hello, I’m Lyndall

If motherhood doesn’t feel the way you expected — you’re in the right place

You’ve been holding a lot. You don’t have to hold it alone. You just have to be willing to show up — for yourself, and for the relationship you’re building with your baby.

Accredited Mental Health Social Worker

Member, Australian Association of Social Workers (AASW)

In person in Bundall on the Gold Coast · Telehealth across Australia · Home visiting

Qualifications & training

  • Masters of Social Work — UNSW
  • Bachelor of Social Work (Honours) — UNSW
  • Accredited Mental Health Social Worker — AASW
  • Authorised Mental Health Practitioner
  • Certified Marte Meo Practitioner
  • Perinatal and Infant Mental Health — Centre for Perinatal Psychology, Victoria

Who I am

If you’ve landed here, something has probably brought you to this moment. Maybe you’re not coping the way you expected. Maybe motherhood feels heavier than you thought it would. Maybe you love your baby deeply and still feel disconnected, uncertain, or quietly lost.

Whatever brought you here — I’m glad you found your way.

I’m Lyndall — a therapist, a mother, and someone who has spent over 35 years walking alongside women and families in some of the most vulnerable moments of their lives.

I’m a Masters-qualified Accredited Mental Health Social Worker, which means I’m a highly trained clinician — but you won’t find me hiding behind clinical language or a list of acronyms. What you will find is someone who genuinely believes that the work of becoming a mother matters, that your struggles are real and worthy of care, and that you don’t need to be in crisis to deserve support.

I’ve worked in inpatient Mother and Baby Units, in community perinatal services, and now in private practice — and across all of that, one thing has remained constant: the mothers who sit with me don’t need to be fixed. They need to be seen.

That’s what I’m here for.

I come to this work not only as a clinician, but as someone who understands from the inside how disorienting and isolating early motherhood can feel.

How I work

At the heart of everything I do is relationship

Yours with your baby, and the one we build together in our work.

I’m not here to hand you a checklist or tell you what a good mother looks like. I’m here to slow down with you, make sense of what’s actually happening, and help you find your own way through.

My approach is warm, practical, and genuinely non-judgemental. I’m led by values of authenticity, connection — and yes, a little fun. Because not everything has to be heavy, even when the hard stuff is real.

I warmly welcome single parents and LGBTQ+ families into my practice.

I work across the full perinatal journey — from conception and pregnancy through birth and the early years — supporting mothers and families navigating:

  • The identity shifts of matrescence
  • Perinatal anxiety and depression
  • The relationship changes that come with a new baby
  • Bonding and connection with your baby
  • Birth experiences that didn’t go as expected
  • Fertility difficulties, assisted reproduction, and perinatal loss
  • The adjustment to parenthood — for mothers, fathers, and partners

The Marte Meo difference

“On one’s own strength”

One of the most distinctive things I bring to this work is my training as a certified Marte Meo practitioner.

Marte Meo — from the Latin meaning “on one’s own strength” — is a gentle, strengths-based method developed in Holland by Maria Aarts over forty years ago and now used in 43 countries. It works with the ordinary, everyday moments between you and your baby — a feed, a nappy change, a quiet moment on the mat — to find and grow the connection that’s already there.

We use brief video of your real interactions — not to judge or critique, but to discover. Together we slow down and look closely at what’s happening between you. What your baby is communicating. Where you’re already attuning to them, even when you can’t feel it yourself. And from there, we build.

It is one of the most quietly powerful things I have witnessed in my clinical career — a mother seeing, perhaps for the first time, the exquisite moments already happening between her and her baby.

Why an Accredited Social Worker?

Not a clinical process. A human one.

If you’ve wondered whether a social worker is the right fit — or whether you need a psychologist instead — here’s what I’d want you to know.

Accredited Mental Health Social Workers are highly trained therapeutic clinicians. We offer evidence-informed counselling and holistic support — without the emphasis on diagnosis, formal assessment, or labels.

Many of my clients choose this path precisely because they want meaningful, compassionate support that meets them where they are.

let’s talk

If something here has resonated — even a little — I’d love to hear from you

I offer in-person sessions in Bundall on the Gold Coast, telehealth, and home visiting — because support should meet you where you are, not the other way around.

No pressure. No commitment. Just a conversation.