I spent seven years making myself sick with a story. Then I spent twenty making myself well with a better one. Now I study how the stories we tell ourselves become the bodies we live in — and what that means for medicine, organizations, and the way we treat each other.
Represented by AAE Speakers Bureau ↗\"The mind can break the body. The same mind can heal it. I know because mine did both — and I spent twenty years understanding why.\"
I know this not as a theory. I know it because I ran the experiment — in both directions. I used narrative to make myself sick for seven years. Then I used it to get well. Then I spent twenty years studying why it worked.
What I found is that we are narrative creatures at a biological level. The stories we believe about ourselves — about our worth, our limitations, our right to be seen — don't just shape our psychology. They shape our physiology. They determine who gets heard, who gets helped, and who quietly disappears from the room.
This is the mechanism behind chronic illness. Behind medical trauma. Behind the epidemic of people who have learned to perform wellness because their systems reward the performance and punish the truth.
I call it the Narrative Body. I've been living inside it my whole life. And I've spent twenty years translating what I found there into something the rest of the world can use.
It took doctors a decade to find his diagnosis. It took AI ten seconds. This talk reveals how technology — which can feel cold and detached — is actually the key to reclaiming humanity in healthcare. We can use algorithms to dismantle bias and burnout, empowering patients and freeing doctors to truly see and heal.
The ideas come first. The credentials are the evidence. Click below if you want the full picture.
Roi doesn't give you the comfortable version. He gives you the true one — and that's exactly what our leadership team needed to hear.
I've seen hundreds of inclusion keynotes. This was the first time the room went silent in the right way — because everyone recognized the problem was theirs.
The Patient-in-Residence framework changed how we think about patient involvement at an institutional level. Not a consultant — a genuine strategic partner.
Healthcare institutions, technology companies, and Fortune 500 organizations ready to stop performing transformation and start building it. Every engagement is bespoke — no off-the-shelf programs.
A keynote built around one idea: the stories we tell ourselves become our biology, our culture, and our systems. Not inspiration. The uncomfortable truth about why your people are suffering in silence — and what it actually takes to change that. Delivered from 20 years of living it and advising on it across 27 countries.
Seven books spanning chronic illness, patient rights, healthcare AI, organizational systems, and public speaking. Each one a chapter in the same argument: radical honesty is the only thing that actually changes rooms. An eighth is on the way.
From TEDx stages and international summits to hands-on workshops and the media movement that grew out of all of it.
Three interconnected platforms — professional practice, media movement, and education. Together they form a single argument: radical honesty about chronic illness and organizational failure is not a niche. It is the future.
Speaking, consulting, and advisory work. You're here.
Book or Enquire →Essays, podcast, YouTube — the voice for the chronically invisible. Where the Narrative Body framework meets the people who need it most.
🥄 Representing the 1 in 5 employees living with invisible conditions — the "spoon theory" symbol of chronic illness communities worldwide.
Visit chronically.life →Mental health awareness training built for real people. Practical, online, designed for how people actually learn.
Visit tinymha.com →Speaking, consulting, media, or something that doesn't fit a category yet. If the work is real, I'm interested.