"When my cup is filled as a creative, the best of my motherhood tends to come out," says Australian artist Alessandra Doyle.
"And so, my kids and my husband get the best of me as a wife and a mum."
That's why the 33-year-old decided to enroll in a six-month online course for Catholic women called the Woman School, which promises to help women tap into their long-dormant life-giving gifts without the "mothers' guilt" that can plague them, per Cosmopolitan.
"It helped me to observe my strengths and weaknesses in those areas and through that observation I was able to find and implement tools and strategies to help me to work towards goals," Doyle tells Australia's ABC News.
"I found this course really pulled together the gifts that I've been given in a way that allowed me to use them most effectively," she adds.
"It crystallised for me that when I am being very creative, I am also at my best as a mother because the two feed each other," she says.
"When my cup is filled as a creative, the best of my motherhood tends to come out.
And so, my kids and my husband get the best of me as a wife and a
A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
In the world of social enterprises, failure is a cringe-worthy moment nobody wants to talk about. But, social entrepreneurs can benefit from their failures.