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.
Category: Scientific Notes and Sketches
Explore how women are reclaiming their autonomy by choosing personal growth and creativity over casual relationships, supported by research highlighting the emotional benefits of this intentional lifestyle shift.
What happens when a woman chooses to channel her sexual energy into art, business, and purpose—not romance? This 2025 case study shows how energy management, not abstinence, is unlocking unprecedented creative power.
Napoleon Hill’s 1937 concept of “Sex Transmutation” is finding new relevance in the 2025 creative economy. Far from mystical, it’s a strategy for managing energy, boosting focus, and driving results. Discover how women today are refining this powerful idea for modern leadership and creativity.
Explore how fascia research, somatic therapy, and historical women’s wisdom are reframing the female pelvis as a key to emotional regulation, trauma healing, and creative power.
Discover how interior architecture—through elements like color and spatial scale—can influence emotional states, brainwave patterns, and vagus nerve activity, revealing a groundbreaking link between built environments and the gut-brain connection.
Explore how tactile arts like painting and knitting can enhance the gut-brain connection by stimulating the vagus nerve, increasing Heart Rate Variability (HRV), promoting relaxation, and improving digestive health.
Singing isn’t just self-expression—it’s self-regulation. New research shows that vocalization activates the vagus nerve, improves digestion, reduces stress, and enhances emotional wellbeing. This article explores why singing could be the most overlooked wellness tool in your health kit.
Music-making isn’t just creative—it’s medicinal. According to new research, playing an instrument leads to measurable dopamine increases, reduced anxiety, and greater emotional resilience. This piece explores the science and what it means through the Creative Women’s Association lens.
Infants and children instinctively use vocal sounds to soothe stress and activate the vagus nerve. Discover how their natural hums and babbles regulate the nervous system — and why grown-ups should start doing it too.