Llewelyn-Roen Prowe (Roen) holds an M.A. in Clinical Counseling Psychology and brings an interdisciplinary academic foundation to his therapeutic work. He studied political philosophy at Northeastern University, graduating summa cum laude, and continued advanced study at the University of London (Goldsmiths, Drama & Philosophy) and the University of Edinburgh (Mind & Ethics). He later completed a Certificate in Neuropsychiatry through Harvard Medical School, strengthening his clinical understanding of brain-based mechanisms underlying trauma, mood disorders, and behavioral dysregulation.
Prowe’s integration of philosophy, psychology, and neurobiological insight are unique in contemporary psychotherapy practice and rare for a rural practitioner.
Roen practices psychotherapy grounded in psychodynamic and existential traditions, integrating trauma-informed and cognitive-behavioral interventions where clinically appropriate. His work centers on accountability, emotional regulation, and the cultivation of psychological coherence in men navigating identity, betrayal, anger, and relational conflict.Drawing from Western clinical training and contemplative disciplines, including Zen practice, Prowe emphasizes disciplined self-examination, relational responsibility, and durable internal restructuring rather than surface-level symptom relief.
Roen is the author of Vague Apocalyptica and Capernaum. Vague Apocalyptica examines political culture and ideological distortion through a psychological lens, while Capernaum presents a narrative account rooted in lived experience and moral complexity.In addition to book-length work, Prowe has written extensively on leadership, negotiation, operational discipline, and organizational psychology. His articles on management culture and executive accountability led to recognition by LinkedIn as a Top Voice for Management Culture (2015). He is currently working on a novel Finch Theory, and a second book of philosophy entitled, The Finished World, Consciousness and the Myth of Becoming. Both are slated to be published in 2027.
His broader body of writing integrates philosophy, systems thinking, and psychotherapy to explore masculinity, responsibility, identity, and the ethical demands of adulthood in contemporary society.