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05/10/2026

To the women raising babies, raising teenagers, raising grown adults, raising businesses, raising communities… and somehow still showing up for everyone else while figuring yourself out too—Happy Mother’s Day. 💛

Motherhood changes you. It stretches you, humbles you, exhausts you, and deepens you in ways nothing else can. And for many of us, it also means learning how to let go a little at a time—watching children grow into their own people, make their own choices, and build lives beyond us. That part is beautiful… and hard.

Today we also honor the mothers who are no longer here, the women who mother others without having children of their own, and the women navigating complicated feelings around this day.

However you’re experiencing Mother’s Day, we hope you make space to care for yourself too. 💐

03/18/2026

March is Women’s History Month, and MoveStudio is celebrating women whose discoveries changed science—even when history didn’t give them the credit.

In the 1950s, the cause of Down syndrome was unknown.

Dr. Marthe Gautier discovered that it is associated with an extra chromosome—Trisomy 21.

The recognition went to her supervisor, Jérôme Lejeune.

Today her discovery still shapes genetic medicine and prenatal diagnostics worldwide.

03/11/2026

March is Women’s History Month, and MoveStudio is celebrating women whose discoveries changed science—even when history didn’t give them the credit.

For centuries, people guessed how biological s*x developed.

Then geneticist Dr. Nettie Stevens discovered that s*x is linked to specific chromosomes (X and Y)—a breakthrough that helped launch modern genetics.

Yet her contemporary, Edmund Beecher Wilson, is often the name remembered in textbooks.

Her work helped shape how we understand genetics and inherited traits today. 🔬

03/04/2026

March is Women’s History Month, and MoveStudio is celebrating women whose discoveries changed science—even when history didn’t give them the credit.

In the early 1900s, Hansen’s disease (leprosy) was essentially a life sentence.

At just 23 years old, Dr. Alice Ball developed the first effective treatment, turning a devastating illness into a treatable disease.

But after her death, a male colleague, Arthur L. Dean, renamed the discovery “Dean’s Method.”

Her work still saves lives today.

✨ Another reminder that women have always been shaping medicine.

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