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Vianna Stibal
A Fake
Naturopathic Doctor
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Vianna Stibal has authored several books, most of which are
simply rearrangements and restatements of her basic materials.
This tactic helps in the deception of being an author of many
books. Its too bad that neither she nor anyone on her staff are
bright enough to grasp the point that 500 pieces of paper trash
dont equal one well written page. None
of her materials hold the slightest
evidence of being generated by a fluent
author. Nearly every sentence causes
the reader to ask, What?
If you have an appetite for bad
grammar, misspelling, and ridiculous
sequences of thought processes, then
her stack is waiting for you. Her printed
page has about the same net effect as a dose of chloroform.
In several of these books, she makes reference to her
background as a naturopath. With regularity she uses that
word. As with complex words she hears, she mimics it and throws
it around in volume. Her mentality is that if she puffs the word
enough, it will become her legitimate background. And, with
that, doesnt she insult our intelligence?
While she uses the term loosely, she does so with a reckless
regard for accuracy or truthfulness. The context of her writings
show a specific desire to show off to the
reader. She displays a real insecurity for her
true colors: She has no higher education.
And, most certainly, she has never
completed any training course in
naturopathy.
As a snippet of information,
Naturopathy, Wikipedia says, (also
known as naturopathic medicine or natural
medicine) is an eclectic alternative medical
system that focuses on natural remedies and the body's vital
ability to heal and maintain itself. Naturopathic philosophy favors
a holistic approach and minimal use of surgery and drugs
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One may favor naturopathic solutions and even advocate its
principles. Many people do prefer a natural, organic, and holistic
way of life. However, Vianna Stibal doesnt just prefer and
advocate, she pronounces that she is proficient, well read,
effective, experienced, and successful in naturopathy. She self-
advances by declaring herself to be at the highest level of
naturopathic knowledge and practice. She decorates her empty
credentials by claiming she is a Naturopathic Doctor, an N.D.
In Ms. Stibals book, Go Up and Seek God, she identifies
herself not only as the copyright holder of the material, but also
as a Naturopathic Doctor, an N.D. The following graphic is a
caption of her published claim. It is from the
Acknowledgements section of her book, Go Up and Seek God.
The credentialing and requirements of a Naturopathic Doctor is
summarized by Julierae JR Weldon. A naturopathic doctor,
she writes at jrweldon.com/terminology, is a naturopath who
has a minimum of seven years of postsecondary education and
possesses a degree or diploma that grants the use of the term
Naturopathic Doctor or N.D. A Doctor of Naturopathy is the
same as a Naturopathic Doctor.
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The official credentialing is further discussed at Wikipedia.
They say that a, Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine (ND or in
Arizona "Naturopathic Medical Doctor" or NMD), in sixteen U.S.
States and six Canadian provinces, refers exclusively to an
alternative medicine degree granted by an accredited
naturopathic medical school. While
these degrees may be held by people
outside of these states and provinces,
in most other jurisdictions, the terms
are unprotected and may be used by
anyone, regardless of educational level.
Practitioners who hold such a degree
may also legally use the title 'doctor' in
certain jurisdictions, but not in others.
Equivalent professional titles may be
reserved for ND/NMDs in other
jurisdictions (Naturopathic Doctor,
Naturopathic Physician, Naturopath), or there may be no legally
protected title
The American Association of Naturopathic Physicians (AANP) is
the national organization for licensed naturopathic physicians
who are graduates from four-year doctoral programs from
federally (or USDE) accredited schools and who have passed a
national licensing examination.
A licensed naturopathic physician (N.D.) attends a four-year
graduate-level naturopathic medical school and is educated in all
of the same basic sciences as an M.D., but also studies holistic
and nontoxic approaches to therapy with a strong emphasis on
disease prevention and optimizing wellness. In addition to a
standard medical curriculum, the naturopathic physician is
required to complete four years of training in clinical nutrition,
acupuncture, homeopathic medicine, botanical medicine,
psychology, and counseling (to encourage people to make
lifestyle changes in support of their personal health). A
naturopathic physician takes rigorous professional board exams so
that he or she may be licensed by a state or jurisdiction as a
primary care general practice physician.
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See www.naturopathic.org. :
http://www.naturopathic.org/content.asp?pl=16&sl=56&cont
entid=56, and
http://www.naturopathic.org/Files/About_Naturopathic_Me
dicine/AANMC%20Competency%20Profile%203-31-08.pdf.
Uumm there is a problem here. The AANP has no record
of Vianna Stibal ever being a licensed Naturopathic Physician
upon whom the title N.D. is bestowed.
Furthermore, the IDAANP is the Idaho
chapter of the AANP. The designation for a
Naturopathic Physician in the State of Idaho
is N.M.D. The IDAANP has no record of
Vianna Stibal ever being a licensed
Naturopathic Physician. See:
http://www.idaanp.org/default.htm
But, perhaps we are all fools. We may not
be sophisticated enough to ignore a typo.
A typo? Sure.
Ms. Stibals continuing claims of
naturopathic proficiency and credentialing
continues.
As a single mother with three young children to support, she
writes, I soon decided that working at a manufacturing plant
did not offer much of a future, and the income was less than
desirable, so I began to concentrate on the study of Naturopathic
Medicine, and in March of 1994, I went into a full-time massage
and Naturopathic Practice. A friend of mine mentioned that
since I already had an office and a growing clientele, it might be
a good idea to incorporate psychic readings into my practice for
extra income. I started booking readings and immediately that
area of my business began to sky-rocket, and soon I had more
clients for readings than for anything else I offered.
I worked as a Psychic and Medical Intuitive, and I received
validation many times as to the correctness of what I found. Also,
my knowledge of nutrition was helping people, even those
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with cancer. It was during this time that I discovered I could
actually see the problems inside peoples' bodies. I was quite a
natural at looking inside bodies and locating the weakened or
afflicted areas that needed help. I blended
the knowledge of Naturopathy with my
newfound skills, and began helping people to
recover from their illnesses. Vianna
Stibal, Go Up and Seek God, Page 3 [
Emphasis added.]
In her text rearrangements and continued
comments she writes, In 1991 was trained to
be a nuclear security guard, for a local
nuclear government facility. Instead I ended
up working at a local manufacturing plant.
On our breaks I would draw sketches of
employees and give them short intuitive
readings.
I soon decided that this was not the right career for me,
because I was a single mother of three young children. I began
concentrating on my naturopathic training, and in March of 1994
I went into a full time naturopathic and
massage business. Go Up and Work
With God, page 5. [Emphasis added.]
In her next book she writes, It was in
1991 that I began the training for the job of
a nuclear security guard. Competition in the
training was fierce and I had to learn skills
that pushed me to the limit. After passing
and receiving my year-long training I took a
job at a nearby manufacturing plant. In the
mean time, I waited for my security
clearance to work for the Government.
During this time I never forgot my other
interests. On breaks I would draw sketches of the employees and give
them short intuitive readings. This was shift work, and I would often
work midnights to morning. As a single mother with three young
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children to support, I soon decided that working as a security
guard at a manufacturing plant did not offer the future that I
wanted for us. I knew that something had to change. Health
problems added the incentive I
needed to concentrate on the
study of Naturopathic
Medicine. Once I had passed
the course in Naturopathic
Medicine, in March of 1994 I
opened a business offering
full-time massage, nutritional
counseling, and Naturopathic
Practice. ThetaHealing,
page 1. [ Emphasis added.]
As with so very many deceptions in the ThetaHealing cult,
Vianna Stibal makes the claim to be a Naturopathic Doctor. In
fact, she is not. She never has been. She simply lies and
maintains deception. Yet, isnt this just the type of person that
God chooses as the exclusive conduit for knowledge about the
operations of the universe?
Just for the record, the stairway to Heaven is not stairs spaced
at 5 to 7 Hz. For Viannas benefit (since she knows nothing about
science) thats cycles per second the
frequency of the theta brainwave.
Also, just for the record, Vianna Stibal
has not installed a gate at the stairway to
Heaven.
In conversations and interviews, Ms.
Stibal attempts to reduce the impact of her
fraud by incorrectly and deceptively saying
that her native state of Idaho in the United
States makes no ethics requirements,
qualification standards, nor titling
guidelines in order to practice. She makes
an interesting side-step, but the substance
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of the question remains: Is Vianna Stibal a Naturopathic Doctor as
she claims she is? Is she? That question has nothing to do with the
licensing or qualification standards of the location of her business
practice. It has to do with her personal truthfulness and the
truthfulness of her claim.
Incidentally, what exactly is her corporate business? Does it
have anything to do with ThetaHealing or naturopathy? Well, the
Better Business Bureau believes her business to be composed of a
group of massage therapists. Fraud? Perhaps. Return the
website to watch the frauds come to the surface.
So, back to the topic at hand.
Does Vianna Stibal hold authorized credentials of a
Naturopathic Doctor? The explicit answer is this: Absolutely not!
He hold no N.D. degree. She has no registration or association
with any local, state, regional, national, or international
naturopathic organization.
There is no oops! here. Her story not
only remains, but it continues to be
parroted. She has never made a
retraction. The subject is carefully
ignored.
Just think of those who have been
properly educated, trained, licensed. They
deserve respect for their achievements.
She holds none of those qualifications. She
must not have the same credit and honor.
Think of her cult followers. Frankly, you
must have some degree of compassion for
anyone who is so emotionally troubled and
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intellectually vacant as to be joined at the hip to Vianna Stibal.
Such people are to be pitied. They are avid and steadfast
followers who must unwaveringly rise to her defense. They are
compelled to create any logical or
emotional explanation for her
fraudulent behavior. There can be no
problem, discrepancy, error, or lie left
without the full application of a
ThetaBroom Whatever the filthiness,
it must be swept under the ThetaRug.
Truthfulness is the issue on this
subject. And, by extension, if she lies
on this matter does she or will she lie
on other matters relating to her claims
of effectively commanding God or of
complete association with God.

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