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Printed in the Fall 2020 issue of Quest magazine.
Citation: Hebert, Barbara, "Annual Report 2020" Quest 108:4, pg 37-9
Barbara Hebert
President, Theosophical Society in America
This annual report covers some of the amazing things that our very dedicated staff have accomplished in the past year.
Our fiscal year runs from the beginning of April to the end of March. Therefore we had almost completed the 2019–2020 year when the pandemic impacted us. In mid-March 2020, everything stopped. We closed headquarters, anticipating a two-week closure. We continued to pay staff, but after remaining closed for five weeks, we realized that this was not a sustainable plan. With little to no income and continuing expenses, along with an extremely volatile stock market, concerns about the financial security of the TSA over the next year or so was of great concern. Therefore we furloughed about two thirds of the staff.
We put out a special call for help to the members and friends of the Theosophical Society in America. The response was rapid and amazing. On a daily basis, I send my gratitude to each and every one of you for your support. At this writing, many staff members have returned to work.
In mid-March, all face-to-face programming moved to an online format. The Thursday night lectures have continued; they are livestreamed weekly and then placed on our YouTube channel. Workshops have also moved to an online platform, as have classes. We have added a weekly online meditation, typically led by Juliana Cesano, and we have added an electronic Daily Seed Thought.
For the coming year, we expect to continue providing Theosophical programs online. This requires us to reallocate staff in some areas. Of course, we hope to eventually provide some face-to-face programs, but I anticipate that we will continue with many programs online. We have found that our audiences have actually increased, because the programs are now available to seekers around the country and around the world. This is our mission—to share the Ageless Wisdom with those who are seeking.
Below are the details from the various departments regarding their activities and accomplishments during the past fiscal year, April 2019 through March 2020..
Henry S. Olcott Memorial Library
The Henry S. Olcott Memorial Library collection is more and more visible through various points of access online. This visibility and accessibility helps us to build connections not only locally but worldwide.
This year we were able to work with Theosophical libraries in various countries to resolve collection gaps, we increased our membership by 23 percent from last year, and we began to make digitized audio recordings and textual resources more readily available, especially through an Internet archive (www.archive.org).
There is a wealth of Theosophical material yet to reach the Internet, and this project is one of our primary priorities. Since June 2019 we have digitized over 900 items, which have been viewed over 13,000 times. We are finding that the more our collection becomes known, the more people seek us out. Donations to the library continue to support its expansion and its role as a repository for the TSA. In addition, book sales, both in-house and online, and proceeds from outreach activities such as interlibrary loans have generated revenue that can help us subscribe to the library consortium, which supports our operation and presence locally and internationally.
Marina Maestas, head librarian
Archives Department
The archives department is very pleased to announce donations of archival materials from Walter A. Carrithers Jr., courtesy of The Blavatsky Foundation, and of the papers of the late Seymour B. (Sy) Ginsburg. Digitization projects continue to be a major activity for Janet Kerschner, working with Michael Conlin. She fields requests from academic researchers, Theosophists, and the general public for information about a huge range of topics. In June 2019, she helped the Florida Federation celebrate anniversaries with a presentation entitled ”One Hundred Years of Theosophy in Florida.” Janet works with Pablo Sender to coordinate the efforts of volunteer editors around the world as we expand our Theosophy.wiki encyclopedia online. With great cooperation from Daniel H. Caldwell and Pedro Oliveira, the Mahatma Letters portal was doubled in its scope early in 2020. Use of the wiki has been growing rapidly, with 30,000–33,000 page views each month by users from 140 different countries.
Janet Kerschner, chair, archives department,
Internet Services/Information Technology
The Internet services/information technology department continues to maintain and support all technology needs for the departments of the Theosophical Society in America. This year we completed a network infrastructure upgrade at the national headquarters, replacing old equipment and improving security settings. The redesigned theosophical.org website was rolled out in June 2019, attempting to simplify navigation while still offering a wide variety of resources and information. A new voiceover Internet phone system was installed across the Olcott campus. The IT department also continues to support projects such as the new Online School of Theosophy (https://study.theosophical.org), provide website hosting for lodges and study groups, and provide technology advice and support for a variety of Theosophical projects around the world.
Chris Bolger, chair, IS/IT department
Audiovisual Department
From April 2019 through March, 2020, the AV department posted fifty-nine new video titles to our Theosophical Society in America YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/user/TheosophicalSociety). Seven of the top ten most viewed programs on YouTube in the last year included “The Secret Teachings of All Ages” by Richard Smoley; two programs by Mitch Horowitz on The Secret Doctrine, two programs by Pablo Sender, “Human Consciousness” and “A Universe of Purpose”; “Answering the Spiritual Call,” a talk by William Meader; and “Catching Fire from the Flame of Truth” by Elena Dovalsantos. As of March 31, 2020, we had 74,400 subscribers to our TSA YouTube channel, a 55 percent increase from the previous year. We averaged 2,200 new YouTube subscribers per month last year.
Steve Schweizer, manager, AV department
Quest Book Shop
This past fiscal year was the Quest Book Shop’s most successful year in terms of numbers of visitors and sales. The efforts to widen the circle of customers have resulted in increased exposure to the Theosophical Society’s mission and programs. Providing books on a wide range of spiritual traditions has made it possible to increase awareness and sales of Theosophical literature published by the Theosophical Publishing Houses in both Wheaton and Adyar. The store remains profitable and open to the public every day of the week, thanks to the additional revenue coming from a great selection of crystals, incense, candles, statuary, and other sidelines. A valuable resource in the area, the bookstore offers a welcoming space for a community of people with greatly varied spiritual paths and aids them on their own particular quests.
Juliana Cesano, manager, Quest Book Shop
Membership and Outreach
Membership director Beverly Porzelt reports that as of March 31, TSA membership was 3,370, a 3.9 percent increase over the prior year. She also reported that we now have 910 Life Members. During the past year, David Bruce scheduled thirty-three national speaker appearances at lodges, study centers, camps, and federations. Because of the coronavirus, however, no further speaker bookings are anticipated in the near term. Most groups stopped meeting in March or April, but more than half of them began to hold virtual meetings via Zoom. Richard Smoley created a twelve-month course entitled Esoteric Christianity, which was distributed to the 520 members of the National Lodge. The prison program, under the direction of David Bruce, continues to provide assistance to prisoners across the country, offering them books, gift memberships, and correspondence courses mentored by volunteers from the Society. To date, over 450 prisoners have received certificates of completion for one or more of our courses.
David Bruce, national secretary
Theosophical Publishing House
The Theosophical Publishing House in Wheaton has been focusing on accelerating production of audiobook selections from our extensive variety of Quest Books and classic Theosophical titles. The audiobook edition is a rapidly expanding market through Amazon/Audible. The easy availability of Quest Book audio titles to a new audience will ensure the outreach of Theosophy into the future. To facilitate the search of seekers, especially during this time of pandemic, TPH continues to provide easily accessible means across all platforms: print, e-book, and audio book.
Since our return to full-time operation in May 2020, Quest Books has had a 40 percent discount on all products available on the questbooks.com website. The response has been beyond our expectations. This sale may be continued, so please check the questbooks.com website.
The resourceful and dedicated staff members who have returned to work at TPH and the national headquarters have brought a renewed energy and focus with them in this trying time.
Patricia Griebeler, operations manager, TPH
Public Programs
The public programs department strives to provide high-quality programs for study, meditation, service, and community participation that are of interest to our current members and attract new people.
Our Thursday Lecture series covers an eclectic range of topics from different traditions. By webcasting these, we reach a larger national and international audience, as people can watch them live over the Internet. During the past year, we presented thirty-six lectures, which had an average on-site attendance of thirty people and an average of eighty-six online viewers for the livestream. These recorded lectures are later available for on-demand viewing on our YouTube channel.
This year we hosted internationally renowned Buddhist teacher Ajahn Brahm for a lecture at the College of DuPage that was attended by 375 people. Ajahn Brahm’s lecture and following workshop is available on our YouTube channel as well as on CD and DVD through questbooks.com.
We promoted and hosted an additional sixty-two workshops, retreats, and special events, attended by 1,755 people. These included many free community events, such as World Tai Chi and Qigong Day, Interfaith Prayers for Peace, Celebrate the Season, and Meditation for World Peace.
We continue to increase the number of online interactive classes and groups, in which people from across the country and the world can actively participate. Last year, we offered fifteen online classes of four to six weeks’ duration, taught by experts in their respective areas of study. Almost 500 people from the U.S. and other countries participated in these classes. Our most popular weekly groups include “Walking the Theosophical Path” and the Mahatma Letters reading and discussion group with Pablo Sender. We invite you to explore the many different programs that are offered. An updated list is on our website (theosophical.org) under the “Programs” tab.
John Cianciosi, chair, programming department
Marketing Department
Our marketing department started the year ready to promote the Olcott Mural and Art Restoration Project, but quickly changed gears to focus on fundraising during the pandemic. The COVID-19 fundraising campaign was promoted via email, postal mail, and social media. As a result, we received generous gifts from over 430 donors. Thank you to all for your support! We have also made other changes as a result of the shifting landscape brought on by the pandemic, including the consolidation of our various monthly e-newsletters into one weekly update, in which we share information about free resources and promote our programs and fundraising campaigns. We have also initiated a totally new free Daily Seed Thought, which provides a spiritual quote each morning for meditation, contemplation, or inspiration. Contact marketing@theosophical.org to sign up for the Daily Seed Thought.
Jessica Salasek, chair, marketing department,
Maintenance Department
During the past year, the building maintenance department completed many interesting and challenging projects. The largest one involved renovation work at the L.W. Rogers cottage, which was built back in the 1930s. This house is used as a source of rental income for the TSA and usually houses employees. During this renovation, we completely rewired the house, because many of the electrical wires were original to the building. We were also able to add additional outlets and increase the electrical supply, bringing the house into the twenty-first century. We reinsulated the attic and refinished the bathtub and tub surround as well. Tom Porzelt and Nick Peters did much of the interior painting and detail work. Thanks to a combined team of TSA staff and outside contractors, everything in the house is now up-to-date and is a wonderful home for the new tenants!
While balancing COVID-19 restrictions and with the buildings closed to the public, we were still able to accomplish a lot of outdoor maintenance work. Tom Porzelt, Will Goldsmith, and Nick Peters did their best to keep the grass mowed, even through the wettest May in Chicagoland history. We were blessed with many volunteers, who helped by pulling weeds and planting flowers. Many thanks to Diana Cabigting, Danelys Valcarcel, Linda Dorr, and Pam Farinella. The Sustain DuPage volunteers, under the direction of Andrew Van Gorp, continue to amaze us with their gardening and landscaping improvements. Without the continued support of such volunteers, the grounds at the national center could never rise to their current level of beauty. Our sincere thanks go out to everyone for their effort and commitment to the national center!
Mark Roemmich, chair, maintenance department
Quest Magazine
Quest continues to receive many appreciative comments from readers both in and outside of the Theosophical Society. Recent issues covered Tragedy and Loss in the Light of the Ancient Wisdom, Compassion and Ahimsa, Ancient Civilizations, Science, Initiation, and Ritual. Coming issue themes are Enlightenment, Ecology, and Spiritual Struggle. We have also introduced a Facebook page and invite all members to like and join it.
The closing of the Olcott headquarters did not keep us from putting out the magazine, and the summer issue came out on schedule. We expect to continue to do so in the future. We are grateful to art director Drew Stevens, who has done a superb job for the magazine for the last ten years, and to Royle Printing in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, which has served us faithfully for an equally long time.
Richard Smoley, editor, Quest
Printed in the Fall 2020 issue of Quest magazine.
Citation: Hebert, Barbara, "Viewpoint: Change and Our Response to It" Quest 108:4, pg 8-9
Barbara Hebert
National President
Change is a part of life: few if any things remain static. For this reason, theories of change exist in many areas, including business, education, healthcare, and psychology, and so on. They may help us to deal with changes more effectively.
Organizational psychologist Kurt Lewin created a model for management change that is frequently used in business. Lewin’s theory requires looking at the various aspects of a given situation, setting aside prior knowledge, and replacing it with new information.
Lewin’s three-stage model includes the following steps: unfreezing, change, and refreezing. For example, a business unfreezes its current process in relation to a given situation and looks deeply into all procedures related to it. Once this analysis has been completed and more efficient processes are identified, the business makes changes. After these are in place, the business then refreezes the newly implemented processes.
While each of these stages involves certain pragmatic steps, the emotional response of the people involved is worth exploring in more detail. To explore it, we can look to the Change Curve, a model that is also frequently used in business. Based on Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s work in grief and loss, the Change Curve model has four stages. The first, identified as status quo, is the situation in place when people are first introduced to upcoming change. The response is frequently shock or denial. Stage two, disruption, occurs when individuals begin to realize that change is actually going to happen. At this point, many begin to experience fear and anger as well as resentment and concern. Some may protest, while others may even resort to active resistance. Stage two is a difficult time for many and if not controlled can spiral into chaos.
Exploration is the third stage of the Change Curve, and it is the turning point. During this stage, individuals begin to let go of their fear and start to explore the changes that are occurring. They begin to experience both the positives and the negatives of the new situation. They test the changes for themselves, determine how they will apply to their own jobs and lives, and discover how they must adapt to them. As this exploration continues, many individuals begin to accept the new conditions and feel some degree of optimism.
The final stage is rebuilding. At this point, individuals have accepted the changes and are now committed to them. They are rebuilding the ways in which they work.
Some might wonder why I have gone into such detail about these business models, but it seems to me that they can help explain what many are experiencing in our world today.
Recent and current events have focused the attention of many on the need for change. In fact, we are watching it happen before our eyes. We see people in various stages of that change and experiencing a wide variety of feelings about it. These feelings range from concern to outright anger to optimism and hope for the future. We also see people exhibiting behaviors that stem from those feelings.
If we look at the Change Curve model, many people today probably fall into the second stage: disruption. They have realized that change is happening and are experiencing fear, anger, resentment, and concern. It may even feel as if the world is in chaos and that everything is falling apart. However, we know that there are other stages to follow: exploration and rebuilding. We don’t know when they will occur, but we know that they will. This provides a solid foundation from which to view the changes that are happening and also gives us hope for the future.
This issue of Quest magazine is dedicated to articles about the Ageless Wisdom. For students of this wisdom, learning about change models can be valuable. The Ageless Wisdom teaches that apart from the Ultimate Reality, change is a constant in the universe. Lao Tzu reputedly said, “Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don’t resist them; that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.” All of life is on a pilgrimage that requires change, growth, and expansion. In order to create something new, the old must be taken down or even destroyed.
We are also taught that what happens in the macrocosm is mirrored in the microcosm. As life continues to unfold and expand, so too do we unfold and grow. To allow for growth, the old ways must go. This applies not only to life but also to our own consciousness. We must let go of our old ways: our thoughts, perspectives, perceptions, conditioning, and so on.
In the Theosophical Society, we frequently talk about the importance of self-introspection for seeing what needs to be discarded as we move forward. This time of transition brings self-introspection into the spotlight. In this process, we look at all aspects of ourselves. We may look at what keeps us attached to the status quo, or at the origins of our thoughts, that is, our conditioning. Our families, those who teach us, our friends, and even the society that surrounds us have conditioned us to have certain expectations about life and other people.
What do we think about the way life should be lived or the way in which we should relate to others? Where did these ideas originate? As young children, were we encouraged to see others as dangerous or different, or less important? As young children, did we receive messages that in order to be safe, we need to be in control of others and the world around us?
As human beings, we will likely experience some sense of disruption in relation to the many changes that are occurring in our world. There is nothing wrong with experiencing such feelings. Humans have them for a reason, and they must be experienced and acknowledged. Then we can move forward. In this process, self-introspection can enable us to understand our reaction to change and facilitate our adjustment to it. It may help us avoid the extreme reactions of many others. Without it, we may find it far more difficult to deal with the emotions that arise.
For me, this is part of our work on the spiritual path, for which self-introspection is essential. This work involves accepting change as well as experiencing the feelings engendered by it. Through self-introspection and maneuvering our way through the changes and the experiences, we learn and grow. Our consciousness expands; as a result, the consciousness of all life expands as well.
We can learn to deal with change in many ways: studying the Ageless Wisdom, finding models of change that speak to us, listening to our own inner voice, and self-introspection. Regardless of how we do it, we must deal with change, and we must change. As painful and uncomfortable as it may be, let us all embrace the opportunity for self-awareness and change. Let us move forward together.
Printed in the Fall 2020 issue of Quest magazine.
Citation: Blumenthal-McGannon, Sally, "Therapeutic Touch Camp Continues via Zoom" Quest 108:4, pg 8, 40
By Sally Blumenthal-McGannon
I recently had the privilege and honor of participating in a Therapeutic Touch (TT) camp on Zoom, the web conferencing site. I am not savvy about or comfortable with technology, so imagining this event was challenging for me. Fortunately I have been attending TT workshops at Indralaya from the beginning in the seventies, as well as a few more at Pumpkin Hollow, where I had the opportunity to learn and study with both Dora Kunz and Dolores Krieger, the cofounders of TT.
Over the years, a group of us have remained very close. Endowed with a variety of skills, we normally hold our healers’ camp yearly at Camp Indralaya on Washington state’s Orcas Island. This year, the virus made this gathering impossible, so we decided to hold the camp online with Zoom. Some of the group had prior experience providing TT with Zoom individually or in small groups.
I am a great believer in healing at a distance and sending healing to others in need. TT is all about energy. There is no need to physically touch the person you are treating. However, if you add technology, you lose me. I have lived in a virgin redwood forest for a long time and have never had good Internet reception. But the desire to participate in TT this summer was so great that other healers came together and figured it out.
While I was glued to the TV, watching the pain and suffering of protests after the murder of George Floyd, I was reading the applications of TT practitioners who wanted to be of service, knew they had something special to offer, and explained why they wanted to attend our virtual camp. I was so touched by their generosity and kindness that the healing from our future gathering had already begun for me. I was reminded of Dora, who urged us to send love and peace to the angels over the cities in distress. This enabled me to shift my focus from suffering to being centered, being of service, and reinforcing what we need in our world during these troubled times. The pandemic was another reason for me to appreciate the power of shifting my awareness and focus on healing.
In addition to all the emails I receive every day, I smile when I see contact from my TT family and know it is about love and healing. And I breathe. The benefit of my TT life and commitment continues to serve me, as I laugh at my original reason for learning Therapeutic Touch, which was to become a better nurse.
Our experiment is over. We held our Indralaya Zoom camp for three days, and it was beyond our greatest expectations (not that the outcome was ever in our hands). I could never have imagined the impact we would have on everyone involved.
We began our mornings with Helen Bee, an Indralaya elder who led morning meditation in the meadow during TT camp. She was actually at the camp, with a camera focused on the meadow, so we could see our safe space and begin our mornings together as we meditated in the meadow.
I was one of the facilitators for the Healing Partners (HP) group, something I have done for many years. As always, we met the evening before, where we had the opportunity to acknowledge what we would need to feel safe as we came together. Many participants knew one another from past summers, so our reunion began by seeing each other face-to-face on Zoom. Newcomers were greeted as well. We began with a welcoming meditation, thanking one another for showing up with a desire to connect with the healing spirit of Indralaya.
The next morning we all came together, over fifty of us, for meditation “in the meadow.” Then we were put in breakout rooms, where individuals received TT treatments from experienced practitioners. A few of us stayed in the main room, holding a safe healing space, available to pop in if someone needed support in a breakout room.
After resting, we met with our group, and HPs (healees) shared their experiences of receiving TT. It was amazing. People’s descriptions resembled those from the live camp. The treatments were just as effective, and sometimes more so. HPs loved the shared intimacy, closeness, and connection with their practitioners—amazingly, all on Zoom.
The first day was my opportunity to set the tone of being open, feeling safe to be vulnerable, and being held with respect and confidentiality. I addressed intimate topics such as grieving, dying, illness, and especially loss during this year of pandemic and social unrest. Naming the fear enables people to address it more easily.
By our afternoon session, HPs were open to sharing their journeys. I shared a page of quotes and had participants each write about one that resonated for them, which led to a deep discussion afterward. Here are some of the quotes they received.
Not everything that can be faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed that is not faced. —James Baldwin
There’s nothing as whole as a broken heart. In these traditions, you cultivate a broken heart, which is very different from depression or sadness. It's the kind of vulnerability, openness, and acute sensitivity to your own suffering and the suffering of others that becomes an opportunity for connection. —Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
As long as I’m alive, I will continue to try to understand more, because the work of the heart is never done. —Muhammad Ali
Laughter is not only carbonated holiness: it is medicine. —Anne Lamott
Everything will be OK in the end. If it’s not OK, it’s not the end. —John Lennon
Sorrow is how we learn to love. —Rita Mae Brown
My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together. —Desmond Tutu
Willing to experience aloneness, I discover connection everywhere; turning to face my fear, I meet the warrior who lives within. —Jennifer Welwood
I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don’t notice it. —Alice Walker
When there’s a big disappointment, we don't know if that's the end of the story. It may just be the beginning of a great adventure. —Pema Chödrön
Your present circumstances don't determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start. —Nido Qubein
How did the rose ever open its heart and give this world all its beauty? It felt the encouragement of light against its being; Otherwise we all remain too frightened. —Hafiz
The universe is wider than our views of it. —Henry David Thoreau
What we have before us are some breathtaking opportunities disguised as insoluble problems. —John W. Gardner
Receiving TT brings new energy, as the healee opens up and lets go of old pain, emotional and physical (if it is time for that). Sharing their chosen quote allowed participants to go deeper into their experience, feeling understood and supported.
The group experience was profound. I reminded people that we are all mirrors and that they might hear their own thoughts or feelings being expressed by another. There is a cumulative effect of TT, which grows over the days and continues after camp is over.
The connections and sharing, the risk taking and vulnerability, is profound. Each gathering builds on the past, and by the end of camp, we were an amazingly close group of people, who felt safe and held with respect and kindness, some on a level never perceived before.
We had a follow-up gathering a week later to check in and validate peoples’ experiences. Three of us led this group. I had wanted to remind the healees that when we parted last week, it was ending, but that every ending is also a beginning and how joyous it would be to share some of their new world.
What we heard was profound. Many recognized the timeliness of our gathering. Before it began, no one knew that our country was going to break open with such overt pain and vulnerability. The timing was impeccable and, again, out of our hands.
Below are some comments from participants.
“How timely for us to hold camp in the world right now. It was profound, and I got to experience BLM with a dose of Zoom and hope.”
“The bubble of safety, kindness, and support has stayed with me.”
“I learned how connected we are energetically.”
”My heart took a leap when I saw this group today.”
“I am transforming and figuring out how to protect myself (often from myself), having experienced such absence of judgment during TT.”
From someone who was deep in a grief state and sadness: “I now see my home as a sad bubble, outside of me when I finally went out (and my sadness), and I am ready to make changes since I have changed. I have found a way to stay connected with my husband with love, not pain.”
“I’m grieving, everything is changing, energy started moving.”
This Zoom retreat has allowed us to connect with each other, ourselves, and the higher/inner power that connects us all and nature. I am left with greater awareness of our oneness and our innate healing power, which enable us to move forward during these challenging times. The healing will continue in each of us as we go out into the world. Knowing we have something to offer during these troubling transformative times is profound and humbling.
Sally Blumenthal-McGannon, MFT, RN, is a nurse, therapist, and Theosophist who has been studying Therapeutic Touch since 1976. She has started a hospice, been the Santa Cruz County AIDS Coordinator, and served as adjunct faculty at Santa Clara University, and has a private practice. She is presently writing a book called The Joy of Dying.
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