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Meet Huyen “Win”: The Wellness Maven With Receipts, Range, and a Whole Lot of Heart

You ever meet someone whose name fits them a little too well? Enter Huyen, affectionately known as “Win,” a woman who’s been stacking victories in the wellness world long before self-care became a hashtag and a candle with a cute label.

Win doesn’t just help people “get healthy.” She helps folks take care of themselves and each other: mind, body, community, and everything in between. She’s a wellbeing coach, consultant, and caregiver with the kind of résumé that makes you sit up straighter and drink some water just out of respect.

Her journey started back in college, where she became a personal trainer and group fitness instructor. While the rest of us were trying to figure out how to eat ramen twice a day without scurvy, Win was already out here helping people feel strong, powerful, and challenged. “Picking a lane” was cute as an idea, but Win knew wellbeing was bigger than biceps and burpees. So she took her talents to public health, advocating for systems, policies, and real-world resources so folks can live well every single day, not just after a workout class.

That’s why you’ll catch her talking about everything from food access to local politics. That’s not “doing the most.” That’s what wholeness actually looks like.

And yes, she’s worked with heavy hitters. Google ring a bell? But if you ask her, her proudest achievements aren’t the shiny brand names. They’re the moments people entrusted her to lead from the heart. Like serving as the Global Wellness Lead for the Black Googler Network. Or coaching Atlanta’s largest hill-running fitness community, @hills4ATL, where the only thing steeper than the hills is the loyalty of the people who show up for her.

But the role that sits closest to her heart is caregiver. Her mom is a ten-year stroke survivor, and Win has been right there, loving, supporting, advocating, and showing up with the kind of devotion that can’t be taught. It’s lived.

For someone who gives so much, Win remains rooted in gratitude. She never forgets the privileges she carries: being able to move her body, having consistent access to food, and having the freedom to choose meaningful work. She treats these blessings like the gifts they are, honoring them with intention, purpose, and joy.

So what does Win want her legacy to be? Simple. She wants to make communities healthier, build a more loving world, and keep her mama smiling. And if that isn’t a win, baby… what is?

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