The Benefits of
Food Therapy, Hypnosis
and Energy Therapy
A Holistic Approach to Health and Wellness
with
Dr. Danielle J. Duperret, ND/PhD
Spirit Body
Soul Mind
2
The Benefits of
Food Therapy, Hypnosis
and Energy Therapy
A Holistic Approach to Health and Wellness
with
Dr. Danielle J. Duperret, ND/PhD
Transcribed and edited, with notes added, from an interview
by Eric Auger, with Las Vegas Advice Givers
July 2015
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Eric: Good afternoon, this is Eric Auger with Las Vegas Advice Givers, Episode # 13. Today on
the show, we have Danielle Duperret, who is from Switzerland, right next door to where I grew up.
Danielle, are you here with us?
Danielle: Yes, I am here. Hello Eric.
Eric: Welcome, welcome to the show. So Danielle, we met actually quite awhile ago and we
kind of lost touch and then reconnected through Las Vegas Entrepreneurs Networking Group. You are a
naturopath and before I met you, I had no idea what that was. Can you define what a naturopath does?
Danielle: Naturopaths use nature, the power of nature, of food, the sun, water, rest and exercise
to stay healthy or recover health. Naturopaths do not deal with diseases, they deal with health. How to
maintain health or recover it.
Eric: Ok. Is it almost like a preventive measure?
Danielle: It is illegal for a naturopath with my training to do something that is preventive. Only
medical doctors are allowed to prevent diseases.
(Note: there are different kinds of ND-Naturopathic Doctors. Some have done medical studies as well as
naturopathic studies. They work at diagnosing, preventing and treating diseases using natural remedies,
such as plants, homeopathy and neutraceuticals. They can also use pharmaceutical drugs and do minor
surgeries. Then there are Traditional Naturopaths, who deal only with maintaining or recovering health. I
am a Traditional Naturopath. I do not diagnose, prevent, treat or cure diseases. I do use natural
remedies, but no pharmaceutical drugs or surgery. I have NOT gone through medical studies)
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Eric: Ok.
Danielle: It's all about staying healthy or recovering health.
Eric: Ok, very good. And what led you to become a naturopath? I think that you started on
that road in 1995, so take us back to 1995. Was there a defining moment for you, something that led
you to explore that discipline?
Danielle: Actually, that was when I got my doctorates. It started way, way before. When I was 10
years old, I wanted to become a medical doctor, but my parents could not afford the lengthy studies. I
wanted to be a neuro-surgeon. The brain and the mind fascinated me. When I was 15, I was diagnosed
with skin cancer and I had surgery every 6 months.
Eric: At what age?
Danielle: When I was 15, 1… 5…, 15 years old.
Eric: Ok. Oh, my God!
Danielle: I was sick during most of my childhood. I had all the vaccinations and some of the
diseases they were supposed to prevent. I had whooping cough,
mumps and the measles together. I was always the kid who missed
school the most. I was quite sick as a child. Then I was diagnosed
with cancer at age 15 and had surgery every 6 months. At 16, I
started to study psychology with an Institute in Paris, which was
also teaching nutrition. (Note: in Switzerland, school is over when
kids are 15-16, at which time they enter college or go into
apprenticeship.) One of the instructors said: "Why don't you study
nutrition as well? We have books that connect nutrition with
cancer." So I started to study nutrition and put into practice what I
was taught. I learned about eating raw, juicing and removing toxins.
I stopped going to the surgeon and I am still here. So it was in my teens that I became interested in
natural health.
Eric: Ok.
Danielle: Then I came to this country, had children and became sick again in my 30s. I was
bedridden for months. I went back to studying more about nutrition and that's when I got my degrees,
my doctorate in naturopathy (1994) and then a PhD in Natural Health (1996). I realized that nutrition
was not all there was to my condition. You also need to have your mind and your emotions under
control. My PhD dissertation was actually on "The Power of the Mind in Healing" and I went further in
that direction. So now, I work with food therapy and empower my clients to master their mind and their
emotions as well.
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Eric: Ok. So now you have a PhD and it's the result of a difficult childhood when you were sick
a lot. Have you ever been able to connect, to find out what was the source of your bad health? Was it
your nutrition? Was it something specific?
Danielle: I don't know that it was something specific. (Note: I was fortunate to have a happy
childhood surrounded by a wonderful family.) It is very controversial, but I am studying more about
vaccinations now and I had a lot of vaccinations. My pediatrician was even afraid, telling my parents,
"We are not going to give her anymore, she had all the vaccinations over and over." There are some
findings that vaccinations can lead to diseases. When I was bedridden in my 30s - I was in incredible
pain, screaming sometimes for hours - it could also have been a late side-effect of vaccinations.
Eric: Was it?
Danielle: It was called polyneuritis. My chiropractor said, "You have all the symptoms, but only
people who are alcoholics can contract polyneuritis." I was not drinking any alcohol. Doing some
research, I found out that it could also be a side-effect of vaccinations.
Eric: Amazing.
Danielle: Who knows whether that's it or not. I cannot go back to have a childhood without
vaccination to check it out.
Eric: Yes.
Danielle: But I became very healthy after I started the nutrition approach following the skin
cancer. I was happy and healthy.
Eric: How did you modify your nutrition? What changes did you make?
Danielle: Besides the studies with the French Institute and during the time I was having these
surgeries, I happened to be walking around in Lausanne, where I lived and I saw a poster on a telephone
pole with the title "Cure cancer with raw food." It was my first dip into something a little bit alternative.
You know when I was growing up, we had good food. My mom went to get fresh bread every morning,
we had produce from the farm. There was no GMO problems like we have today. However, I do not
think it was specifically good food for me. I learned later on that I was allergic to gluten and we ate a lot
of pasta and bread. It was probably part of the problems.
Anyway, back to that poster. I attended the conference. It was interesting. We arrived and there was a
huge table covered with fruits, vegetables and… crabs. They were asleep.
So we went in to the conference room, listened to
whatever was being taught about raw food and we
came out. We were supposed to partake of the bounty
on that table, but at that time, the crabs were walking
all around on top of the fruits and vegetables. We were told to grab a
crab, yank a claw and eat it. And I am going, "Nooooo. I don't think so." It was a little weird.
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After that, I came nose to nose with another poster on another telephone pole, this time promising
cancer cures with macrobiotics. I studied macrobiotics for a year. There, you cooked everything, even
your salad and your fruits. You cook everything. And then I decided to make my own thing, because not
everything worked right. I was also doing food experiments on my own, where I did not eat a food for
about 3 weeks and then over-dosed on it to see how my body reacted. That is a way to find out if you
are sensitive to a food or not.
Later on in my 30s and 40s, I did more studies and now I do what is called food therapy. I have a
computer program. I input a lot of information in it and it gives me a chart of what a person should or
should not eat. I then talk to my clients about what's good and what's not, and why.
(Note: Food chart example
In Green: foods that act like medicine
In Black: foods that are "just" nutrition,
neutral
In Italick: only eat rarely
In Red: food the body considers as
poisons)
Eric: Fantastic. Now, talking about your clients, what are the problems or issues you like to
work on most?
Danielle: Well, as mentioned, I do food therapy. I have a client who is an acupuncturist and who
does what's called the Tapping Techniques, as well as different energy therapies. She wanted me to
tweak her nutrition. So I inputted her blood type, metabolic type, brain chemistry type and her age into
the program, as well as the conditions she was dealing with. Age is important, because at different ages,
food reacts differently in the body. When I gave her the chart, she said, "I am not supposed to eat rice?
But I am Chinese." She ate rice every day. She had scleroderma and was almost totally blind. Besides
being a colleague, she was also a friend, so I said, "Why don't you give it a try?" It took her a few weeks,
then she agreed, "Ok, I'll try to follow the chart for one month." She wrote me back within 2 weeks,
saying, "You know, the pain is going away, my hands are not so stiff and I am starting to see colors."
So I believe food is important. Some people can eat whatever they want because they have good
genetics, but some people have to be more careful and others have to be extremely selective with food.
With a computer program now, we can quickly and easily find out what specific food people should eat
for specific conditions.
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Eric: So you are saying that the body reacts differently to food depending on who you are,
depending on your genetic, maybe your medical history, and that based on that you need to tweak what
you eat and you can actually decrease the effects of some symptoms, just by doing that?
Danielle: Exactly, yes. That's part of the Key # 1 - Health and Vitality in my program 5 Keys to
Thrive on Planet Earth.
(Note: the 5 Keys are:
Key # 1: Health and vitality - Food, detox, movement and nature
Key # 2: Emotional F.R.E.E.D.O.M. - Free yourself from disempowering beliefs
Key # 3: Mental Fitness Training - train your mind for laser sharp focus
Key # 4: Imagineering or the Power of the Mind in Healing - BodyMind Partnership
Key # 5: Love, Life and Miracles - When You Change Your Energy, You Change Your Destiny)
Eric: Good
Danielle: But if for instance you live in a very stressful environment, like an abusive household - I
worked a lot with abused women and abused children - food is
not going to be enough. Your first need is to get out of that
environment and remove all the stress symptoms. You are not
going to tell somebody who has PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder), "Just eat a cucumber and you are going to feel
better." You have to get rid of the symptoms of PTSD. That's
what I like to work with. I like to dig deep to find the root cause
of the problem.
Eric: So the first thing you like to work on is the food therapy and then you move onto the
more psychological aspects of what's going on.
Danielle: It all depends on my clients' needs. I also work with business people. I am known for
finding the root cause of a blockage. Right now I have a client, a businessman, who cannot move
forward in his business. He feels something is blocking him. I am not going to do food therapy with him.
That is not what he is interested in.
We are working with a technique called InterActive Guided Imagery(sm) or Client-Centered
Hypnotherapy, going back in time to see why he has that blockage, why it is that he cannot break free of
that glass ceiling. One blockage we already found was that, when he was a child, an Army brat, he was
very worried and felt uncertain about having to move to Germany. He had to leave all his friends and he
felt that uncertainty. He was very stressed about this idea and he kept that stress locked within him.
Now, going into a new business, that uncertainty suddenly surfaces and is blocking him. We also found
another problem, an addiction. He feels bad about this addiction and subconsciously he is punishing
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himself, not allowing himself to move forward in his business. We found out what to do, and where it
came from with the imagery and then we use the F.R.E.E.D.O.M. Technique, my brand of EFT-Emotional
Freedom Techniques, or Tapping Techniques. I don't know if you are familiar with the Tapping
Techniques, many people talk about them now, as they help to remove blockages. It's a great tool.
Eric: It is? Yes, tell me more about that. How does that work and how does it remove a
blockage?
Danielle: Well, I'll give you a very short history. You know about
acupuncture, a technique where people insert needles in specific points
on the body. That's been known for some 5000 years in China. Then a
chiropractor, Dr. Goodheart, figured out that you do not need to put
needles, you can just tap on these different points to remove allergies. So
he used that in his practice as a chiropractor for allergies. Then a
psychologist, Dr. Roger Callahan, attended one of his seminars. He made
the connection that an allergy was the same to the body as a phobia was
to the mind. It was an over-reaction.
He started to work with his patients who had fears and phobias, tapping on different points. Within
minutes, the fear or the phobia was gone. Some medical doctors realized that the patients who were
using the Tapping Techniques saw a lot of their symptoms diminishing or going away. It is
understandable because a lot of the symptoms we have come from stress. The Tapping Techniques help
to remove the stress. So medical doctors started to use the Tapping Techniques.
Then it drifted to the world of athletes; many athletes have blockages. They know
how to perform well, yet something is blocking them and they cannot do better.
Just doing the Tapping has helped people improve their golf game, for example. I
was visiting somebody one day and the television was on. There was a hockey game.
I saw a guy going on the ice doing the Tapping. It was quite interesting.
Eric: So you recognized that what he was doing…
Danielle: … was the Tapping.
Eric: Oh, I see…
Danielle: The Tapping will not teach you how to do something. For example, I worked with people
who were doing martial arts. It will not teach you how to
do martial arts, but it will help you improve faster. For
instance, I was learning Aikido and I was afraid of the falls
or of tumbling, because I hurt myself during one of the
exercises. I had to learn to do it. I used the Tapping
Technique to not be afraid to do another fall. It helped me
improve faster. You still have to learn to do things, you still have to learn how to do business for
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instance. If you need to do cold calling, you can remove the fear or anxiety about cold calling and you
will then do the calls instead of stalling.
Eric: So when you have to perform, you are in a much better mindset to perform better.
Danielle: Exactly. A lot of public speakers actually use the Tapping Techniques. It does not teach
you how to speak, but it removes the fear of public speaking.
Eric: Interesting. So you can cure (Note: naturopaths are not allowed to "cure", they "relieve")
some of the symptoms in people, but you can also help improve people's performance. It works on both
sides.
Danielle: Exactly. It helps people with performance. Now there is also a study by Kaiser Hospitals,
I believe it was based on 17,000 people, called the ACE-Adverse Childhood Experiences Study. In that
study, they found that 86% of people who suffered from degenerative diseases had an adverse
childhood experience. The energy of that experience is still stuck, somewhere in the body. We have
energy circulating in our bodies. What we believe is happening is that when we experience stress or a
trauma, for some reason, that energy stops circulating. It gets "frozen." By using the Tapping, you help
that energy get unstuck and move through the body again.
(Note: Dr. Hamer, a German oncologist, also found that a trauma would cause something like a short-
circuit in the brain. 6 months to 20 years later, a cancer or degenerative disease would develop if the
trauma had not been resolved.)
Eric: So it's that mind-body connection.
Danielle: I work on what is called psycho-neuro-immunology or psychosomatic problems, which is
the body-mind connection.
Eric: Very good. Now what are the other areas you work on or the other specialties that you
work with on your clients?
Danielle: I had a client in California who had chronic and clinical
depression. For years and years, she had been depressed. Again, we used
the imagery to find out where her depression came from. It took about 6
months to get to the root causes and to release them. I was not using the
Tapping Techniques at the time. I was just using Imagery and different
remedies. It took about 6 months and she got out of her depression.
Then, she also had a weight problem. She tried all kinds of weight loss diets and
other therapies and it just did not work. So we went back to Imagery. At the
time, I did not believe in past lives. To me, it just did not exist, yet my client
went back to a time when I guess her ancestry was in Europe and her people
were coming to America on boats. She could remember being famished on that
boat. She constantly wanted to eat.
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We know now that we carry emotions from our ancestry in your DNA. For some reason, the hunger was
passed down in her DNA and she was constantly hungry, constantly thinking she was starving.
So, using InterActive Guided Imagery(sm), we can find the reason for the challenge and then we can use
the Tapping Techniques to remove the energy, the frequency of the challenge. Then, we move on to see
if there is another subconscious blockage.
Eric: Now, how do you cancel that imagery of being hungry at that time. How does that work
with the Tapping?
Danielle: How it works? I don't think anybody understands how it works. The medical doctor who
taught me about energy said, "You know, we don't understand, but maybe in 50 to a 100 years, we'll
understand what we are doing. But it does not do any damage and it works wonderfully. Why not use
it?"
As I mentioned, I started to study about the mind and nutrition when I was 15. In all my years of
research since that time, I have never come across anything that works as well as the Tapping
Techniques. It is just amazing. When I initially heard what they could do, I thought it was snake oil. It was
just not possible that such a simple technique - I taught it to my 5-year old son, and he is using it - could
work on so many different issues. We are still not sure how it works, but it does.
What is unfortunate is that this technique has been trivialized. I hear a lot of people now saying, "Oh,
yeah, the Tapping Techniques, I tried, it does not work." It works, if you use them properly. Just
downloading a free book is probably not the best way to succeed. Come and do a workshop with me
here in Las Vegas or find somebody who is using them successfully and learn to apply them efficiently.
Eric: Right, right. What you were telling me last week is that there has been a lot of
marketing and publicity made around the Tapping and it kind of took away from its efficiency because it
is not taught correctly.
Danielle: There are what is called the "1-minute
miracle". When I was teaching in high rise buildings, I
always had some students who were afraid of height
or of going in an elevator. Usually, that fear goes away
easily, within 10 minutes. It's not a problem. However,
for somebody who has a degenerative disease like
multiple sclerosis for instance, 10 minutes will not do
it, because there are layers upon
layers upon layers of problems that have never been addressed. You do not have
multiple sclerosis from one day to the next. You have signals before that something
is not working properly. We have a testimonial of somebody with MS who did the
Tapping for 2 years, every day, who got out of her wheelchair.
Eric: Seriously. She could walk again?
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Danielle: She could walk again. Is that going to happen with everybody? You never know. You
don't know why they have the problem and what they can do. What we say in the InterActive Guided
Imagery(sm) circle is that the person knows why they have a problem, when it started and they know
what they can do about it. My job is to pull it out of the subconscious mind to make it conscious. Then
we can work on it.
Eric: Now, let's talk a little
bit about energy and vitality because
it's a subject that is very important to
me and to a lot of our listeners. In
everyday life, we are always called to
perform better, and better, and better.
We are like athletes who never get a
season off. And there is only so much energy and vitality we can draw out of ourselves and I know for
example that quite frequently, by mid-day, I have that 2-hr window. That's it, I am drained and I try to
concentrate and it's just not working. So let's talk about energy and vitality. What can people do and
how to manage it so that we have all these resources available to us when we need them.
Danielle: Well, first of all, the human body is not meant to work 24 hrs a day. A lot of us try to do
that and it does not work. You need some rest. It is during the time that you sleep that your body is
recovering. So, rest is important. And then, nature is important. People do not realize that we have a
certain vibration, a certain frequency and that going out in nature is like a reboot. I used to go out all the
time when I was a kid. With my parents, we used to walk in forests, we walked in the mountains, we
went to parks. Nowadays, people just stay glued to their computer, sitting day in and day out, and we
need nature. Nature is will give you a lot of vitality. So it's important to be in nature.
The sun is important. I do not mean going out to bake for hours in the sun but at least half an hour in
the morning or in the evening in the sun, that will also give you vitality.
Drinking water is important. Most people in America are dehydrated. Good water is important. And you
need to drink throughout the day.
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(Note: how do you know how much to drink? Drink until your urine is a very pale yellow. Some days, you
need to drink more than others. If you exercise, if it's hot, if you do some intellectual work, you need
more water than on a cold day when you are resting at home.)
Here is one trick if you have that slump, these 2 hours when your energy goes down. Take a cup of
water and sip about a third of it, and 5-10 minutes later, drink another third and then the last third 5-10
minutes later. Very often, it will help you get over that slump.
Eric: Ok.
Danielle: I often forget to drink. I did not drink much in Switzerland but here in Las Vegas, you
need to drink a lot.
Eric: Yes.
Danielle: Now, with our wonderful telephones … by the way, try not to drink out of plastic
bottles…
Eric: Ok, so I did not show you that bottle then…
Danielle: I have an iPhone and I put a reminder to drink
every hour. The reminder is to drink and to notice what I am
thinking about. Am I thinking about something positive or is my
mind going around on a problem? Becoming aware of what you
are thinking about is also very important because a lot of our
thoughts are not necessarily positive and uplifting. Just become
aware of your thoughts. If you are going to use the Tapping Techniques, you can tap away all those
disempowering thoughts.
Eric: Ok.
Danielle: Then you replace these disempowering thoughts with something more uplifting,
empowering and positive.
And then food again. If you are going to stuff yourself with delicious
spaghettis or pizza at noon, expect to fall asleep in the afternoon.
For me, it takes about 10 minutes if I eat food with gluten. I get very
sleepy. So be careful what you eat. Eat some salad and lean meat, if
you have the blood type that needs to eat meat. And if you like the
pizzas and the pastas, do it when you are going to fall asleep… but
it's still not a good idea.
Eric: Right.
Danielle: But watch what you are eating throughout the day to keep that energy going.
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Eric: Ok. So you really have an approach that encompasses a lot. It
encompasses the food, the nutrition, the energy, the subconscious mind, it's
like a whole package thing, as opposed to maybe a western doctor who would
be specialized into looking at just your brain or just something else. So you have
an approach that almost looks at everything, right?
Danielle: It is a holistic approach. It is a psychosomatic or body-mind approach. Psycho-neuro-
immunology means your psyche, your thought, your subconscious mind works on your nervous system,
which then works on your immune system. I have been in the field for over 40 years, so I had the
opportunity to learn different things, to be sick and to recover, and to experience different therapies
and techniques. With new clients and with new issues, I keep on researching. I also like to work with
medical doctors, because I do not have their knowledge and I think if we balance the holistic with the
medical, it could be wonderful.
Eric: Yeah. How come… You know this is kind of a discipline or an aspect of medicine that is
not widely known. Why is it that people are not more interested or not talking more about it?
Danielle: Well, I think that in California, everybody knows what a naturopath or a holistic doctor
is. Also in California, there are a lot of groups which comprise a naturopath, a medical doctor, a
psychologist, a chiropractor and a massage therapist. It's a wonderful way to work together. We don't
see that yet in Las Vegas.
Many people, when you talk about food, think that they already know because they read an article, or
maybe they are afraid. Many people know they are not eating right and they don't want a naturopath to
tell them, "Eat this, don't eat that…" I tell my clients that instead of looking at what they cannot eat, to
look at all they can eat. Often, it's just about making very small changes.
When I see clients who have very bad eating habits, I usually start with salt, because if you start with
something that is simple, they will do it.
Salt can be the white salt that has
absolutely nothing and causes health
problems or it can be Real Salt, Celtic salt
or Himalayan salt or other unrefined salts.
These have about 86 minerals that the
body needs. It does not change the taste
of the food that you eat, but it's going to bring the minerals that you need.
Eric: That is an interesting tip. So the salt that you buy at the supermarket, like iodized salt,
could actually cause problems?
Danielle: Yes. You know, a lot of medical doctors tell you to give up the salt. Well, give up that
kind of salt, but the body needs salt. If you have an emergency and you go to the hospital, what do they
do? They give you a saline solution.
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Eric: Right.
Danielle: If you taste your tears, they are salty. We need salt in the body but we need the good
kind of salt. (Note: and it should not be overdone. A little salt is good. We do not need much.)
Eric: So Himalayan salt you said is a lot better than regular iodized salt, when you cook.
Danielle: Yes. Himalayan or Celtic, which is grey, or Real Salt, which comes from the mines of
Utah, way, way deep in the Earth. That is a good salt too.
Eric: Ok.
Danielle: Then I move onto oils, because oils are not going to change the taste of the food that
you eat, but some oils will clog up your cells. You probably know that your body is made up of cells, and
on the membranes of these cells you have doors for nutrients to go in and doors for trash to get out.
That membrane is actually the brain of the cell and it is made up of oils. If you eat oils that clogs these
doors, nutrients cannot get in, trash cannot get out and eventually the cell will die. So the oils that you
ingest are very important too.
Eric: Ok, very good. Now, if somebody comes to see you, maybe because they want to
perform better or they want to lose weight or have more energy, how many sessions does it take to get
somebody to where they want to be? Kind of a loaded question I guess.
Danielle: Well, it depends. I just worked with a lady when I was in
Denver. She had a swollen lymph node and it took 10 minutes to get it down.
Then there was this lady who had chronic depression: it took 6 months.
I get an idea usually. I talk to people for awhile and then I see what I can do, if
I can do something for them. I get an idea about how many sessions it will
take to see an improvement. And it's different for everybody. So, it's difficult
to answer that question.
Eric: Right, ok, ok.
Danielle: If you have a fear of going in an elevator or a fear of flying… I had a lady who contacted
me from New York (most of my sessions are done by Skype). She wanted
to fly to Europe to visit her daughter and she was very, very scared about
flying. Within an hour, we took all that fear of flying away and she actually
enjoyed her trip. It is usually pretty easy to get rid of things like fears and
phobias. If you have to go deeper, like with addictions and weight loss,
depression or PTSD, it's going to take more than 10 minutes.
Eric: Ok. Now if one of our listeners is experiencing some of those symptoms, and they say I
want to go see someone, at what point should they just say, "Hey, you know what, I need to go see
someone. Danielle, make an appointment." How do they know it's time for them to take action?
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Danielle: Well, first of all, you have to become aware you have a problem. An alcoholic is not
going to do anything until he becomes aware that he is an alcoholic and he needs to do something, he or
she needs to do something. So awareness is first. Then he has to be willing. He has to say, "It's ok, I
realize I have this problem, but am I willing to do something about it?"
Eric: Ok.
Danielle: That's when I come in with tools and techniques. I have studied many tools, many
strategies and techniques. Then people need to take action. You know that it's not enough to hear about
the Tapping Techniques, they need to do the Tapping and that will bring success. So you have
Awareness, Willingness, Tools and Techniques, Actions and that bring success.
Awareness + Willingness + Tools and Techniques + Action = SUCCESS!
Eric: So as soon as they are willing to act on all 4, then it's a good time for them to come see
you and you can speed up that process for them.
Danielle: Exactly. You may realize that you don't feel well and that you could have more vitality,
but maybe you also realize that you don't have 20 years to study everything and an article in a
newspaper is not going to give you all the tools. A lot of people think, "Ok, I read that I am supposed to
take this herb for my condition." Every week though, there is a new miracle herb for more energy, more
vitality, more this or less that. But there is more to health than just taking an herb.
Eric: Right, right. If it was just that easy as a DYI guide, then there would not be any doctors,
right?
Danielle: Exactly. Yes.
Eric: Very good. Now if one of our listeners wants to get a hold of you, maybe to just have a
conversation or ask you a question or set up a consultation with you, what is the best way for them to
get a hold of you?
Danielle: You can go on my website, that's TakingYourLifeBackStartsNow.com or my name,
DanielleDuperret.com, it takes you to the same place or you can call me at 702-900-6730.
We can talk or set up an appointment. What I have also done is have lunch with some people and we
talk during our time together so I can feel whether I can help them or not.
Eric: Very good, very good. And you know, I've known Danielle
for awhile now and she is very intuitive. She has a way of being able to
pick up on all those cues and is able to tell you, "Ok, this is the direction
you should take." I've noticed that about you.
Danielle: Yes. Intuition plays a role too. Intuition, experience,
study and research.
16
Eric: Ya, ya, absolutely. So DanielleDuperret.com or TakingYourLifeBackStartsNow.com.
Right?
Danielle: Yes.
Eric: Very good, very good. Well, thanks for spending that time with us, Danielle. We really,
really appreciate. I think our listeners learned a lot about you and about what you do and how you can
help them speed up either their recovery or improve their performance and you are in Las Vegas of
course, so you will be available to them. Any last thought you want to add before we end our time
together?
Danielle: Well, what I am studying right now is
about genes. A lot of people think it's because of
genetics that they have cancer, or have diabetes, or that
they are overweight. New research shows that genetics
count for only about 5%. Your lifestyle counts for 95% of
what's happening to you and you can take care of your
health.
Eric: Ok. And the lifestyle is something you can control because this is the thing you can
affect the second you make a change.
Danielle: Exactly.
Eric: Very good, very good. Well thank you for your time again.
Danielle: Well ,thank you for having me.
Eric: Of course. And you know, listeners, we would appreciate if you want to just take a
minute or two and leave us a positive review on iTune.com. Thank you again for listening and we'll catch
you again next week.
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USEFUL LINKS
To listen to the interview:
http://lasvegas.localadvicegivers.com/2015/07/27/lvag-013-the-benefits-of-food-therapy-hypnosis-and-
energey-therapy-with-danielle-duperret-ph-d-in-natural-health/
Dr. Danielle's website TakingYourLifeBackStartsNow.com or DanielleDuperret.com
Dr. Danielle's phone # 702-900-6730
Dr. Danielle's email [email protected] or [email protected]
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