The Nutters Club

From Survival to Service: Lyndal Midgley’s Journey Through Trauma, Foster Care and Mental Health Advocacy

59 min · 26. mai 2026
episode From Survival to Service: Lyndal Midgley’s Journey Through Trauma, Foster Care and Mental Health Advocacy cover

Beskrivelse

Guest Lyndal Midgley spoke about growing up first on a remote Northland farm before moving to Auckland’s North Shore as a child. While her early years were idyllic, she described her teenage years as deeply turbulent, shaped by family conflict, emotional isolation and a growing mental health struggle. At just 15 years old, she overdosed at a Blue Light disco, an event she says became a turning point in her life. “I remember the feeling of shame,” she recalled, describing how the incident became widely known at school and church, yet little emotional support followed. Despite the trauma, Midgley completed high school and later studied business and tourism, persevering through academic setbacks to earn two diplomas. The conversation explored how those early experiences eventually led Midgley toward helping others. After years working in accounting and IT, she unexpectedly became a foster parent after a teenage neighbour asked to live with her and her then-husband. That experience introduced her to the realities of neurodiversity, youth trauma and the complexities of New Zealand’s mental health and care systems. Over time, Midgley became heavily involved in mental health advocacy and education, eventually teaching Mental Health First Aid courses across New Zealand. She explained the training focuses on helping everyday people recognise distress, respond empathetically and safely support someone experiencing a mental health crisis. “A lot of it is learning how to listen to understand, rather than listening to respond,” she said during the programme. Midgley also discussed the importance of directly asking someone if they are suicidal when warning signs are present, a conversation many people fear having. She stressed that empathy, calmness and genuine presence can make an enormous difference during moments of crisis. Alongside her mental health work, Midgley now volunteers as a first responder with ambulance services, motivated in part by gratitude toward the paramedics who saved her life after her teenage overdose. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

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46 Episoder

episode Gloria Masters: Survivor Calls Child Sexual Abuse New Zealand's 'Silent Epidemic' cover

Gloria Masters: Survivor Calls Child Sexual Abuse New Zealand's 'Silent Epidemic'

Internationally recognised survivor advocate Gloria Masters has highlighted what she describes as New Zealand's "silent epidemic" of child sexual abuse, while sharing her own decades-long journey of recovery and healing. Masters, who grew up in West Auckland, revealed she experienced sexual abuse and trafficking throughout her childhood, beginning in infancy and continuing until the age of 16. She said the abuse left lasting psychological impacts that took decades to fully understand and address. Masters said recovery from prolonged childhood trauma was far from straightforward. "I thought I would be fine once it was over," she said. "Instead, everything fell apart." Masters described dissociation as one of the most significant consequences of her trauma, explaining it as a survival mechanism in which "the mind leaves because the body can't." Now an author, speaker and advocate, Masters has dedicated much of her later life to supporting survivors and challenging systems that allow abuse to continue unchecked. She said she was not able to openly discuss her experiences until she was nearly 60 years old, when writing her memoir helped her process what had happened. Masters cited research indicating that one in three girls and one in five boys in New Zealand will experience sexual abuse before adulthood. She argued that the scale of the issue is not reflected in public discussion or policy attention. "The outcry is invisible," she said, describing child sexual abuse as a problem that remains largely hidden despite its prevalence. Masters also spoke about the role of grooming, secrecy and shame in preventing victims from disclosing abuse. She said perpetrators often manipulate not only children but also families and communities, making it difficult for survivors to be believed when they eventually speak out. A particularly damaging experience, she said, can occur when survivors are dismissed after disclosing abuse. Masters referred to this as a "second wound", a further trauma caused by disbelief, denial or minimisation. Despite the challenges, she emphasised that recovery and healing are possible. Through her advocacy work, Masters now hears regularly from survivors around New Zealand and overseas who are finding the confidence to share their own stories. Her message, she said, is simple but powerful: survivors are not alone, they deserve to be believed, and hope remains possible even after profound trauma. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

I går1 h 11 min
episode Filmmaker Shares Story of Grief, Survival and the Power of Storytelling cover

Filmmaker Shares Story of Grief, Survival and the Power of Storytelling

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4. juni 20261 h 12 min
episode From Survival to Service: Lyndal Midgley’s Journey Through Trauma, Foster Care and Mental Health Advocacy cover

From Survival to Service: Lyndal Midgley’s Journey Through Trauma, Foster Care and Mental Health Advocacy

Guest Lyndal Midgley spoke about growing up first on a remote Northland farm before moving to Auckland’s North Shore as a child. While her early years were idyllic, she described her teenage years as deeply turbulent, shaped by family conflict, emotional isolation and a growing mental health struggle. At just 15 years old, she overdosed at a Blue Light disco, an event she says became a turning point in her life. “I remember the feeling of shame,” she recalled, describing how the incident became widely known at school and church, yet little emotional support followed. Despite the trauma, Midgley completed high school and later studied business and tourism, persevering through academic setbacks to earn two diplomas. The conversation explored how those early experiences eventually led Midgley toward helping others. After years working in accounting and IT, she unexpectedly became a foster parent after a teenage neighbour asked to live with her and her then-husband. That experience introduced her to the realities of neurodiversity, youth trauma and the complexities of New Zealand’s mental health and care systems. Over time, Midgley became heavily involved in mental health advocacy and education, eventually teaching Mental Health First Aid courses across New Zealand. She explained the training focuses on helping everyday people recognise distress, respond empathetically and safely support someone experiencing a mental health crisis. “A lot of it is learning how to listen to understand, rather than listening to respond,” she said during the programme. Midgley also discussed the importance of directly asking someone if they are suicidal when warning signs are present, a conversation many people fear having. She stressed that empathy, calmness and genuine presence can make an enormous difference during moments of crisis. Alongside her mental health work, Midgley now volunteers as a first responder with ambulance services, motivated in part by gratitude toward the paramedics who saved her life after her teenage overdose. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

26. mai 202659 min
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26. mai 20261 h 11 min
episode Glen Green: Finding Light After Childhood Trauma cover

Glen Green: Finding Light After Childhood Trauma

This week’s episode of The Nutters Club explored the lifelong impact of childhood trauma, the burden of anger, and the transformative power of forgiveness through the story of Glen Green. Growing up in East Auckland, Glen described a childhood marked by domestic violence, fear, and instability. As a young boy, he and his younger sister would hide upstairs while their parents fought. One defining moment came when police arrived at the family home and forcibly removed his father while neighbours watched from across the street. Glen recalled how, at around ten years old, something inside him “shut down” emotionally after being torn between his parents in that moment. The trauma followed him into adolescence. Struggling at school, gravitating toward other angry young people, and frequently getting into fights, Glen said he often felt consumed by rage. He explained that lashing out became the only time he experienced relief from the turmoil he carried inside. But his life began to change through an unexpected act of kindness. A local youth worker named Peter started spending time with Glen and his friends, eventually inviting them back to his home for food and conversation. During a simple prayer one evening, Glen described experiencing a profound emotional release. For the first time, he let go of the anger and unforgiveness he had carried toward his father. That moment, Glen said, changed everything. The discussion focused heavily on the idea that forgiveness is often less about excusing harmful behaviour and more about freeing yourself from carrying its emotional weight. Kyle MacDonald noted that forgiveness does not mean saying what happened was acceptable, it means letting go of the anger that continues to harm you. Glen shared how he carried those lessons into his professional life while working at the Hilton London Metropole, then Europe’s largest hotel. Starting as a porter, he introduced a workplace initiative based around kindness, appreciation, and “random acts of kindness” between departments. The result was a dramatic transformation in morale and performance, eventually helping the hotel become the highest-rated Hilton in London. Throughout the episode, a clear theme emerged: hope, compassion, and genuine human connection can profoundly change lives, both our own and those around us. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

26. mai 202658 min