The sun was blinding as it cut through the sterile glass of the Sick Kids Hospital operating room in Toronto. On the gurney, an eight-year-old girl named Che Marville lay trembling, her small hand clutched in her mother’s. This was a battle for a limb, a life, and a legacy.
The doctors in Trinidad had already delivered their verdict: amputate the right leg below the knee. They didn’t see a future for it, but Che’s mother, a nurse and midwife with a spine made of iron, had signed the papers against medical advice, flown her daughter through hallucinations and sweat-soaked nightmares on a plane back to Canada, and placed her in the hands of a leading orthopedic surgeon.
“Mommy, don’t worry. I talked to God and I’m going to be fine. I’m already healed.”
In those final seconds before the anesthesia took hold, Che didn’t just pray; she bargained with the Infinite. “Dear God,” she whispered, her eyes locked on the brilliant light, “I don’t want to walk tomorrow, but I want to walk again. I can’t leave my mom.” When she opened her eyes, she looked at her weeping mother and said the words that would define her existence, “Mommy, don’t worry. I talked to God and I’m going to be fine. I’m already healed.”
When I met Che at a Black History event in Oakville, I saw a storyteller of our era, someone who understands that if we don’t write our own history, we will be erased. We sat and talked about the unspoken ache of loneliness, a public health crisis that no app can fix.
To understand the woman who now sits across from CEOs and community leaders, teaching them to decouple their worth from their bank accounts, you have to go back to a game of hide-and-seek in Guyana. Che was four years old. Her grandfather, a man who had made his mistakes early and lived his later years with a generous, golden heart, was her favorite playmate.
They were playing, a moment of pure childhood joy, when the music stopped. Her grandfather suffered a massive heart attack. Che was holding his hand when the light left his eyes. At four, you don’t understand “forever,” but you feel the fracture. That event was the first time Che realized that the people we love can vanish in a heartbeat, leaving us to navigate the silence alone.
It was this early brush with the quiet collapse that turned her into a student of the unseen. By thirteen, the trauma had manifested as chronic insomnia. While other girls were obsessed with pop stars, Che was in the Thorncliffe Library, spending two cents on a discarded book about yoga and breathing. She was searching for a way to stay in her body when her mind wanted to flee. Under the guidance of Dr. Hutchinson, a rare physician who actually listened, Che learned that her nightmares were messengers. She began to write. She began to breathe. She began to build a first home within her own skin.
Che Marville portfolio reads like a resume of survival. She is a woman who has invited Angela Davis to Canada after a ban, worked at the intersection of scientific bias and racism at the Ontario Science Centre, and ran for provincial and federal office.
The fire wasn’t just in her professional achievements. I recognize a fellow warrior when I see one. Che has felt the sting of the crabs in a barrel mentality. She recalls a woman in one of her political campaigns who wore a wig and a hat as a literal disguise, only to be caught throwing Che’s campaign pamphlets in the garbage.
“I have been punished by the community in some ways,” Che admits with a transparency that is as sharp as a blade. She has been told she is weird for her spiritual track, for her refusal to run as a Liberal or Conservative just to fit in. She has faced board members who ended her contracts because they feared her political edge. All of this brought her to an understanding…
“I have been punished by the community in some ways,”
Real transformation happens when no one is watching, when you have a chance to sit with yourself, no outdoor noise, no opinions, just self. For Che, the ultimate test came five and a half years ago when her mother, her closest friend and spiritual anchor, contracted COVID-19 and died in just eighteen days.
It was a stunning, life-altering event that could have leveled a lesser soul, but Che had already learned the intelligence of healing. She understood that she was in the world but not of it. She pivoted her focus to WiseMindly, a platform designed to bridge the gap between clinical efficiency and human compassion in an age where AI threatens to dull our empathy.
She teaches a radical concept; your business is not you. She watches successful entrepreneurs burn out because they serve their ego instead of the enterprise. She tells them, “Take yourself out of the business framework.” It is a psychological decoupling that allows the professional to survive the storm.
Che Marville has been in the game of life for some time, yet she speaks with the fire of someone who is just getting started. She is currently mentoring a group of young African men and women, teaching them a vocabulary for their emotions that their families never provided.
She isn’t interested in superficial wins or highlight reels. She has the ability to sit with the unpolished, complex parts of ourselves and refuse to look away. As the world hurtles toward automation, Che stands as a sentinel for the human soul. She is the outlier who stayed, the girl who walked when they said she wouldn’t, and the woman who reminds us that your breath is still yours.
As she moves forward, you can’t help but wonder: what miracles will she command next?