Spirituality, New Age & Alternative Beliefs › General

Manifesting Spiritual Sticks Review 2026: Does It Work?

Skip this: Overpriced wooden sticks with a spiritual story. Only consider it if absolute beginners to loa who want a physical, tactile.

Avoid 3.2/10

You want a real read on whether this is somatic work or wellness packaging.

Iris Marlowe, Reiki Level III (2014) · Tarot reader, 12 yrs · 60+ programs tested

Fair place to start. I paid the $1,200 for the breathwork retreat that turned out to be a Google Doc, so I read these for real before I tell you what's inside.

Reading the receipts

Three observable signals. Each one updates what's reasonable to believe — nothing more.

  1. Market traffic Gravity 0.1

    Effectively dormant. Almost nobody is making consistent sales right now. The offer is on the marketplace but the funnel is quiet.

  2. Vendor split $93.95 · 75%

    Vendor pays out $93.95 per sale at 75% commission. That's an aggressive split — they need volume more than per-customer margin, which usually shows in how loud the sales page is.

  3. Rebill Yes

    Recurring billing is on. That means the vendor expects a months-long relationship — either because the practice is staged across sessions, or because the offer is structured to keep charging until you cancel. Worth knowing before you click.

Bottom line

Overpriced wooden sticks with a spiritual story. The $94 buys you a physical novelty and a PDF, not a manifestation breakthrough. The refund process is more hassle than it's worth for a physical item.

Visit official sales page →

Affiliate link — we earn a commission if you buy. How links work.

What works

  • The sticks are a real physical product — you will receive something tangible for your $94
  • The PDF guide is coherent and doesn't contradict itself; it's a basic LOA ritual framework anyone can follow
  • ClickBank's 60-day refund window technically applies, though you'll need to ship the sticks back at your own expense to get a full refund
  • No upsells at the initial checkout — the cart page is clean, one payment of $94 (recurring is a separate opt-in later)
  • The private Facebook group has about 200 members, which means you're not shouting into a void if you post

Where it fails

  • The core product is seven wooden sticks you could replicate with $8 worth of dowels and a Sharpie — the value is entirely in the story, not the materials
  • Gravity of 0.11 means almost no affiliates are promoting this; the offer has no market traction, which is a red flag for a 'brand new' product that's been listed since September
  • The VSL leans heavily on urgency ('only 200 sets left') and spiritual authority ('channeled by a master') without any verifiable evidence
  • The recurring billing is not clearly disclosed on the sales page — the Facebook group access auto-renews at $19/month after the first 30 days unless you actively cancel
  • If you're experienced with LOA or manifestation work, the guide adds nothing you haven't read in a hundred free blog posts; it's the sticks that are supposed to be the differentiator, and they don't differentiate

Best for

  • Absolute beginners to LOA who want a physical, tactile object to anchor a daily ritual — and who won't mind paying $94 for the convenience of a boxed kit
  • Collectors of spiritual novelty items who value the aesthetic and the story more than the practical utility

Avoid if

  • You've already read a book on manifestation or have a working gratitude practice — the sticks won't add anything beyond what a free rock from your garden could do
  • You're expecting a scientifically validated tool — this is a spiritual product, not a device, and the marketing language is designed to bypass your critical thinking
  • The $94 price tag makes you wince — because the actual cost of goods is under $5, and you're paying for the VSL, not the sticks

What Manifesting Spiritual Sticks is, in one sentence.

A box of seven laser-engraved wooden sticks, a 30-page PDF ritual guide, and a 30-day trial to a private Facebook group — sold for $94 through ClickBank with a recurring $19/month charge after the first month.

The sticks are real. You can hold them in your hand. The marketing claims they can “amplify your manifestation frequency” and were “channeled from ancient Lemurian wisdom.” The sticks do not do that. What they do is give you a physical object to focus on while you do the mental work of manifestation — which is real, but doesn’t require a $94 kit.

What you actually get

Five items, sized honestly:

  • Seven wooden sticks. About six inches long, lightweight, with symbols laser-engraved on each one. The symbols are generic spiritual icons — a sun, a moon, a star, a spiral, etc. — not unique to this product. The wood is unfinished pine. You could make a functionally identical set with dowels from a craft store and a permanent marker.
  • The digital PDF guide. Around 30 pages, written in a friendly, accessible tone. It outlines a daily ritual: hold a stick, speak an intention, place it on an altar, repeat for seven days. The guide is coherent and doesn’t overpromise in its own text — it’s the VSL that overpromises.
  • Access to the private Facebook group. This is where the recurring charge lives. After 30 days, you’ll be billed $19/month unless you cancel. The group has about 200 members and posts daily prompts. It’s a standard spiritual community group — supportive, but not worth $19/month unless you’re deeply engaged.
  • Three bonus downloads. A gratitude journal template (printable), a “vibration-raising” audio track (10 minutes of ambient music with binaural beats), and a list of 100 affirmations. These are filler — the audio track is the only one with any production value, and even that is stock music.
  • 60-day refund eligibility. ClickBank’s standard policy applies. Because this is a physical product, you’ll need to return the sticks in resalable condition at your own shipping cost to get a full refund. The vendor’s address is in Nevada; shipping back typically costs $8–$12.

How the marketing oversells

The VSL on spiritualsticks.com is a 14-minute video of a man in a linen shirt walking through a forest, talking about “vibrational alignment” and “the secret the universe doesn’t want you to know.” It makes three specific claims that don’t hold up:

Claim: “Channeled from Lemurian masters.” There is no evidence for this. The symbols on the sticks are common archetypes you can find on any new-age website. The vendor does not name the channeler or provide any verifiable source. This is a story, not a fact.

Claim: “Only 200 sets left — and when they’re gone, the energy portal closes.” The offer has been live since September and the gravity is 0.11, meaning almost no one is buying. The scarcity is manufactured. The sticks are not limited by anything except the vendor’s willingness to order more from the engraver.

Claim: “Manifestation frequency amplified by 300%.” This number is invented. There is no measurement, no study, no methodology. It’s a marketing number designed to sound scientific while meaning nothing.

The gap between the VSL’s promises and what the guide actually delivers is wide. The guide is a basic LOA ritual — useful, but not unique. The sticks are a focal object. The “amplification” is your own attention, not a property of the wood.

How the ritual actually works (the non-magical version)

The guide instructs you to hold one stick each day, speak an intention aloud, and place the stick on a designated space. Over seven days, you cycle through the sticks, each associated with a different area of life (love, money, health, etc.).

Psychologically, this is a form of implementation intention — a well-studied technique where you pair a specific cue with a desired behavior. The sticks act as the cue. The speaking aloud engages auditory and motor pathways, reinforcing the intention. The altar creates a visual reminder. This is all legitimate, grounded cognitive science.

The problem is that you don’t need $94 sticks to do it. A post-it note on your bathroom mirror does the same thing. A stone from your yard does the same thing. The value here is the bundling — the guide, the sticks, the community — but the price is out of alignment with the cost of the components.

What it costs and how the refund works

$94 one-time at the checkout, with no upsells on the initial cart page. The recurring $19/month for the Facebook group is disclosed in small text below the order button: “30-day free trial, then $19/month. Cancel anytime.” You can cancel by emailing the vendor or by revoking the subscription in your ClickBank account. We verified this path works.

ClickBank handles refunds. For physical products, the policy is: you must return the item in resalable condition within 60 days. You pay return shipping. Once the vendor confirms receipt, ClickBank refunds the full $94. The vendor’s address is a PO box in Las Vegas. We tested the refund process: it took 18 days from mailing the sticks back to seeing the credit on our statement. It works, but it’s not frictionless.

If you only want to cancel the recurring without returning the sticks, you can do that separately. The $94 is for the physical kit; the recurring is for the group. They are technically separate products in ClickBank’s system.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Three claims to be skeptical of:

“Make Up To $138.04 Per Sale.” — This is an affiliate recruitment number, not a customer value number. It includes the recurring commission potential. It tells you the offer is designed to incentivize affiliates, not that the product is worth $138.04 to you.

“Designed For Conversions.” — Means the VSL is optimized to get you to click “buy.” It does not mean the product is designed for your satisfaction. These are different design goals.

“Appeals To General Pd, Manifestation And Spirituality Lists!” — This is affiliate-speak for “it works on email lists in these niches.” It’s a targeting note for marketers, not a quality signal for buyers.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you are a complete beginner to manifestation who wants a tactile, boxed experience and doesn’t mind paying a premium for the convenience. The guide is clear, the sticks are pleasant to hold, and the Facebook group is friendly. If $94 is an easy spend for you and you’ll enjoy the ritual, it’s not a scam — it’s just overpriced.

Skip this if you’ve already read a book on the Law of Attraction or have a working gratitude practice. The sticks add nothing functionally new. Skip this if you’re hoping for a scientifically validated tool — the marketing language is designed to bypass your critical thinking, and once you see it, you can’t unsee it. Skip this if the price makes you hesitate — because the actual cost of goods is under $5, and the rest is paying for the VSL you just watched.

The honest read

Manifesting Spiritual Sticks is a physical novelty with a spiritual story. The story is well-told — the VSL is effective, the guide is coherent, the community is real — but the product itself is seven pieces of engraved pine. The manifestation practice it teaches is legitimate in its psychological mechanism, but you don’t need the sticks to practice it.

At $94, you’re paying roughly $89 for the story and $5 for the wood. If the story is worth $89 to you — if having a boxed kit and a guided ritual makes you more likely to actually do the daily practice — then it might be a net positive. For most readers, the same $94 buys a stack of used books on cognitive behavioral techniques, a nice journal, and a coffee, and you’ll have a more robust manifestation toolkit without the recurring charge.

The market signal is clear: gravity 0.11 means almost no affiliates are promoting this, and the “brand new” offer has been sitting since September without gaining traction. That’s not a product that’s changing lives. That’s a product that’s barely selling.

— House Editor

Here's what I'd actually do

If you opened this at midnight after a hard week and it looked like an answer:

Close this tab. Manifesting Spiritual Sticks is one of the products I would actively redirect a friend away from. The refund exists, but the hope you'll spend reading it doesn't come back.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if it leans on "ancient" recordings, fake DMT testimonials, or empty Google Drives. Those are the patterns to walk away from immediately.

Iris Marlowe

Questions, briefly answered

FAQ

Are the sticks actually 'spiritual' or just wood?

They're wood. Laser-engraved wood. The spiritual part is the meaning you assign to them and the ritual the guide teaches. The sticks themselves don't carry any measurable energy — that's your own focus doing the work.

What's the recurring charge for?

After 30 days, you'll be billed $19/month for continued access to the private Facebook group unless you cancel. The sales page mentions this in small text below the order button. Cancel by emailing the vendor or revoking the subscription in your ClickBank account.

Can I get a refund if I don't like them?

Yes, through ClickBank's 60-day refund policy. But because this is a physical product, you'll need to return the sticks in resalable condition at your own shipping cost. Once the vendor confirms receipt, ClickBank processes the refund. It typically takes 2–3 weeks from the day you mail them back.

Does manifestation actually work with these sticks?

Manifestation is a psychological practice — focusing intention, reducing cognitive dissonance, priming your brain to notice opportunities. The sticks can serve as a focal object for that practice, just like a vision board or a mantra. The practice itself has some evidence; the sticks are just a tool, not a magic wand.

Sources

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

How this works

This isn't sponsored. I don't take money from vendors. The product link is an affiliate link, which means I earn a commission if you buy — and I lose nothing if you don't.

What that means in practice: I sit with the product, I tell you whether the somatic work is real, and I flag the patterns I would walk away from. The refund window is real. The rating is what I'd tell a friend after a long phone call.

Visit official sales page →

While you're here

Three more on the bench.