Create Love Create Freedom
Guiding women through the deeper thresholds of self-leadership, relational sovereignty, and feminine embodiment, the Create Love Create Freedom podcast is a space for those who already know something in them has changed.
This is not a podcast about fixing yourself.
It is a space for women who are ready to live from what is already intact.
Through archetypal psychology, conscious relationship, and mythic feminine wisdom, Allison Fischer explores what it means to create a life rooted in truth, devotion, and self-trust — not through striving, but through alignment.
Each episode is an invitation into a quieter kind of power:
grounded, sovereign, and deeply free.
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Create Love Create Freedom
Sacred Pleasure, Sovereignty & the Egyptian Goddess Bastet
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In this episode, we explore the deeper psychological, spiritual, and archetypal meaning of Bastet — the ancient Egyptian goddess often reduced to the “cat goddess,” yet profoundly connected to feminine sovereignty, nervous system regulation, sacred pleasure, beauty, discernment, and emotional restoration.
This is not an episode about surface-level goddess aesthetics or performative femininity.
It is an exploration of the modern woman who is exhausted by overstimulation, emotional chaos, burnout, hyper-independence, and constant performance — and who is beginning to reclaim another form of feminine power entirely.
Inside this episode:
- The true symbolism and history of Bastet in ancient Egypt
- Bastet’s connection to feminine energy, sensuality, and sacred atmosphere
- The psychological relationship between beauty, pleasure, and nervous system regulation
- How women move from survival mode into regulated feminine sovereignty
- Discernment, boundaries, emotional access, and energetic protection
- Why modern women are craving softness, peace, beauty, and restoration
- The difference between feminine softness and feminine self-abandonment
- Bastet after betrayal, burnout, heartbreak, and emotional exhaustion
- The rise of the modern sovereign woman
We also explore:
- hypervigilance and feminine burnout
- sacred femininity and emotional regulation
- beauty as nourishment rather than performance
- feminine embodiment and self-trust
- the psychology of atmosphere and environment
- post-spectacle femininity
- feminine leadership and internal sovereignty
This episode is for women who are no longer interested in living in constant emotional survival mode — and who are beginning to understand that peace itself can become a form of power.
If you’ve been drawn toward:
- feminine archetypes
- goddess psychology
- nervous system healing
- sacred pleasure
- emotional discernment
- sovereign femininity
- post-spectacle living
- feminine embodiment
- beauty, softness, and sacred restoration
…this episode will speak directly to the deeper transition you may already be moving through.
Welcome to Create Love Freedom — A living temple for women reclaiming their feminine essence, healing old wounds, and rising sovereign
Explore the Temple:
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- The School of Self-Transformation...
Welcome to the Create Love, Create Freedom Podcast. This podcast explores feminine psychology, relationships, mythology, and what begins to shift when a woman lives from her own center rather than from expectation or conditioning. My name is Alison Fisher, and my work centers on internal authority and relational clarity across the seasons of life. As you listen to today's episode, just know that there's nothing you need to force. We're simply noticing what's already present within ourselves and allowing things to become clearer over time. On today's episode, we are going to be diving into the Egyptian goddess of power and sensuality, which is Bastet. One of the things that I've noticed is that there are seasons in a woman's life where she becomes exhausted by noise, not merely external noise, but the noise of performance. The pressure to constantly explain herself, to prove her strength, to remain endlessly available, to survive over stimulation, masquerading as ambition, to continue producing, responding, nurturing, fixing, giving, and managing. Many women live for years inside nervous systems that never truly soften. Hypervigilance becomes identity. Exhaustion becomes normal and right sacrifice. Even self care becomes another form of performance. And eventually something inside the woman begins to resist. Not dramatically, not loudly, quietly. She starts craving dim lighting instead of visibility, silence instead of constant output, beauty instead of optimization, discernment instead of openness, and depth instead of access. This is part of why the Egyptian goddess Bastet feels so psychologically relevant right now. Bastet is often reduced to the cat goddess, but that framing misses almost everything important about her. Bastet was not merely a symbol of cats, she was a symbol of cultivated feminine power, a woman who no longer leaks her energy unnecessarily, a woman who understands atmosphere, a woman who protects the sacred interior of her life, and a woman who no longer mistakes constant hardness for strength. There is something deeply sovereign about Bastet. She does not perform dominance, she does not beg for attention, she does not explain her boundaries endlessly, and she does not abandon beauty in order to survive. She watches, she discerns, she protects, she restores, and perhaps most importantly, she reminds women that peace itself can become a form of power. In a world addicted to spectacle, urgency, visibility, and emotional chaos, Lastet represents another path entirely, the woman who returns to herself so fully that her life begins to feel sacred again. Let's begin. So first we're going to discuss who Bastet really was. When most people hear the name Bastet, they think of cats. They think of elegance, mysticism, ancient Egypt, perhaps femininity in its softer forms. But like many feminine archetypes throughout history, Bastet has been simplified so heavily that most of her psychological and symbolic depth has been lost. Because Bastet was never merely a cat goddess. She was a goddess of protection, discernment, pleasure, sensuality, atmosphere, fertility, music, home, women's rituals, and sacred restoration. And perhaps most importantly, she represented feminine power after refinement. What most people don't realize is that Bastet did not originally appear in Egyptian mythology as the softer domesticated cat most people imagine today. In earlier Egyptian history, Bastet was associated much more closely with the lioness. And I think that this matters psychologically. The lioness represents survival, force, protection, aggression when necessary, and the willingness to fight for territory, safety, and sovereignty. This connects Bastet historically to other Egyptian lioness goddesses like Sekmet, fierce solar feminine forces, associated with destruction, purification, rage, war, and divine protection. But over time Bastet evolved. Her symbolism softened from lioness into cat, and modern culture often interprets that transition as weakness. The Egyptians did not see it that way. The cat was not powerless, the cat was precise. A cat does not waste energy unnecessarily. A cat observes before acting, a cat protects its environment carefully. A cat understands instinct, and a cat knows when to approach and when to withdraw. This is not passive energy, it's calibrated energy. And psychologically, many women move through this exact transition in their own lives, especially after periods of burnout, betrayal, overgiving, survival, or hyperindependence. At first, feminine power often emerges through the lioness phase, fighting, proving, surviving, protecting, overworking, and enduring. But eventually, many women realize they cannot live in constant defense forever. And this is where Bastet become begins to emerge. Not as weakness, but as power that no longer needs constant performance. Historically, Bastet became associated with lower Egypt and the city in the cities there, where massive festivals were often held in Hurona. These gatherings were not cold or rigid religious ceremonies. They involved music, dance, perfume, adornment, celebration, beauty, feminine gathering and embodied joy. And modern culture often dismisses these things as frivolous. The ancient world understood something many modern societies have forgotten that beauty changes consciousness. Atmosphere changes consciousness. Pleasure changes consciousness. The nervous system responds to environment. This is why and part of why Bastet feels so psychologically important right now, particularly for women living in psych cultures built around overstimulation, productivity, visibility, and chronic emotional exhaustion, because Bastet represents something radically different. She represents the sacredness of the interior world, the home, the body, the senses, the nervous system, the emotional environment, and the energetic environment. She reminds women that what enters their space matters, what surrounds them matters, what they consume matters, and who gains access to them matters. And unlike many modern interpretations of feminine empowerment, Bastet does not teach women to become harder in order to become powerful. She teaches women to become more discerning, more selective, more regulated, and more sovereign. And there is also something deeply important about the way Bastet integrates pleasure and protection simultaneously. Modern culture often splits women into extremes soft or strong, sensual or intelligent, nurturing or powerful, beautiful or serious. But Bastet dissolves those false divisions. She is sensual and watchful, soft and protective, beautiful and dangerous, warm yet deeply discerning. She does not abandon pleasure in order to survive, nor does she abandon discernment in pursuit of pleasure. And this balance is part of why Bastet continues to resonate so deeply with women who are rebuilding themselves after chaos, women who are no longer interested in proving themselves endlessly, over explaining their boundaries, leaking energy into unstable dynamics, remaining accessible to everyone, and confusing exhaustion with worthiness. Bastet represents the woman who has learned that peace itself requires protection. And perhaps this is the deeper truth hidden among her mythology. Bastet is not the absence of power. She is the power that has become self-possessed. We're going to examine Bastet and the nervous system next. One of the reasons Bastet feels so emotionally resonant for modern women is because many women are profoundly dysregulated without even realizing it. Not because they are weak, not because they are incapable, but because modern life often requires women to remain in states of constant activation, constant input, constant stimulation, constant emotional labor, constant visibility, and constant urgency. Many women have spent years, sometimes decades, functioning inside nervous systems that never truly feel safe enough to soften. And eventually the body begins to tell the truth, the exhaustion, the inflammation, the overstimulation, the emotional numbness, the inability to rest deeply, the craving for silence, the desire to withdraw from noise, performance, and emotional chaos. This is part of why Bastet matters psychologically, because Bastet is not merely a goddess of femininity, she's a goddess of regulated feminine energy, and regulated feminine energy feels very different than performative empowerment. A regulated woman does not need constant validation, does not chase intensity to feel alive, does not mistake anxiety for chemistry, does not glorify burnout, and does not leak herself into every environment. She becomes more intentional with her space, her relationships, her environment, her sensory world, her access points, her attention, and how she allows society to influence her. And this is where Bastet becomes deeply symbolic, because in ancient Egypt, the Egyptians understood something modern culture often dismisses. The nervous system is profoundly affected by atmosphere. Environment is not superficial. Lighting matters, the scent matters, the sound you surround yourself with matters, textures that you surround yourself with matters. The emotional tone matters, and the beauty matters. This is why so many women instinctively begin creating rituals around themselves when they are trying to come back to regulation. The hot bath, the candlelight, the soft music, perfume, the clean home, the silk robe, the evening walk under the moon, quiet morning coffee, the incense, fresh flowers. Modern productivity culture often mocks these things as indulgent or unnecessary. But Bastet reminds women that restoration is not frivolous. Restoration is biological. The body cannot remain in survival indefinitely without consequence. And many women have unknowingly normalized chronic activation for so long that peace initially feels unfamiliar, even uncomfortable. This is especially true for women who spent years over functioning in relationships, caretaking emotionally unavailable people, surviving instability, living inside financial pressure, navigating emotionally chaotic environments, trying to earn love through usefulness, and performing competence constantly. The nervous system adapts to chaos, and when it does so, calm can feel almost suspicious. But Bastet energy begins teaching women something different entirely, that softness and safety can coexist with power. This is where Bastet differs profoundly from the modern girl boss archetype, because many modern empowerment narratives still glorify overextension, more output, more visibility, more access, more optimization, and more proving. But Bastet does not constantly perform power, she conserves it. And there is a quietness to Bastet energy, a selectiveness, a refusal to pour life force energy into environments that drain the soul. If we are also creating connection between Bastet and Greek goddesses and Greek myth, to me this feels a lot like healthy pestia energy. Healthy healthy energy that protects one's psychological space, one's spiritual space, and deeply connects oneself back to herself. Now this quietness to this Bastet energy, right? It is selective. It is a refusal to pour life force into environments that drain the soul. And psychologically, this often marks a major transition in a woman's life. She stops asking, how much can I endure? And begins asking, what actually allows me to remain alive inside myself? That shift changes everything. Because once a woman becomes more regulated, she also becomes more discerning. She notices which relationships exhaust her, which environments constrict her body, which conversations dysregulate her, which ambitions are rooted in fear instead of desire, and which forms of visibility cost far too much energetically. And often women moving into bastard energy begin simplifying their lives, not because they become passive, but because they stop worshipping over stimulation. They begin protecting their mornings, their evenings, their homes, their bodies, their emotional bandwidth, and their attention. They become more intentional about what enters their world. This is also why Bastet is so connected symbolically to the home, much like Hesja. Not domesticity as submission, but home as sanctuary. That's a very different shift and mindset shift that our culture often provides us with, our current culture. This contrasts the ancient world, because the ancient world understood home as energetic environment, as sacred interior. And modern women often underestimate how profoundly healing it is to create spaces that regulate rather than deplete them. Spaces with softness, warmth, beauty, order, sensuality, calm, and intentionality, not for aesthetics alone, but for nervous system restoration. Vastet teaches the feminine that power does not thrive under chronic depletion. It thrives in protected aliveness. And perhaps this is one of the deepest misunderstandings modern culture has about feminine energy altogether. Women are not meant to remain permanently armored. The body was never designed to live forever in survival mode. Eventually, the woman must come home to herself, not through collapse, not through passivity, but through conscious restoration. And this is the deeper medicine of Bastet, the woman who stops leaking energy into chaos and becomes capable of protecting something sacred within herself again. Next we're going to look at Bastet and feminine discernment. One of the most important aspects of Bastet is discernment, not fear, not emotional walls, not bitterness, but discernment. And modern culture often struggles to understand the difference, because many women are taught to extremes, to be endlessly open, or to become completely hardened. But Bastet exists in neither polarity. She is warm without being naive, sensual without being easily accessed, and open without abandoning instinct. And this is part of why the cat became such a powerful symbol in relation to her. Cats don't give themselves fully to everyone. They observe first. They feel environments carefully. They notice tone shifts, energy shifts, tension, safety and intentions. A cat does not apologize for its instincts, and psychologically, this mirrors something many women begin reclaiming later in life, their intuitive discernment, especially after years of overriding themselves, because many women were conditioned very early to disconnect from instinct in order to preserve attachment, to ignore discomfort, overextend empathy, explain away red flags, tolerate inconsistency, abandon intuition to appear nice, stay accessible even when exhausted, and prioritize being chosen over being safe. And eventually this creates enormous self betrayal, not always dramatically, often very subtly. The woman says yes when her body says no. The woman keeps explaining herself to people committed to misunderstanding her. The woman remains emotionally available to people who have not yet earned access to her inner world. And over time this erodes trust in the self. But Bastet energy begins restoring that trust, not through aggression, but through observation. The Bastet woman watches. She listens carefully. She notices patterns. She pays attention to inconsistency. She notices how her body feels around people. She notices whether peace increases or decreases in someone's presence. And importantly, she no longer believes that discernment makes her cruel. This is one of the deepest shifts many women experience psychologically, because women are often socialized to experience boundaries as guilt, to believe protecting themselves is selfish, withdrawing access is unkind, saying no is harsh, discernment is judgmental, and selectiveness is arrogance. But Bestead does not apologize for protecting the temple. And the temple psychologically is the nervous system, the emotional world, the body, the home, the psyche, the erotic self, and the inner life. Not everyone deserves access to those spaces, and modern overstimulation culture has made many women dangerously overexposed, overexposed emotionally, digitally, energetically, and relationally. Constant availability has become normalized. A bastad energy restores sacred thresholds. The understanding that access should be earned through consistency, integrity, reciprocity, emotional safety, demonstrated care, and energetic coherence, not merely attraction, not charisma, not intensity, because intensity is not intimacy. And this is one of the places where discernment becomes especially important in relationships. Many women mistake emotional activation for connection. The nervous system becomes conditioned to unpredictability, intermittent reinforcement, emotional inconsistency, longing, anxiety, chasing. And then calm love initially feels unfamiliar. But Bastet energy does not chase emotional chaos. It moves slowly, observes carefully, feels deeply, and chooses intentionally. The Bastet woman no longer romanticizes instability. She no longer confuses mystery with unavailability, chemistry with dysregulation, desire with devotion, tension with intimacy. And perhaps most importantly, she no longer overfunctions in order to secure love. This also extends beyond relationships. Discern affects relationships, businesses, leadership, collaboration, social media, visibility, audience building, opportunities, and entrepreneurship. Because not every opportunity is aligned. Not every invitation deserves acceptance. Not every room deserves access to a woman's energy. And modern culture often rewards overexposure, more visibility, more access, more vulnerability, more output, more sharing. Bastet energy becomes increasingly selective, not secretive, not fearful, a little bit mysterious and quite selective. There is a quiet confidence in a woman who no longer needs everyone to understand her in order to trust herself. And often this phase emerges after disappointment, after betrayal, after burnout, after realizing how much energy was wasted trying to convince people to care properly, after realizing how much energy was wasted on men who only want to extract. After realizing how much her culture, her society tries to condition her to make herself smaller so that she will fit the narrative they are trying to push onto the world. Eventually, the woman stops forcing access, and instead she begins watching who naturally approaches with consistency, reverence, reciprocity, steadiness, and emotional maturity. This is also why Bastet energy often feels deeply peaceful, because discernment removes chaos for chaos fully enters. The woman becomes more attuned to subtle disrespect, emotional instability, energetic depletion, performative charm, manipulation disguised as vulnerability, and attention seeking disguised as connection, not from paranoia, but from pattern recognition. And the more regulated the woman becomes, the sharper this discernment often grows. Because intuition becomes clearer when the nervous system is no longer flooded constantly. This is why peace and discernment are deeply connected. A regulated woman can hear herself more clearly. And perhaps this is one of Bastet's deepest teachings altogether. A woman does not become powerful by abandoning softness. She becomes powerful by learning where softness belongs. Next, let's examine Bastet, beauty, and sacred pleasure. One of the greatest distortions modern culture has created around feminine power is the belief that beauty and pleasure are somehow shallow, that softness is unserious, that sensuality lacks intelligence, that rest must be earned through exhaustion, and that beauty is frivolous unless it's monetized, optimized, or publicly validated. And as a result, many women slowly disconnect from their own aliveness, not intentionally, but gradually. They become functional instead of embodied, efficient instead of nourished, capable instead of fully present in their lives. The nervous system adapts to survival, and eventually many women stop noticing how deprived they truly feel, not only physically, but sensually and when it comes to their sensory space, also emotionally and spiritually. This is part of why Bastet feels so restorative psychologically, because Bastet reconnects a woman to sacred pleasure, not escapism, not hedonism, not endless indulgence, but pleasure as nourishment, pleasure as regulation and embodiment, and as a return to the senses, pleasure as proof that life is still meant to be lived from within the body, not merely managed intellectually. The ancient Egyptians understood the relationship between beauty, ritual, and consciousness very deeply. Bastet's temples were associated with perfume, oils, music, adornment, dance, celebration, sensuality, feminine gathering, and sacred atmosphere. And modern culture often dismisses these things as decorative or excessive. But the body does not experience beauty as trivial. The body responds to beauty, the warmth and scent, to softness and rhythm, texture and lighting, the spaciousness and sensory safety. This is why women so often begin craving beauty again after periods of grief and burnout, heartache and overwork. Not because they are superficial, but because the psyche is trying to restore aliveness. A woman buying flowers for herself, lighting candles at night, wearing perfume even when alone, taking long hot baths, dancing in her kitchen as she creates something both healthy and absolutely beautiful, creating a beautiful home, wearing silk against her skin, and listening to music that softens her body. These are not meaningless acts, they are acts of re enchantment. And Bastet energy reminds women that beauty is not weakness. Beauty can come can become a form of emotional and spiritual coherence, especially in cultures that normalize ugliness through overstimulation, exhaustion, aggression, and emotional fragmentation. There is also something profoundly important about the way that Bastet integrates sensuality without self objectification. Modern culture tends to split women into extremes purity or hypersexualization, invisibility performance, and repression or exposure. Bastet exits and exists outside of these binaries. She is sensual without becoming consumable, erotic without becoming performative, and beautiful without needing constant attention. And this distinction matters deeply, because many women were taught to experience beauty through the male gaze long before they ever experience beauty through their own nervous system. Beauty became approval, desirability, competition, social currency and performance, instead of embodiment, delight, atmosphere, pleasure, artistry, and self devotion. But Bastet restores and reorients beauty inward again, toward feeling, toward presence, toward intimacy with life itself. The Bastet woman does not beautify herself solely to be seen. She creates beauty because beauty changes her internal world, because beauty softens the body, it restores emotional spaciousness, and beauty reconnects a woman to herself. And this is especially important for highly capable women, women who work hard, lead heavily, and carry responsibility constantly. Because over time, responsibility without beauty can create spiritual dryness. The woman becomes productive, but emotionally undernourished, accomplished, disconnected from delight. And eventually, many women realize they do not merely want success, they want a beautiful life, not necessarily extravagant, not performative luxury, a beauty that feels alive, a beautiful home, beautiful conversations, beautiful pacing, beautiful rituals, beautiful relationships, and beautiful emotional environments. And Bastet reminds women that cultivating beauty is not separate from sovereignty, it is part of sovereignty. Because what surrounds a woman eventually shapes what's happening inside of her internally. This is also why sacred pleasure requires discernment. Not every form of pleasure nourishes. Some forms of pleasure numb, distract, dissociate, and deplete. Lastet teaches restorative pleasure, the kind that leaves a woman feeling more whole, more connected, more alive, and more rooted in herself, not less. And perhaps this is one of the deepest things modern women are slowly relearning. Pleasure is not the opposite of discipline. Pleasure is part of what makes a sustainable life possible. A woman cannot easily survive on depletion and deprivation and still remain fully alive inside herself. Eventually, the soul begins asking for beauty again, for slowness, for softness, for atmosphere, for sensuality, and for delight. And Bastet reminds women that responding to those desires is not weakness, it is remembrance. Next we are going to examine Bastet and the modern sovereign woman. One of the reasons Bastet feels so psychologically relevant right now is because many women are beginning to question the entire cultural model they were handed about success, femininity, visibility, and power. And for years, modern culture has largely presented women with two options become smaller in order to be loved, or become harder in order to survive. And many women moved between these extremes for decades, shape shifting, performing, over functioning, overachieving, over explaining, and trying to stimulate simultaneously, remain desirable, productive, emotionally available, ambitious, agreeable, beautiful, nurturing, independent, accomplished, and endlessly resilient. And eventually, many women began asking a quieter question. What if power is not supposed to feel this exhausting? This is where Bastet becomes deeply symbolic for the modern sovereign woman. Because Bastette represents a form of feminine authority that is not internally excuse me, that is internally rooted rather than externally performed. She does not need constant validation to feel real. She does not need endless visibility to feel powerful, and she does not need chaos to feel alive. And this creates a very different emotional orientation to life. The modern sovereign woman begins caring less about attention, performance, social approval, forced accessibility, proving intelligence constantly, competing for visibility, and managing everyone's perception of her. And the modern sovereign woman became more and has become more about peace, coherence, emotional regulation, depth, beauty, meaningful work, energetic integrity, sustainable relationships, and protected creativity. This often looks very different than the loud empowerment narratives modern culture tends to reward, because sovereign women frequently become quieter externally as they become more rooted internally. Not invisible, not passive, but less available for performance. And in many ways, this is profoundly threatening to spectacle culture. A woman who no longer needs constant validation becomes difficult to manipulate. A woman who is no longer starving for attention cannot easily be controlled through approval or rejection. A woman who has cultivated an inner sanctuary becomes less vulnerable to environments built on external extraction. And this is part of why the Bastet archetype feels especially resonant for highly intelligent, deeply feeling women. Women who are beginning to realize they do not actually want endless hustle, performative visibility, emotional chaos disguised as passion, shallow networking, over stimulation as identity, burnout disguised as ambition, constant service seen as feminine duty. They want lives that feel internally beautiful, lives that feel spacious, emotionally coherent, aesthetically nurturing, intellectually alive, relationally safe, financially stable, and spiritually grounded. And importantly, many women are beginning to realize that creating this kind of life requires discernment. Not everyone can enter the sanctuary. Not every opportunity deserves acceptance. Not every relationship deserves emotional access. Not every audience deserves intimacy. Not every ambition is aligned with the nervous system. The sovereign woman becomes increasingly aware of energetic cost. She begins asking, What does this require from my nervous system? What does this environment require? Hold me away from internally? Does this relationship deepen my peace or destabilize it? Does this ambition nourish my life or consume it? Does this visibility feel coherent or extractive? And this changes the way she moves through the world. She becomes more intentional, more selective, more rooted in herself. There is also something deeply important about how Bastet reframes feminine leadership. Because modern leadership models often reward hypermasculine overextension with endless output, emotional suppression, constant accessibility, optimization, urgency, and dominance, and because modern feminine leadership models often reward hyper feminine service and giving, right? Constantly proving herself to others, constantly being available to her family, to the man that she is with. Constantly in a state of overgiving, in a state of constant accessibility and endlessly outputting for others, not just herself. But Bastet introduces another possibility leadership through emotional coherence, leadership through discernment, leadership through atmosphere, leadership through nervous system regulation, and leadership through steadiness rather than spectacle. Leadership through returning to herself and making sure that she has what she needs without overgiving. This is especially relevant for women building businesses, communities, creative work, or intellectual bodies of work, because many women eventually realize the way they build matters as much as what they build. A woman can create external success while internally abandoning herself, and Bastet refuses the split. She reminds women that sovereignty is not merely financial or relational, it is internal. It is the ability to remain connected to oneself while moving through the world, to create without depletion, to lead without self erasure, to love without self abandonment, to remain soft without becoming porous, and to remain powerful without becoming hardened. And perhaps this is the deeper emotional shift many women are entering collectively now, not the rejection of ambition, but the rejection of forms of ambition that require the destruction of the self. The modern sovereign woman still desires depth, impact, beauty, love, success, meaningful work, financial stability, and intellectual expansion, but she no longer wants those things at the cost of her nervous system, her body, her peace, or her soul. And this is where Bastet becomes more than mythology. She becomes a psychological orientation, a way a way of moving through life. A woman who understands peace is power, beauty is nourishment, discernment is protection, softness requires boundaries, atmosphere shapes consciousness, pleasure can be sacred, restoration is intelligent, and sovereignty begins internally. And perhaps more importantly, the sovereign woman no longer organizes her life around surviving chaos. She organizes her life around protecting a liveness. To conclude today's episode, I think that this is perhaps why Bastet continues to resonate across thousands of years, because she speaks to something many women are quietly remembering now. That feminine power was never meant to exist only through exhaustion, not through endless performance, constant proving, emotional overexposure, or permanent survival mode, through presence, through discernment, through beauty, through nervous system safety, through protected softness, and through the sacred cultivation of an inner life. And maybe this is the deeper shift many women are moving through collectively, not becoming less ambitious, not becoming less intelligent, not becoming less relational, and not becoming less powerful, becoming less willing to abandon themselves in the pursuit of those things. Also sacred pleasure over numbness, and sovereignty over self erasure. And for many women, this shift begins quietly, a candle lit at night, a long bath after a difficult day, turning off the phone, protecting the home more intentionally, leaving relationships that destabilize the nervous system, choosing beauty again, softness again, and stillness again. Not because the woman has become fragile, but because she finally understands what deserves protection. And perhaps this is the real heart of Bastad. Not the cat, not the mythology alone, but the woman who learns that her life force is sacred. The woman who no longer pours herself endlessly into environments that cannot honor her. The woman who becomes selective with her energy, not from fear, but from self-respect. The woman who realizes that peace itself can become a form of power. And maybe in a world addicted to urgency, spectacle, noise, and emotional chaos, the most radical thing a woman can do is create a life that allows her to remain fully alive inside herself. Thank you for being here. Let whatever was useful settle in its own time. Clarity, I have found, tends to unfold naturally when we give it space. Until next time, stay rooted, stay sovereign, and stay true to your feminine path.