SPEAKING

Youth Keynotes • Adult Keynotes • Workshops • Trainings

Igniting Light, Healing, and Courage in Every Room

MelRo is known for her powerful ability to connect instantly with audiences of all ages from middle school students to corporate teams. Her lived experience, trauma-informed training, and rare blend of warmth and strength make her a speaker audiences never forget.

Whether she’s energizing an auditorium full of students or training a statewide team of child-welfare professionals, MelRo activates something deep and lasting:

Healing. Resilience. Radical Hope.

MelissaRoshan Potter, better known as MelRo, is a nationally recognized speaker, trauma-informed trainer, and advocate who helps people move from survival to self-worth and from pain to purpose.

With lived experience in foster care, homelessness, teen parenting, and healing complex trauma, MelRo brings a rare combination of credibility, compassion, and clarity to every stage. Her work is raw without being retraumatizing, hopeful without being hollow, and grounded in real tools, not platitudes.

She doesn’t just share her story.
She helps audiences understand their own, and what’s possible next.

Light. Hope. Healing. Transformation.

She doesn’t just inspire.
She equips and shifts the room.

MelRo with long dark wavy hair, wearing a pink dress and a red bracelet, speaking into a headset microphone with purple balloons in the background.

Signature Keynote

Keynotes for Youth and Young Adults

Keynotes for Adults & Organizations

Workshops & Trainings

What Audiences Experience

Scars Aren’t Shame: Becoming the Hero of Your Own Story

Our worst experiences can leave invisible wounds, but they don’t get to define who we become.

In this powerful keynote, MelRo reframes trauma, identity, and self-worth, challenging the belief that pain equals weakness. Through storytelling, insight, and trauma-informed language, she invites audiences to see their scars not as shame, but as proof of survival and strength.

This keynote is adapted for:

• Youth and school assemblies
• Adult and community audiences
• Leadership and professional development
• Child welfare, advocacy, and nonprofit organizations

Audiences leave feeling seen, grounded, and reminded that healing is possible and choice still exists.


MelRo speaks honestly to young people without talking down or sugarcoating reality. Her youth keynotes center identity, agency, and resilience, meeting students where they are and helping them see beyond what they’ve been through.

The Light Activator Tour™

Start the school year with hope, unity, and purpose.

The Light Activator Tour is MelRo’s signature beginning of school experience, designed to empower students, and the adults who support them, to reconnect with self-worth, choice, and possibility.

Learn more about The Light Activator Tour

Popular Youth Keynotes

• Your Bad Experiences Do Not Define You
• Becoming the Hero of Your Own Story
• Healing the Wounds No One Can See

Ideal for: middle school, high school, and college-age audiences.


For adult audiences, MelRo connects healing to leadership, relationships, and responsibility, highlighting how unhealed trauma shows up in families, workplaces, and systems.

Popular adult keynotes include:

• Radical Responsibility: Healing Yourself So You Don’t Harm Others
• Building Resilience in Youth, Families, and Communities
• Resilience at Work: What Unhealed Trauma Costs Organizations
• Beauty & Healing: Reclaiming Self-Worth at Any Age

Ideal for conferences, professional development, nonprofits, corporate teams, and advocacy organizations.


MelRo also offers interactive workshops and trauma-informed trainings, available in-person or virtually. Sessions can be customized based on audience and goals.

Common workshops include:

• Beauty & Healing (Women & Teens)
• Trauma-Informed Care & Parenting
• Caregiver Burnout & Emotional Resilience


✔ Authentic, lived-experience storytelling
✔ Trauma-informed language and delivery
✔ A balance of compassion and accountability
✔ Practical takeaways - not just inspiration

When schedules allow, MelRo is known for holding space after she speaks. Because healing doesn’t end when the applause does.


Contact us to discuss availability, audience fit, and customization.

MelRo wearing a white blouse and black skirt, sitting on a chair on a wooden stage, holding a microphone and speaking, with an American flag in the background.
Person holding a sign with the words 'WRONG GROWN', with 'WRONG' crossed out, in purple ink, standing on a shiny tiled floor.

Youth Detention Facility

I Am What I Choose To Become

In juvenile detention ("juvie"), youth receive temporary custody, education, counseling, and structured activities while awaiting court proceedings, focusing on rehabilitation rather than just punishment, with daily life including school, meals, recreation, and services for mental/physical health, all within a secure, supervised environment aimed at teaching life skills and positive behavior.

As a teen in Foster Care, MelRo went without adequate resources.  She wasn't surrounded by supportive services, nor positive role models that were pouring into her.  Thus, she aligned with the, "wrong" crowd, and made what would be a fateful decision that landed her in juvie.  Gratefully, due to the nature of the crime being on a smaller scale, MelRo was released not long after her arrival.

Through internal healing work, MelRo would learn the valYOUable lessons that our wrong choices in life, are actually opportunities to grow.  When we flip the letters of wrong around, it says grown.

It is a message she now offers to Youth Detention Facilities, Group Homes, Intervention, and Adversion Programs, Alternative High Schools, probation officers, correctional officers, staff, and various programs that support incarcerated youth,

"I am what I choose to become" is a nationally recognized, and highly sought after keynote that helps our most vulnerable youth reach inner restoration, personal leadership, and reformation.

MelRo hugging a student in an indoor setting with a wooden wall, a blue flag, and a table with a coffee cup, microphone, and podium.
Group of students and two teachers in a classroom, with sun emoji face filters over their faces, all wearing matching orange slippers, posing for a photo.
MelRo standing at a podium with a laptop, raising her hand, at a CASA conference promoting foster care and cultural inclusivity.
MelRo wearing an orange dress, smiling, standing in front of a backdrop with multiple blue and red hearts and figures of people.
Two women standing together and smiling in front of a poster at an event. The woman on the left is wearing a black dress with a tiger-stripe blazer, and the woman on the right is wearing a gray dress with a tie at the waist. They are in a conference room with a textured beige wall and striped carpet.

CASA

Reimagine The CASAbilities

The Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) program is

a national network of non-profit organizations that train and support community volunteers to represent the best interests of children who have been removed from their homes due to abuse or neglect. Appointed by judges, these volunteers act as the "eyes and ears" of the court, ensuring that children in foster care do not fall through the cracks of an overburdened child welfare system.

As a child in foster-care, MelRo was faced with what would be one of her most challenging life moments: she became a teen-mother at 17, and was in a teen domestic violence relationship.  Vowing to never allow her son to be away from her, she did everything in her limited power to ensure his safety.  But, without adequate support, and a lack of resources- she could not get away from her son's father.

It was MelRo's Court Appointed Special Advocate volunteer who would eventually learn of her case after her son's father was put in jail for domestic violence.  Her CASA Volunteer advocated for MelRo, and her baby to stay together.  She saw far past the adversity MelRo faced, and saw the value in her as a mother.  She knew that with adequate support, housing, income, and other services that MelRo/baby would thrive.

Gratefully, the magistrate granted this request.  MelRo and her son were gifted the opportunity to stay together, and through the dedicated advocacy of her volunteer, a placement in a teen parenting home was found.  MelRo and baby lived in the program for two years.  She would then finish high school through a General Equivalency Diploma, attend some college, obtain a management position in cosmetics, and started what would be her internationally recognized modeling career.

Due to the impact the organization of CASA has made on her son, and MelRo's life, MelRo has included the program in her mission to serve others.  As life presents us with beautiful, full-circle moments MelRo would go on to serve as Ohio CASA's first Diversity Equity Inclusion Services Director.

Through her work, she help train 50+ counties on the value of building cultural competency, her presentations explored the healing one's implicit bias,  and too a deep dive into the creation of more inclusive best practices for youth, and families.

MelRo also served as a CASA Volunteer.  It is MelRo's belief that our ability overcome, refuse to become like the harm we experiences (forgiving ourselves if we do/allow our experiences to inspire us to heal), and that when we turn our pain to purpose, we ignite our own inner Lights, but the Lights in others.

MelRo continues to provide keynotes for local, and statewide programs through compelling story telling/real life CASA experiences.  She is available for both in person, and virtual keynote sessions, DEI based trainings, CASA panel discussions, CASA Volunteer Appreciation dinners, fundraisers, and recruitment events.

Programs served: National CASA, Ohio CASA, Illinois CASA, Wisconsin CASA, Pennsylvania CASA, New York CASA, Colorado CASA, Wisconsin CASA, and over one hundred local programs.

MelRo making a heart shape with her hands in front of a backdrop with the logo of CASA for Children, featuring a stylized heart and figure, at an event in Wisconsin. She is wearing a blue dress and beige high heels, smiling and posing.
MelRo in a blue dress making a heart shape with her hands in front of a step-and-repeat backdrop with "CASA Colorado" and heart-themed logos.
MelRo with black hair, glasses, and a black t-shirt stands smiling next to a table with CASA for Children promotional materials, inside a modern conference room with glass walls and an empty room with chairs in the background.
MelRo with glasses and curly hair smiling and holding a blue pillow with the CASA logo, standing next to a patterned couch and a white bag.
A large group of people gathered in a conference room, many holding blue and white pinwheels, smiling for the photo.