I was a paramedic for nine years. Then I spent seven in bed while 33 doctors looked for a different answer. I found it myself. Now I walk into rooms — and people leave feeling like themselves again.
"I think everyone needs an afternoon with Roi now and then."
— Riccarda P., Krems, April 2026
The topic is always the door. Patient communication, burnout, leadership, invisible illness — we choose together. What happens inside is the work underneath: you remember who you are.
You arrive performing your role. The clinician role. The leader role. The caregiver role. The strong one. You leave being the person underneath — able to say what you couldn't say before, to see what you'd stopped seeing, or to feel something you'd been managing away.
This happens because most professional spaces actively prevent honesty. They reward compliance over truth. They ask you to perform, not to be. This room reverses that.
It takes an afternoon. People remember it for years. Stefan from Krems applied it to a patient that same evening. David said: "I am a changed man. I can't go back to unminded living."
"I am a changed man after this talk. I can't go back to unminded living."
— David P., Belgrade University"The magic begins as soon as you appear. You're a master in creating emotional atmospheres."
— Stefan, Krems"I have never seen a speaker like you before."
— Dorthe H., Boehringer IngelheimNo intake form. No discovery call unless you want one. Just an email saying you're interested and who the room is for.
Book The Room →Roi reads every message personally.
"I left with the feeling that I had grown on a human level."
Alexandra A. — Krems"This is the most important lesson I have had in medical school."
Sarah H. — Tel Aviv University"I could immediately put the spirit into practice — the same evening."
Stefan — Krems (about a patient, that night)
I don't know what to call myself.
Author. Speaker. Facilitator. Patient. Paramedic. Founder. None of them are wrong. None of them are the whole thing.
Here's what I know I do.
I walk into a room — ten, twelve people, sofas if possible — and something happens. People arrive performing their role. They leave being themselves. I've watched it happen in hospitals, pharma companies, universities, and living rooms across 27 countries.
The topic changes. The room is always the same.
I know this works because I lost myself completely once. Seven years in bed. Thirty-three doctors who were wrong. A body that became the only honest thing in my life. I found my way back — not through inspiration, but through language. Through finding the words for what was happening when no one else had them.
That's what I do for other people now.
I call it The Room. Half a day. The topic is whatever brought you there — patient communication, burnout, leadership, invisible illness, being heard. What actually happens underneath is: you remember who you are.
If you're a healthcare organisation, a pharma company, or a team that has forgotten why it started — I work with you directly.
If you're a person who is stuck, unseen, or about to emerge — you're exactly who this is for.
That's the whole thing.
Learn to speak with authority when everything is working against you. For leaders, professionals, and anyone who needs their voice to matter in rooms where the stakes are high.
Every talk is the same talk wearing a different door. The topic is chosen by the host. The work underneath is always mine: making the invisible visible. I only speak when the talk feels true and the room feels right.
On organizational leadership, constraint-based thinking, healthcare transformation, communication, and the hidden power of what doesn't get said. An eighth is in progress.
Essays about illness, voice, body narrative, and the gap between what we feel and what we can say. No content calendar. No algorithm. Just honest writing when there's something honest to say.
Read Chronically →No form. No booking system. No automated response. If something here felt true — about the room, about a talk, about any of it — write to me. I read everything personally.