Meet Coach Uwem

Coach Uwem is the founder of ALL MADE WELL™, where identity, healing, and leadership are rebuilt from the inside out.

Her work was born out of a clear pattern:

Women are often taught to disconnect from themselves in order to survive systems that were never designed with them in mind. In church spaces, that can look like spiritualized silence. In leadership, it can look like overperformance without support. In maternal care, it often looks like being told to trust systems that have historically dismissed or overlooked them.

Uwem’s work interrupts that pattern.

Through coaching, recovery programs, and doula support, she helps women develop the clarity, language, and internal safety needed to trust themselves again. Her approach integrates identity development, emotional processing, physical preparation, and strategic action—because healing that stays internal but never translates into lived change isn’t enough.

Coach Uwem guides her clients through Spirit-Led Deconstruction and is affectionately known as The #HolyHotHead for a reason. She is the author and visionary behind “Unapologetically WorthyAF”, a journaling program designed to promote fiery self-love within Christian women who have been led to doubt their worth. Coach Uwem is a writer, a heartfelt public speaker, a domestic abuse survivor advocate, and a trained leader for Celebrate Recovery and the California Black Women's Health Project. With over 25 years of experience in church ministry, she is now a new church planter within PASSION 2 PLANT’s network of culturally aware and socially responsible church planters and is launching a microchurch called WE ARE THE REFUGE in Sacramento, CA. Besides all that she does in the community, Coach Uwem is also a homeschooling mother of 4 and married to her high school sweetheart!

She brings over two decades of ministry experience, a background in Exercise Science and Nutrition, and years of hands-on work supporting women through both personal and systemic transitions in her business coaching and spiritual recovery work.

This is not about fixing women.
It’s about dismantling what taught them they needed to be fixed—and building something truer in its place.