Adventures & Experiences,  Events

Paranormal Pub: Vibrational Medicine

The other night, I ran over to the Kennedy School for their monthly Paranormal Pub. This month’s topic was Vibrational Medicine. I wasn’t exactly sure what it was about. By the title, I thought it could have referred to energy work and crystals; things I am interested in. 

The talk was given by Sue Whittaker, a.k.a. Tsunami Rose, owner of Wellsong Energetics. This is the first time I’ve ever heard about the topics she talked about and obviously that makes me very naive and uninformed. Other people in the audience were much more familiar with the names and things she discussed. For me, much of it went over my head. 

Vibrational Medicine…what is it?

Even as I sit here now and try to recap what it is; I can’t really explain it. It didn’t help that I dozed off for a moment. (It was warm. I just had a big ole burger with tots, and I had rushed over after a workout and a shower.)

Picture of slide from the talk.
There are a lot of syllables on this slide.

All I can remember from the talk is that 4G and 5G throw off huge levels of EMF (electromotive force). Solar panels, apartment living, and electric cars are also huge culprits on emitting this EMF. EMF is bad. It makes people sick. You need to clear EMF to get the full effect of healing. Healing shouldn’t cost a lot, it doesn’t need to come in the form of pharmaceuticals and not even supplements. She doesn’t claim to be able to medically cure people. Her husband believes she fixed the algae bloom-water issue in Salem a couple of years ago when people were advised not to drink it.

What are EMFs? https://www.healthline.com/health/emf#types

Vibrational medicine? https://upliftconnect.com/vibrational-medicine/

No doubt, I have trust issues

In the beginning, I was having a hard time with this talk. Yes, a heavy dinner and nap during the presentation aren’t helpful but I was just really skeptical of how much I trusted the speaker. My perception of her woo-woo-ness made it difficult for me to latch on.

What made matters for me worse was that she mentioned her products pretty early on in her talk; which then made the latter part of talk feel like an infomercial. That turned me off even more.

Picture of slide from the talk about the services the speaker offers.

The Main Event

Here’s where the talk gets interactive. A+ for engaging presentation style. The speaker and her husband started things off where they used dowsing rods to identify if our cell phones were “dirty” with EMF. When things are “dirty,” the rods automatically cross. When they are clean, the rods go parallel to each other; it’s like there’s a force field pushing the rods apart. To me, it seemed that they could have just been moving the rods with their thumbs. 

See…skeptic. 

She then did this thing where she’s supposedly clearing the negative energy away. That’s one of the services she sells with a monthly subscription. She said she could clear the whole room. So someone asked if she would. She agreed. They started by running around the room “checking people’s cell phones” with their rods which of course all crossed when tested. So then she cleared the room, one half at a time. It wasn’t clear if her husband suggested that to help us skeptics out. 

I feel like it would’ve been more effective if they ran it like a magic trick where a random person in the audience was chosen to tell her which side of the room to clean while her husband’s back was turned. Then when she was done, her husband would go test each side, not knowing which side had been cleaned to show us how the rods reacted.

Skeptic conversion or gas?

But the funny thing is…after she cleaned my side of the room I felt a little weird and I noticed my heart rate went up considerably. I honestly couldn’t tell if it was because of her cleansing or if it was because I was uncomfortably full after my burger dinner. I know I’m highly susceptible to crystals; meaning I have noticeable physical reactions when I’m near them. So, she could have actually shifted the energy in the room. And again, it could’ve just been gas.

During the Q&A time, I got up to leave because I was tired. As I was headed towards the back door, I passed by their info/sales table. Her husband stopped me to ask what I thought. I told him I was new to the topic and that it was interesting. I also told him that I felt a little odd after she “cleared” our side of the room. 

He asked if he could do something and he used the dowsing rods on me and, of course, found that I personally had not been cleared. So, with my permission, he “cleared me” and also sent to me a sense of love, something, and something. It’s a hallmark of what his wife does too after her clearings. Apparently the dowsing is supposed to unblock chakras and get meridians flowing. Along with the EMF cleansing of our phones, my personal cleansing should last for 5 days. This will be interesting because I’m getting reiki done by a person who comes highly recommended on Saturday. I’ll be interested to hear if she can feel that my chakras are still unblocked, etc. 

The salesman in his element

He said that he got a higher-level sense of something from me. Like I have the capacity for something greater and for love. What’s “the something?” Not sure. It seemed like he was talking about something otherworldly. The latter part about love made me chuckle as I don’t necessarily agree with that; being the grouch and pessimist I am. He also said that he suspects that I already have a sense that I have an increased capacity for “the something.” 

Again, the skeptic in me just thinks he was playing off my comment about being susceptible to crystals. It just felt like the good salesman who says things that you want to believe about yourself so that you believe what he’s saying when he’s asking you to buy his wares. 

I can’t say that I felt a significant energy shift when he did his cleansing. Although, I did get pretty burpy afterward. Again, that could have just been the fullness of the burger kicking in. We’ll see. After he delivered me the feelings of love, etc, etc, he said I should be “careful” as for the next 5 days, I’d be a puddle of loveness. He didn’t use those words exactly but he might as well have. 

Who knows. We’ll see how things go this week!

Update:

I continued to be burpy for two hours after and for a couple of hours after I woke up. Was that me expelling negativity? It felt like a scene from a movie where a spell is cast on a person and then they started burping up frogs. Gross, I know. 

Last Thought:

Even with all my skepticism, or maybe because of my skepticism, I became curious about the dowsing rods and considered trying them out myself. So, of course…I looked them up on Amazon. The best selling item had an SEO-title/description of Ghost Hunting, Divining Water, Gold, Buried Items, etc. A couple of the other dowsing rod options had terms related to “ghost hunting too. That’s not what I’m signing up for and it’s giving me pause to try them on my own because, with my luck and lack of knowledge, I would open up some ghost portal in my house. I think everyone in my home would frown upon that.

Wait! Another update!

My husband is traveling internationally during what seems to be the peak (hopefully) of the exponentially escalating reaction to the Coronavirus. He’s on a trip that he’s been very excited about and has been meticulously planning for months. Of course, I worry about him but I also didn’t want to rain on his parade based on the facts that we know so far. So, I’ve just tried my best to be realistic, yet supportive of him and let him know that we’ll deal with whatever happens if and when anything happens.

My friend noted to me that I was being atypically optimistic. (She’s not off base.) So, maybe the transference of the love, etc, etc. actually worked…

Links:

Picture of slide from the talk.

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