My name is Henry Rowan Hawk, and my work is rooted in listening.
Long before this became my profession, I learned the power of presence. As a child, I lived in the jungles of Panama among Indigenous tribes, where attention is a form of respect and healing begins by slowing down enough to notice what is speaking. That early immersion shaped how I work to this day: real change responds to safety, not pressure.
Over time, I traveled through more than forty countries, spending time in close proximity to some of the world’s most sacred sites and learning from people, kitchens, and healing traditions across cultures. These experiences refined my understanding of how humans navigate pain, transition, and restoration—and taught me that proximity matters: to place, to body, and to truth.
Today, my work is grounded in Sedona, Arizona—a landscape long known for clarity, intensity, and self-encounter. I chose to root here intentionally, drawn by the land’s quiet insistence on honesty and presence. It is from here that I support others in their own unfolding.
I am also a two-time cancer defeator. That journey forged resilience, courage, and a deep respect for the body’s intelligence. It taught me how to stay present in uncertainty, how to meet fear without turning away, and how to reclaim vitality without denial. I do not guide from theory—I guide from lived experience.