
13/07/2025
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For eight years, Michelle has worked as a nurse visiting kids living in out-of-home care. Hotels, motels, caravan parks with staff on a roster. Places that are meant to be temporary but too often become long-term.
She steps into those spaces not just to run health checks, but to bear witness: to trauma, to displacement, to the quiet resilience of children navigating broken systems.
"The trauma for them is real and it affects their brain and their growth and development and their well-being and their mental health and their education, it affects every part of them".
Michelle sees what being taken from family does to children, but never saw that she was affected by trauma in herself.
It was through this work, face-to-face with the raw edges of abandonment and survival, that Michelle started to turn inward. Her care for others sparked a deeper realisation with her own adoption story, eventually leading her into breath work, nature, and healing modalities that would transform her life.
For those working in care settings or navigating systems that separate families, we recommend this insightful read- Trauma Trails, Recreating Song Lines: The Transgenerational Effects of Trauma in Indigenous Australia by Emeritus Professor Judy Atkinson - a powerful exploration of trauma, displacement, and healing within Australian contexts.
Listen now to Michelle’s story on The Australian Adoption Podcast