Oil of Ormus: The Topical Version, Explained

IESA Journal Volume XIII cover with the title "Oil of Ormus" set in serif type over a gold bottle silhouette and frequency rings on a deep plum background.

By Clinton Greenlee · Founder, IESA Healing Arts

Oil of Ormus is the topical companion to the Ormus you take internally. The same mineral science, the same frequency intention, applied through skin rather than mouth. This piece explains what it is, why it exists separately from the internal preparation, and how to use it.

If you've already read my piece on what Ormus actually is, you have the foundation. This is the next layer: what changes when the preparation is designed for the skin instead of the digestive tract, and why I formulated it the way I did.

The short version

Oil of Ormus is a carrier-oil preparation infused with the same monoatomic mineral substrate that goes into IESA's internal Ormus. The carrier is a clean fractionated coconut oil base. The product is prepared while exposed to 528 Hz tuning — the same frequency I write about in my 528 Hz piece. The intended use is topical: applied to the chest, wrists, temples, or anywhere you'd apply a focused-intention essential oil.

It's not a substitute for internal Ormus. It's a parallel modality — the difference between meditation and prayer, or between breath work and chanting. Same intention, different delivery, different felt experience.

Why a topical Ormus exists

The skin absorbs a meaningful percentage of what you put on it. This is well-established in conventional dermatology and pharmacology — transdermal drug delivery exists for nicotine, hormones, painkillers, and other substances precisely because skin is a real route of administration, not a barrier.

For mineral preparations specifically, the topical route bypasses gastric pH, doesn't compete with food for absorption, and produces a different sensory experience than swallowing. Whether the same biochemical outcomes follow from topical application as from oral application is an open question for Ormus, the same way it is for many traditional mineral preparations. What's clear from client reports and personal practice: the felt experience is different. Topical Ormus tends to produce a more immediate, localized sensation — a kind of warmth or settling at the application point — while internal Ormus produces a slower, more diffuse effect across the body and attention.

The 528 Hz preparation

This is where Oil of Ormus differs most from standard Ormus on the market. The preparation environment matters in alchemical mineral work — the temperature, the timing, and increasingly in IESA's work, the acoustic field surrounding the preparation.

Oil of Ormus is prepared in a studio environment with sustained 528 Hz tone playing throughout the integration period. I don't claim this changes the chemistry. I do claim, based on my own felt sense and consistent reports from clients who've used both standard topical mineral preparations and the 528 Hz-prepared version, that there's a perceptible difference in how the final product registers. Treat that as an empirical claim you can test, not a metaphysical one I'm asking you to accept on faith.

How to use Oil of Ormus

The application is simple. A few drops, warmed briefly between palms, applied to one or more of the following:

Wrists and pulse points. Standard aromatherapy application. The thinner skin here absorbs faster and the warmth of the pulse helps the oil disperse. Good entry point if you're new to topical mineral work.

Sternum / center of the chest. My most common application. The chest is where 528 Hz tones are most easily felt resonating in the body during sound work, so applying Oil of Ormus here creates a felt sense of physical and acoustic alignment.

Temples and the back of the neck. For sessions oriented around attention and clarity rather than emotional integration. Light touch — this isn't a massage oil; it's a focused-intention application.

As an integration ritual after internal Ormus. Some clients pair the two: take internal Ormus in the morning, then twenty to thirty minutes later, apply Oil of Ormus to the chest and sit for five minutes of conscious breath. Different from either alone.

Start with one or two drops. More is not more here. The whole point is intentional, sparing use — not coverage.

What Oil of Ormus is NOT

It is not a moisturizer. The coconut oil base will moisturize incidentally, but the purpose isn't skin care.

It is not a perfume. There's no added fragrance. What you smell is the carrier oil and the subtle quality of the mineral preparation.

It is not a medical-grade transdermal delivery system. Conventional medical claims do not apply.

It is not interchangeable with internal Ormus. If you want the internal effects, take the internal preparation. If you want a topical complement to that practice, this is what it's for.

How I use it in my own practice

Morning: internal Ormus, fifteen minutes of Solfeggio listening, then a few drops of Oil of Ormus on the chest before client sessions begin.

Mid-afternoon, on long writing or composition days: two drops on the back of the neck and a slow exhale.

Evening, before contemplative reading: one drop on each wrist.

It's a small ritual. It's not designed to do heavy lifting on its own. It's designed to fit alongside other practices and amplify the intentional structure of the day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Oil of Ormus the same as essential oil?

No. Essential oils are plant-derived aromatic compounds extracted by distillation. Oil of Ormus is a mineral-infused carrier oil — the active substrate is the Ormus mineral preparation, not a botanical extract. You can use them together (apply Oil of Ormus first, then a drop of essential oil on top, for example) but they're functionally different categories.

Can I use it on my face?

Yes, but sparingly and not as a daily face oil. A drop on the temples or the third-eye point during contemplative practice is fine. Avoid the eye area and don't use it as a moisturizer replacement. If you have sensitive skin or known reactions to coconut oil, do a patch test on the inside of your forearm first.

How long does a bottle last?

For a daily user applying a few drops at most, a single bottle lasts approximately two months. For occasional or session-specific use, longer. The preparation is stable in a sealed bottle stored away from direct light and heat, but I recommend using within six months of opening for best felt quality.

Can I use Oil of Ormus and internal Ormus on the same day?

Yes, and many clients do. My internal dosing guide covers timing for the oral preparation; the topical pairs naturally with the internal protocol and can be applied at any point in the day without conflict.

Does it have a scent?

Very mild. The carrier is fractionated coconut oil, which is nearly odorless. The Ormus mineral substrate itself has a subtle, almost mineral-water character that some users describe as "clean" or "neutral" and others don't perceive at all. There's no added fragrance, essential oil, or perfume.

Is it safe during pregnancy?

There's no specific safety data on Ormus preparations during pregnancy, which is true of most artisanal mineral preparations. When in doubt, defer to your prenatal provider. If you choose to use it, applications limited to wrists and back of neck (avoiding the abdomen) are the most conservative approach.

About the Author

Clinton Greenlee, founder of IESA Healing Arts and Sound Works

Clinton Greenlee

Founder · Practitioner · Author

Clinton Greenlee is the founder of IESA Healing Arts & Sound Works. A trained musician and Alexander Technique practitioner who studied under a long-time Dr. Sebi protégé, he integrates frequency-tuned sound work, ancestral herbalism, and modern science into daily practice and client care from Miami Beach.

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