About
the Unintentional Author of Intention Fiction™
25 years ago in Senegal, West Africa, Ruth Theobald Probst felt the exterior
of the life she thought she was supposed to live cracking and revealing someone
very different. The real woman inside began to emerge, compelling Theobald Probst
to leave the only world she knew; on a path she could vaguely see.
For the next 20 years, Theobald Probst searched for meaning in her life. She
looked for it in monetary gain and only found a dungeon of debt and despair.
She pursued it through success in the corporate world but found only a deepening
sense of unworthiness.
Nothing she tried could satisfy the internal void and so she gave up. Anxious,
ill, depressed, angry and deeply in debt; no drug, self-help book, therapist
and certainly no credit card had solved her problems.
There was no place
to turn, except inside.
On March 10, 2007, Theobald Probst awoke from a vision that changed her life.
Overnight she went from why me to teach me. The vision happened in her imagination
and became the inspiration behind the four-volume series she has self-published,
The Restoration of Avery Victoria Spencer. Each volume she writes comes to her
without plan or plot and reaches its own amazing conclusion.
And that is just the beginning. Theobald Probst has created a second series of
stories. This time her inspiration is an illustrated and colorable series to
help people of all ages raise their emotional vibration through color.
Through her ContemPLAYtions™ workshops, offered by LifeMark Institute for
Greatness and through her writings published by LifeMark Press, Theobald
Probst lives a
life full of rich meaning and deep satisfaction. She is the head of a prospering
company and the heart of a prospering marriage. In the midst of a busy schedule
of lectures, workshops and writing, Theobald Probst makes her home with husband
Tom, near Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Today, Theobald Probst’s life is all
about teaching others the playful, joyous journey to discovering their own
unique brilliance – restoring
their greatness. . .