The Spirit of Alchemy

He Had a Stroke at 27. Then He Chose Joy. | Rowyn Stoltz — Episode 9

Episode Summary

Rowyn Stoltz is a mechanic who runs Black Unicorn Auto in Midrand. He was diagnosed dyslexic, had two strokes at 27, lost his marriage a month later, and came back to work on Ferraris, Porsches, and Bentleys with a bike in the corner for the days his body needs it. This is a conversation with someone who never quite registered his hardship as hardship, and what that actually looks like from the inside.

Episode Notes

Thank you for tuning into The Spirit of Alchemy, a podcast sharing entrepreneurs' life stories of turning the ordinary into the extraordinary.

Rowyn Stoltz is a mechanic, a grease monkey by his own description, who runs Black Unicorn Auto, an independent workshop at WorkPods in Midrand. He was diagnosed dyslexic, left school in Grade 9, had a stroke at 27, lost his wife a month later, and came back to work on some of the world's most expensive cars with new physical limitations and the same quiet insistence on showing up fully.

This is not a conversation about how to survive hardship. It is a conversation with someone who never quite registered it as hardship to begin with.

 

✨ In This Episode

Opening a padlock at age 7 with homemade tools, and asking: what else have I been told I can't do?

Growing up with a brilliant, alcoholic father and a mother Rowyn describes as the angel who saved them

Being diagnosed dyslexic and building an entire intellectual framework through observation instead of books

Having two strokes at 27, relearning to walk and talk, and going back to work voluntarily clocking extra hours

Why Rowyn never uses words like "tough" or "challenging" to describe his own life

The four pillars he lives by, kindness, humour, curiosity, and gratitude, and why they are not rituals but just who he is

Using the bicycle in his workshop as a backup plan for the days his body needs it

What a stoic, neurodivergent, self-taught mechanic can teach the rest of us about presence

 

🌟 Why This Story Matters

Most conversations about resilience are about what people did after things went wrong. Rowyn's story is different because nothing about his framing suggests things went wrong. He did not rebuild. He just kept going, with curiosity, with humour, with a bike in the workshop for the hard days. That is not a coping strategy. That is a way of being. And in a world that sells transformation as a destination, Rowyn is a quiet reminder that it was never about arriving anywhere.

 

Get in Touch with Rowyn Stoltz:

Email: rowynstoltz@yahoo.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rowynstoltz/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rowyn.stoltz

 

Black Unicorn Auto:

Email: blackunicornauto3@yahoo.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Black-Unicorn-Auto-100092543966152/