Homegrown Support: Holistic Care for Mothers
For Melina Rainger, midwifery has never been just a profession. It is a lineage, a calling, and now a homecoming.
Born and raised in the small coastal village of Pottsville, Melina comes from generations of local families who have lived, worked, and raised children in the Tweed Valley. Those who came before her were shaped by this place, its rhythms, its resilience, and its deep sense of community.
Alongside her connection to place, Melina holds a deep interest in the lineage of women who come before us and how each generation shapes the next. She is particularly drawn to the quiet, often unspoken ways birth experiences, parenting patterns, trauma, and resilience are carried through families over time.
“What we experience as women doesn’t exist in isolation,” Melina says. “It lives in our bodies, our relationships, and often echoes through generations. When we bring awareness to that, there’s an opportunity for healing, not just for one woman, but for those who come after her.”
Like many young women, Melina left home in early adulthood, carrying her roots with her as she followed her work across Australia. Her midwifery practice took her into hospitals, private homes, and some of the most remote corners of the country. She worked across a wide range of settings, from metropolitan services to extremely remote communities, alongside Indigenous families and women with complex and diverse needs, and collaborated with midwives from across the globe.
“It taught me how deeply culture, safety, and trust shape health,” she reflects. “And how important it is to meet people where they are, not where the system expects them to be.”
For many years, Melina was known for her work in homebirth, supporting women seeking continuity, autonomy, and deeply personalised care, work that demanded presence and long periods on call.
After almost two decades living and working in very remote Australia, and more recently on the Southern Gold Coast, twelve months ago she returned to Pottsville, not only to live, but to reshape her work in a way that reflected everything she had learned.
That vision became The Village Midwife, under her long-term business name Mother Seed: a small clinic offering pregnancy support, shared care for women planning hospital births, postpartum care, birth trauma support, and early parenting guidance. It is a space where clinical knowledge sits alongside deep listening, and where women are given time.
“I realised I wanted to offer care that was slower, more spacious, Central to Melina’s work is an understanding of the nervous system, and how stress, fear, and trauma can be carried and softened across generations. Her approach supports mothers, babies, and families as a whole.
“Babies aren’t problems to be fixed,” she says. “They’re communicating. When parents feel supported and regulated, babies respond.”
Now working once again in the community that raised her, Melina’s role feels both full circle and deeply present. She supports daughters of the Tweed, newcomers to the region, and families becoming more conscious of the threads that weave through their lives.
In returning home, Melina has brought with her the depth of a career shaped by distance, diversity, and devotion, and has woven it quietly back into the place where it all began. For the women of the Tweed, her presence is both familiar and deeply earned, a reminder that sometimes, the most powerful work happens when we come home.
Melina will be offering these services from her small clinic, central to Pottsville Village. All first appointments will not incur any out of pocket expenses.
For any appointments, please enquire for availabilities via our contact form at motherseed.com.au