You just watched 17 minutes and 54 seconds of a man telling you to raise your vibration so money and opportunities flock to you. It felt good. It always does. The rhythm of the video, the soft lighting, the confident eye contact, the way he says “frequency” like it’s a science you flunked. But here’s the part they leave out: the only person’s frequency genuinely going up is the guy selling the course at the end. And by “frequency,” I mean his account balance.
The video, as I see it, is perfectly engineered to do one thing: make you feel scarce so you buy access to people who seem abundant. That is the actual secret. Not a frequency. Not a vibration. A marketing funnel with a heartbeat.
Early on he mentions something about how “high frequency people” move through the world differently. They don’t chase. They attract. Doors open. The right phone calls come. Opportunities fall like rain. I see how people can relate to the idea. Who wouldn’t want that? If you are tired of pushing sand uphill, the promise that you can transmute into someone to whom effortlessness comes naturally is sweeter than fresh honey.
The problem is, this sets up an unfalsifiable loop. If it doesn’t work, you just weren’t high frequency enough. Your vibration was still clinging to lack. Try harder. Buy another program. Go to another retreat. This isn’t a philosophy. It’s a retention mechanism.
There’s a moment where he leans into the camera, voice dropping half an octave, and he says something like, “Your environment is the thermostat of your consciousness.” Powerful. Almost poetic. But notice what follows. Suddenly the camera cuts to him having dinner with half a dozen smiling, well-dressed people at a private rooftop somewhere. The implication is clear: to reach this frequency, you need to be near these people. And these people? They cost. Not directly, but you need the ticket, the membership, the mastermind fee. The vibration is a product with a price tag attached.
The part that caught me off guard was the sheer absence of any concrete, repeatable business mechanic. He talked about energy, about alignment, about “holding space” for abundance. Not once, in what I can only guess is the script’s backbone, did he mention anything resembling offer creation, copywriting, price testing, traffic source breakdown, or a single damn funnel mechanic that actually moves dollars from one human to another.
This is where the hustle influencer economy shows its hands. The claim here is that if you raise your frequency, you’ll naturally “attract” money and mentors. But the real mechanics are inverted. The influencer gets rich by selling proximity to himself. You get poor buying it.
Think about it. The pitch is: become a high frequency person so you can stand among high frequency people. The most visible “high frequency people” are the ones renting their proximity by the hour or the month. I’ve watched too many sharp, capable entrepreneurs drain savings on mastermind tiers they didn’t need because someone sold them the fantasy that being in the room would change the molecule of their business. It rarely does. What changes is the guru’s net worth and your credit card balance.
At one point he says, without a hint of irony, that he “used to be low frequency” before he started “investing” in masterminds. So he paid money, and now he’s high frequency. The causal arrow here is suspicious. Did the frequency change first, or did he just use the money as proof he’s a high frequency person because now he can buy the lifestyle? It’s a closed loop of self-validation. The audience is taught to emulate that loop. Spend to belong. Belong to feel worthy. Feel worthy to attract. Attract to spend more. See how that works?
You do not need richer friends, private clubs, or guru proximity to make money. You need a boring offer and real customers. The contrarian truth is that the influencer gets rich selling access while their audience would be better off building something quietly, away from the noise, and selling it repeatedly. You are about to click away right now because you can feel the funnel. The inspiration was high, but the actual path stayed just vague enough to keep you dependent. That’s not an accident. That’s the blueprint.
Let’s get extremely practical for a moment. I want to contrast two people.
Person A watches this video, subscribes to the channel, starts journaling about their “energy leaks,” adopts a morning routine involving cold water and sunlight, and six months later signs up for a virtual retreat that costs $2,500. They feel different. They say they’ve “shifted their identity.” Their bank account? Largely the same.
Person B watches this video, closes the tab, and spends 90 minutes building a Google Doc outlining a dead-simple service offer: they’ll do local lead generation for roofers using a templated outreach sequence. They charge $1,500 a month per client. They pitch five roofers the next week by phone. Two say yes. That’s $3,000 a month in recurring revenue. Their “frequency” just got very high, very fast, measured in Stripe pings.
Here’s a hot take the video won’t give you: money is not attracted by matching frequencies. Money is attracted by solving problems so clearly that the buyer feels stupid saying no. The universe doesn’t care about your aura. It cares about your offer’s specificity and the audacity with which you put it in front of the right person.
I’ve seen people with zero “high frequency” traits. Anxious. Disorganized. Terrible at meditation. But they owned a small roto-rooter route, or they sold gutter-cleaning subscriptions door to door, and they out-earned the charismatic spiritual seeker by a factor of five. Not because they were vibrating on a wealth plane. Because they had a transaction engine that fed itself.
The video’s advice to “curate your circle” sounds wise. But I’ve noticed that the fastest way to attract high-value relationships is to have a track record of making money predictably. When you have cash-producing assets, the right people find you. Not because you preened your vibration. Because you became a node of value. The circle curates itself.
What is a high frequency person, actually? If we steal the term and make it useful, a high frequency person is somebody whose phone buzzes so often with sales notifications that they have to put it on silent. That buzz is a signal. It says: “Someone found enough value in what I made that they traded hard-earned money for it.”
That signal is not woo-woo. It is the result of a chain of boring, unglamorous actions:
The frequency here is literal. Transaction frequency. Output frequency. The rate at which you ship offers and receive payments. Every “high vibe” person I know who actually has wealth got there by increasing the number of value-for-cash exchanges per week. Not by meditating on abundance but by exchanging.
The video likely mentions the virtue of “detachment.” The idea that when you don’t need the money, it flows. That’s a half-truth. Detachment works not because of some energetic law but because desperation smells. When you need a sale to eat, your pitch tightens. You get sweaty. Buyers sense it. The counter isn’t faux spiritual detachment. It’s having enough pipeline that no single deal matters. That’s math, not mysticism.
If you want to become a person to whom money flows more easily, here is the anti-guru playbook. No mastermind required.
Step 1: Pick One Ugly, Unsexy Problem
High frequency influencers will tell you to follow your passion. Hard pass. Pick a problem that already robs people of sleep. Roofers getting underbid. Dentists losing patients to DSOs. E-commerce brands bleeding ad spend. The more boring the industry, the better. Boring industries have fewer showmen and more cash.
Step 2: Build a Micro-Offer in 48 Hours
Not a course. Not a community. An offer. Something like:
See the pattern? Specific, time-bound, risk-flipped. That’s a high-frequency offer because it’s a clear signal of intent in a murky world.
Step 3: Send 100 High-Intensity DM’s or Emails
Not a drip sequence. Not a content calendar. 100 direct messages to real people who fit the avatar, using language like: “Hey [Name], I noticed [specific pain point]. I just built an offer for [industry] folks to [specific fix]. Happy to share. No charge if I don’t deliver.” That’s it. Rejection rate will be high. Good. Rejection is data. Each “no” sharpens the offer for the next send.
Step 4: Fulfill Obsessively and Document Results
Turn one client success into a case study so tight it reads like a lawsuit. Specific numbers. Before and after. Screenshots. This becomes your new offer’s proof battery. Now you have something no frequency meditation can give you: evidence. Evidence changes conversations from “trust me” to “look at this.”
Step 5: Raise Prices and Repeat
Charge more. Serve fewer clients but deeper. Every quarter, increase your rates by 20% or add a higher tier. The money will come faster, and your frequency, measured in cash velocity, will climb.
Do I sound like a mechanic? Good. Mechanics fix things. Priests offer rituals. I’d rather you have the mechanic’s calluses than the priest’s robes.
The hustle guru world needs you to stay aspirational and unfulfilled. That’s the whole game. They sell you a picture of a person you’ll become once you’re “high frequency.” But you never quite arrive, because arrival would mean you stop paying. So the path is kept just foggy enough that you keep buying maps.
The secret they don’t tell you: the fastest way to become a person of high frequency, the kind who attracts opportunities and commands respect, is to become someone who makes a sale. Then another. Then another. Sales pile up. Confidence becomes earned, not borrowed. You start walking into rooms differently, not because you chanted affirmations, but because you know you can generate cash on demand. That’s a vibration they can’t teach in a webinar. It’s a byproduct of being dangerous in an honorable way: the ability to create economic value out of raw thought and work.
Stop chasing access. Stop buying proximity to people whose main skill is monetizing your insecurity. Go build an offer that is so painfully practical, so boringly effective, that people blink and hand you money. That’s the real high frequency. Not the one you feel. The one your bank records.
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