Hi, I’m Meghan, the mom behind Baby Village.
I’ve always been drawn to helping people. That’s what led me to train as an audiologist, and later into teaching, after spending six months in Vietnam teaching English and discovering a love for education. Looking back now, I can see how both paths prepared me for where I am today, supporting families and walking alongside moms in their own journeys.
I became a mother in 2023 when my first child was born. My second little one joined us just this year in 2025. Like so many moms, I quickly realised how much support is needed to feel safe, confident, and secure in motherhood.
When I moved to Mauritius in 2021, I imagined it would be the perfect place to raise a family, and in many ways, it is. But after having my first baby, I realised how little support existed for new moms. I couldn’t even find an antenatal class to attend. On top of that, I struggled with postpartum depression and found myself without the network of guidance or community I so desperately needed.
That’s when the idea for Baby Village began to grow. Not from one single moment, but from a deep desire that no mom should ever feel as lonely in her journey as I once did.
Baby Village is built on the simple but powerful belief that it takes a village to raise a child. Through classes, community events, and safe spaces for conversation, my hope is to create the kind of village every mom deserves, a place to connect, learn, and feel supported no matter what path you are walking.
Along the way, I’ve trained as a Holistic Sleep Coach (OCN Level 6) and in Infant Massage with the Infant Massage Association. My approach is gentle and family-centered, with no cry it out methods and no one-size-fits-all solutions, just encouragement and practical tools tailored to each family.
More than qualifications, I bring my lived experience as a mom of two. I know what it’s like to feel exhausted, to question yourself, and to long for someone to simply say, “me too.”
That’s why Baby Village exists. So no mom ever has to feel alone, unseen, or unsupported. Because motherhood is hard, but it’s also beautiful, and it should be shared.