicing healthy habits, I would have been all over it. Yet, Openshaw has taken choice concepts she has picked from science and various world religions and combined them together to create her own personal manmade religion.
They comprise the things she has learned both from her own life journey and as a lifelong student of natural health. She has thrown in some Bible verses, some New Age, some Hindu, some Chinese, Crystals, karma, Feng Shui, and whatever else suits her and falls in line with her personal religion.
What’s the problem? God is our Creator, and He is also our Healer. Only God can heal. He has given us things here on earth such as plants, good food, sunshine, exercise, and water for our health and happiness. He also gave us the Bible as our source to test all things against.
We cannot add to or subtract from the gospel. We cannot create our own gospel. Jesus Christ is the ultimate Healer. If we are able to obtain healing from having a higher vibrational quotient, where does this healing come from? What type of energy is doing the healing? Does it come from God or from some other supernatural source? If it isn’t from God alone, can we assume it is from the Enemy, otherwise known as Satan? Is it a both a spiritual and a scientific healing?
Before we go believing in Vibrations and Frequencies to heal ourselves and to live in a calmer state more in harmony with others, let’s take a step back and ask where this teaching came from? Have we made science our new religion? Do we think we need science to prove religion?
Openshaw weaves in and out from the scientific to the spiritual to the scientific to the spiritual throughout the book. I personally believe that we are saved in Jesus Christ alone through his sacrificial death on the cross. Science cannot be the religion, because it leaves God out.
Vibes and our vibrational quotient are what this book is about, but the healthy, practical advice was worth far more to me, along with the 7-day nutritional detox program. Thank you, Robyn!