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PRESS RELEASE:
a new game for grade schools to change student behavior one
at a time
| WHO’S
TALKING©2007 in association
with Unraveling Your Past®
A communication game for 10 year-olds
to adults, that makes the book Unraveling Your Past®
to Get Into the Present come to life. Who’s Talking
©2007 is a communication
game for the classroom and for the family. Adults and
children play together and find a better way to communicate.
This is a game that teaches self-discipline. Playing
Who’s Talking© teaches each player to be
himself or herself: the authentic self.
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Comments
from parents:
- “This
game makes you laugh; I have never had a game make
me laugh this much.”
- “This
game teaches you to be who you really are.”
-
“I can use the characters in the game to remind
my daughter when she is not herself.”
Comments
from children: Each one says the same thing in different
words.
FOUNDATIONS
and CHARITIES
Teachers
all across America spend their own money in the classroom
will you help them? There are special projects and day
to day ideas that the grade school teacher brings to
life from his or her own bank account. If you want to
help the children learn better, be better behaved, as
well as staying calm and focused, give the communication
game, Who’s Talking©, to the grade
school teachers of America. Do it today. We are targeting
the 5th grade students at this time by test marketing
5th grade classes.
- Our
goal is to have each student in California and then
America have the opportunity to play WHO’S
TALKING©2007 by Unraveling
Your Past®
- Our
goal is to have Foundations and Charities in America
give this game to each 5th grade school teacher’s
classroom. She or he can use Who’s Talking to
open communication lines and solve behavior problems.
- Please
contact us to give a better education to American
children.
To Teachers:
If you are
a grade school teacher, or high school teacher please
request games for your classroom by e-mailing us through
the website following. The game helps students be self
disciplined and tell the truth. Is this something you
would like to have in your classroom?
Paulette
Renee Broqueville
Broqueville Publishing, 1260 Logan Ave. Suite B3, Costa
Mesa, CA. 92626
www.broqueville.com
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TV
Interviews:
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Re: New book:
Unraveling
Your Past to Get Into the Present
An answer
to the question, “Who Am I?” written by Paulette Renee Broqueville
What
does everyone
want more of - besides money? Happiness!
How can we get it?
How can we keep it?
Why do we not have more of it?
A new writer, Paulette Renee Broqueville, has written
a book that takes the reader from
acting day to day on automatic pilot
- being an actor or an actress wearing masks, pretending
to be happy, pretending to be someone important, someone -
anyone - but one’s self;
to knowing
who you really are,
knowing what you really want to do, and expressing who you
really are. The
book is called Unraveling Your Past to Get Into
the Present. There
are many self-help books that can tell the reader what the
problem is but Ms. Broqueville’s book gives you over 100 mental
exercises to edit the reader’s subconscious mind and relieve
you of the fear which keeps you from being who you really
are. “Being who you really are is the only way to be happy,” says
Ms. Broqueville.
Magazine:
Seems so easy, so simple!
PRB: It is very complicated in its simplicity.
It takes courage to be yourself.
People have been raised with the word NO.
They are afraid of hearing that
word and so they tailor their
behavior around not hearing that word.
For example: putting on an act of being happy when
inside you are crying; doing what someone else wants you to
do and pretending to like it when you do not; and agreeing
with someone’s idea when you know that the idea is a bad one.
Magazine:
Everyone does this!
Are you saying that your book helps people
to tell the truth?
PRB: Yes. There are a lot of hurt feelings inside of each one of
us that occurred in childhood. These hurts have taught us
to be afraid of being honest about our feelings, our wants.
For example:
Injustice:
children have been
blamed for things that they did not do.
Criticism:
children have been criticized when
they should have been encouraged, praised for what they did
correctly and taught how to do things right.
Not
being justly reprimanded: the parent covered up the child’s
wrong-doing. The
child then carries the guilt of not being punished or worse
that someone else was blamed and punished for his or her wrong-doing.
Magazine:
It seems like years of therapy would be needed.
PRB:
Unraveling Your Past to Get
Into the Present
is a book of questions.
The answers are given by the reader; therefore, the
book is written by the reader who answers the questions and
solves the mysteries of his or her own life circumstances.
It is the questions that accelerate the healing of the reader’s
psyche. The only
thing I do in the book is point out different perspectives
on life. I give
the reader different paths that the reader could choose to
take. I educate
the reader in what is or is not real.
As people - adults or children - we tend to look through
only one perspective.
My book teaches the reader to look at these past experiences
from multiple perspectives.
Why did the parent say, do, or act in this way?
What made the reader feel or think this way?
The problem comes in the future when the child, now
an adult, finds himself or herself in a similar situation:
a girlfriend makes him feel like his mother did when
he was 5, he reacts to his girlfriend as though he were 5
and reacting to his mother.
My book helps the reader expose the reason he has these
feelings. The
reader is now aware of why he feels this way; knowing the
reason why enables the reader to be able to
change. The
reader is the only one who can decide to change.
Change brings happiness; therefore, the readers of
my book tend to finish the book with a lot of happiness -
happiness that they did not have before they learned to have
the courage to be themselves: themselves, ourselves, yourself,
myself? Who is the self, but your soul
thinking, speaking, and acting; and, that is how you find
happiness.

Fables, Legends, and Myths?
Is
anyone writing fables, legends or myths today or is that only
in our past? A
new writer, Paulette Renee Broqueville, writes in the style of fables, legends and myths.
The
Answer to Sun Tzu
series
books,, have been mistaken for an ancient Chinese
manuscript. A question and answer book about a man and his mentor: The
mentor, and the Great General Sun Tzu, is a book that does
what many books aspire to do - inspire the reader.
Sun Tzu lived 2500 years ago, but his writing, The
Art of War, is
read today for not only military battle strategy; but also for business strategy.
We interviewed Ms. Broqueville.
Magazine:
What made you write this book about Sun Tzu?
PRB:
I took a military history class in 1968 where I learned about
how Sun Tzu’s book, The Art of War, had influenced
military generals for 2500 years. I write the way I think, I live this way and I act this way
as well. When
a boyfriend insulted me one day I sent him a fax; it was the
first answer to Sun Tzu that I wrote as
a conversation between the philosopher, Confucius,
and the General Sun Tzu.
That was my first Sun Tzu “Love and War.” I got my message across to him and it was the beginning of
the idea for this book.
I felt that business people would benefit from the
insights that I have into Asian philosophy.
We do a lot of business with Asians, and Americans
think entirely different than Asians do about every aspect
of life.
Magazine:
What do you think people will get from The Answer to Sun
Tzu?
PRB:
I believe they
will be inspired, encouraged, and supported in their own convictions
in life: people
should be fair, better service should be rewarded, respect
should be given to everyone,
the good and the innocent should be defended and protected,
and what to do when one’s inherent rights are violated
by: jealous, revengeful, slanderous, liars.
People will learn how to look at life and love and
their everyday battles in a different way.
Magazine:
How do you know all of these things that you have written.
Have you studied Sun Tzu?
PRB:
I have not studied
anything but the book, The Art of War by Sun Tzu. I
am a philosopher/ mentor who believes that people deserve
to be inspired to do better and think greater, deeper thoughts.
I believe that my book will do just that.
I want students in schools all over the world carrying
my books around; reading them for ideas on how to solve the
personal or business situations in which they find that they
need help. Maybe
he is young and needs help with a girlfriend.
Reading about the Soul
of a woman could
be a revelation to a man.
His hormones usually supercede and sex is all he can
think about when he looks at a woman. I present him with the thought of looking at the soul of a
woman. What a
mystery to unravel.
You see,
one must know that a thing exists before he or she
can search for it. I
let my readers know that these things exist and then they
go in search of them.
It makes for a more exciting life and an exciting interrelationship
with people - especially those who are also reading my books.
Magazine:
So you have taken a figure from 2500 years ago, a Chinese
General Sun Tzu and made him come alive today in order to
be a mentor to your readers?
PRB:
Yes, I have. I want to help people.
I want to teach them to talk soul to soul with each
other. I want
people to learn to be nice - play nice.
It is playing
dirty that hurts the souls of the people and gives them the
complexes that may take forever from which
to heal. I
really want to inspire young people to want to be nice, compliment
each other rather than be negative.
I want to make it cool to be wise, noble, honorable
and polite. Imagine
a world such as that.

Re:
New book: Gentle
Breeze Carrying the Scent of Flowers
accompanied
by the sequel Running
Water Kissed by the Sun, A story of growth through
questions, written by Paulette Renee Broqueville.
A
new writer, Paulette Renee Broqueville,
writes in the style of fables, legends and myths. Gentle
Breeze Carrying the Scent of Flowers
accompanied
by the sequel Running
Water Kissed by the Sun, series books,, have been mistaken for interpretations of Indian
legends. A
question and answer book about how an Indian Chief and his
wife answer the questions of a girl and a boy as they mature
into adulthood, reveals how they train children to grow up to be noble souls.
Ms. Broqueville’s books do what many books aspire to do - inspire the reader.
We interviewed Ms. Broqueville.
Magazine:
Indian legends tell a lot in very little text.
Your books do the same.
How do you think of the answers to the questions?
I know that you are not Indian and I wonder how you
could be raised as an American today and write such books.
PRB:
I was born into an immigrant family who came from Norway in
the early 1900’s, and was raised in Minnesota in a small town
of under 10,000. Our
family had a summer log
cabin in the woods on a lake:
no running water, we carried water from a pump;
no indoor plumbing, we had an outhouse; no electricity,
we had kerosene lamps.
I was raised without TV until the age of
around 10. Our Cabin was in the area of Minnesota near several Chippewa
Indian reservations.
Indian life fascinated me while I was growing up.
All of these factors influenced my soul: being raised
in nature, lack
of unnatural influences, and the peace and quiet of being
in nature allowed my soul to grow.
Magazine:
What is soul growth?
PRB: First, soul growth is having a conscience that lets you know,
by a feeling in your stomach, when
you are doing right or doing
wrong.
Second, soul
growth comes from examples of people who have noble souls.
The Indian
Chiefs I saw in the cowboy and Indian movies on TV had a way
of imparting
noble characteristics:
their word was good, they did not lie, they showed
respect to each other, they made agreements with the government
of the U.S. and
they kept their word; they had a sense of justice and honor
between each other.
All of these indicate soul maturity.
Magazine:
How do people learn to have soul maturity today?
PRB:
That is a difficult task with what people are exposed to today:
violence and
sex in
movies and on TV; repetitive music; drugs and alcohol,
MTV, Video Games,
and porno. All
of these are unnatural to the soul
and prevent the soul from functioning.
There is no soul growth if the soul cannot even choose
the life the
soul wants to have.
This is the reason why I am writing my books: I want
to mentor the souls.
Give people a choice of how to live, think, act and
speak. Speak as the soul or speak as the ego. The ego imprisons the soul.
People need to realize this.
Magazine:
What do you mean, choose the life the soul wants to have?
PRB: People are followers, they copy fads, they are
imitators of anything they see or hear if
they are ruled by the ego.
People are individuals, creative, inventive, self directed,
take responsibility for their actions and words, if
they are ruled by the soul.
Which life would you like to have: a robots or a creative,
inventive life.
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