I first came to Sedona in 1990, long before it became a spiritual buzzword.
Back then, the red rocks called to me the way a waterfall does—something bigger, older, and wiser than words. Locals spoke about “vortexes” the way you’d talk about the wind. Not to impress anyone. Just to point toward something you could feel.
They told me the shape and mineral makeup of the land caused the Earth’s natural magnetic and electric energy to swirl in these places. Not in a spooky way—just like tuning forks or resonant chambers. If you were out of alignment, you might feel it like a jolt or a rush. But if you were in tune with the frequency? You’d just feel still. Like peace had pulled up a chair.
Over the years, I’ve seen thousands come here searching for clarity, healing, release, or just a reason to breathe deeper. And while science has yet to “prove” vortexes are real, I’ve also never seen a peer-reviewed study on love. Doesn’t mean it’s not real.
I’m not here to convince anyone. I’m here to tell the truth as I’ve lived it.
Vortex energy, if you want to call it that, isn’t something to sell. It’s something to sit with. To listen to. And maybe, to let change you.
Cathedrals in Europe. Temples in Asia. The pyramids of Egypt and the Americas. Stonehenge. Machu Picchu. Humans have always built sacred structures on the earth’s energetic hotspots. Sedona just happens to be one of the few places where many of those spots exist in close proximity—and remain open to the sky.
Is it real?
Come stand in the silence. Let your body answer for itself.

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