If there's divine guidance, why would it need all those strange far-from-perfect more-than-imperfect human pseudoscientific woo that obviously exposes the preacher's lack of understanding of the concepts they borrow from? You also appear to misconstrue DNA damage from ionizing radiation or UV exposure, a potential cause of cancer, with magical imprinting of some sort. Our cells contain water, which conducts electricity up to some point and certain cell types like neurons can transmit signals with electrochemical conversions. But that's all very physical and doesn't allow any access to the supernatural. There's no reason for it to magically allow access to the non-physical, electricity is also physics. There's no evidence that the brain neurology requires special quantum effects for memory, intelligence or consciousness. Geometry, like mathematics, is a human language that can certainly express mind games without a physical basis, but that's called imagination, and there's also no evidence that imagination allows actual access to other dimensions, universes, beings, etc. Some human experiences can however give that delusion. And you don't really want crystals in your tissues, like oxalates or urea, it's painful disease. If your water forms crystals, your cells are likely to burst when you defrost. If it's a generalized condition, you're likely already dead from hypothermia...
Woo may sell to the ignorant but doesn't provide access to powers... It's a waste of time and money and even in older meditation doctrines this kind of pseudointellectual nonsense can be considered an obstacle on the path, like other rationalization types, it's still "in the form", in "duality".