Healing After the NICU with Psychologist & Miracle Moon Founder, Frankie Harrison
Sun Dec 07 2025
In this deeply human and heartfelt episode, Mary sits down with clinical psychologist and NICU parent Frankie Harrison, founder of Miracle Moon, a global online support community for families navigating life after neonatal care. Frankie shares her powerful personal journey—from a traumatic pregnancy marked by preeclampsia, to a six-week NICU stay, to the emotional aftermath that reshaped not only her identity as a parent, but her entire professional path.
Together, Mary and Frankie explore:
What it means to experience trauma before, during, and after the NICU
Why so many parents don’t realize they’re experiencing trauma until long after discharge
How anxiety, hypervigilance, dissociation, and grief often hide beneath the surface
The cultural and clinical barriers that make parents feel unseen, dismissed, or “palmed off”
The healing power of community, validation, and meaningful attunement
The critical need for clinician training, nervous-system literacy, and emotionally attuned care
Why support shouldn’t end at NICU discharge—and what true post-NICU “rehab” might look like
Frankie also shares the evolution of Miracle Moon—from an Instagram page to a global community providing trauma-informed resources, peer support, and evidence-based guidance for the long arc of healing that follows neonatal care.
This conversation is a profound reminder that trauma-informed developmental care is not only for babies—it’s for parents, clinicians, and entire systems. And that healing happens in connection.
NICU trauma as both a psychological and physiological experience
Dissociation, survival mode, and why parents often can’t “take things in” while hospitalized
The overlooked emotional labor of clinicians
Shame reduction through validation and shared experience
The need for rupture-and-repair in healthcare relationships
Why birthdays, transitions, and milestones often retrigger trauma
Strategies for rehumanizing clinical spaces
How community care can become a lifeline
Frankie Harrison, CPsychol, is a UK-based clinical psychologist and founder of Miracle Moon, a groundbreaking online community providing trauma-informed support for NICU families worldwide. After her own traumatic pregnancy and NICU journey, Frankie transformed her career to focus exclusively on neonatal trauma, parent mental health, and nervous system healing.
Miracle Moon offers resources, videos, community spaces, and evidence-based guidance for families navigating life during and long after the NICU.
Important Links:
Miracle Moon: https://www.miraclemoon.co.ukFollow Frankie on Instagram: @miraclemoonuk Podcast: https://www.miraclemoon.co.uk/podcast LinkedInLearn more about Trauma-Informed Developmental Care
If this episode resonates with you, please share it with a NICU parent, clinician, or advocate who could use the validation and support. And don’t forget to rate and review the podcast—it helps amplify trauma-informed conversations that change lives.
More
In this deeply human and heartfelt episode, Mary sits down with clinical psychologist and NICU parent Frankie Harrison, founder of Miracle Moon, a global online support community for families navigating life after neonatal care. Frankie shares her powerful personal journey—from a traumatic pregnancy marked by preeclampsia, to a six-week NICU stay, to the emotional aftermath that reshaped not only her identity as a parent, but her entire professional path. Together, Mary and Frankie explore: What it means to experience trauma before, during, and after the NICU Why so many parents don’t realize they’re experiencing trauma until long after discharge How anxiety, hypervigilance, dissociation, and grief often hide beneath the surface The cultural and clinical barriers that make parents feel unseen, dismissed, or “palmed off” The healing power of community, validation, and meaningful attunement The critical need for clinician training, nervous-system literacy, and emotionally attuned care Why support shouldn’t end at NICU discharge—and what true post-NICU “rehab” might look like Frankie also shares the evolution of Miracle Moon—from an Instagram page to a global community providing trauma-informed resources, peer support, and evidence-based guidance for the long arc of healing that follows neonatal care. This conversation is a profound reminder that trauma-informed developmental care is not only for babies—it’s for parents, clinicians, and entire systems. And that healing happens in connection. NICU trauma as both a psychological and physiological experience Dissociation, survival mode, and why parents often can’t “take things in” while hospitalized The overlooked emotional labor of clinicians Shame reduction through validation and shared experience The need for rupture-and-repair in healthcare relationships Why birthdays, transitions, and milestones often retrigger trauma Strategies for rehumanizing clinical spaces How community care can become a lifeline Frankie Harrison, CPsychol, is a UK-based clinical psychologist and founder of Miracle Moon, a groundbreaking online community providing trauma-informed support for NICU families worldwide. After her own traumatic pregnancy and NICU journey, Frankie transformed her career to focus exclusively on neonatal trauma, parent mental health, and nervous system healing. Miracle Moon offers resources, videos, community spaces, and evidence-based guidance for families navigating life during and long after the NICU. Important Links: Miracle Moon: https://www.miraclemoon.co.ukFollow Frankie on Instagram: @miraclemoonuk Podcast: https://www.miraclemoon.co.uk/podcast LinkedInLearn more about Trauma-Informed Developmental Care If this episode resonates with you, please share it with a NICU parent, clinician, or advocate who could use the validation and support. And don’t forget to rate and review the podcast—it helps amplify trauma-informed conversations that change lives.