Explore how forgotten rituals, folktales, and ancestral care practices act as great teachers—grounding resilience, self‑understanding, and communal wisdom in a world obsessed with progress.
Author: CreativeWomensAssociation
Only Human
In Real Life. Is A powerful feature celebrating unfiltered letters, confessions, interviews, and poetry. It reframes vulnerability as strength and storytelling as social infrastructure for creativity, connection, and collective empowerment.
The Flow State Files
Women don’t lose their creative spark — it gets interrupted. New research shows how constant micro-disruptions kill flow state. Here’s how women can reclaim it, protect it, and burn brighter than ever.
Toxic Beauty
A searing critique of Toxic Beauty—the modern phenomenon where empowerment, self-compassion, and body positivity are weaponised to justify extremes. This article explores the collapse of common sense in beauty culture, drawing on research from Psychology Today, Verywell Mind, and the International Journal of Indian Psychology.
Long before women were allowed in labs, they sketched. Scientific illustration was their microscope — a way to document, analyse, and contribute to discovery. Now, we reclaim that resilience through line, pigment, and process.
Social prescribing is revolutionising healthcare by putting creativity at the heart of wellbeing. This article explores how creative practices are helping women thrive and why the future of health needs art more than ever.
We keep calling it feminism — like it’s a theory, not a fact. But women aren’t living a debate. We’re living a daily system of unpaid labour, structural inequality, and rebranded oppression. From workplace bias to burnout dressed as empowerment, nothing has changed. And if nothing changes — structurally, measurably — then nothing will.
The Creative Equity Index is a blueprint for measurable, enforceable workplace standards that reflect the real economic load women carry — not just theory, but policy.
Women create culture, corporations profit, and the originators disappear. This piece explores how cultural capital is mined from female creators, how platforms like Etsy and eBay profit from feminine labor, and how we can shift the system to value creators—not just trends.
Women are the backbone of the global creative economy—yet they remain unpaid, under-credited, and under-capitalised. Backed by the UNESCO Creative Economy Report, this article reframes the conversation around ownership, value, and visibility in the culture industries.