I dont wear tiara, but born to be a Royalty
Royalty isn’t about crowns or tiaras — it’s about resilience, dignity, and how we carry ourselves. A poetic reflection on self-worth that resonates across cultures and borders."
You Don’t Need a Tiara to Be Royal
Don’t Have a Tiara on My Head, Yet I Was Born Royalty
When I wake up and look in the mirror, there’s no crown, no jewels — just me.
Messy hair, sleepy eyes, yesterday’s thoughts still lingering.
Yet deep inside, I carry a royalty no throne can give.
As a child, I often felt less-than. In classrooms where the brightest girls sparkled, I shrank into corners. At family gatherings, where comparisons bloomed louder than laughter, I swallowed my voice. No tiara ever landed on my head. But in those quiet, aching moments, I crowned myself with something stronger: resilience.
Royalty, I’ve learned, isn’t about titles or glittering ornaments.
It’s about the way you walk when no one is cheering.
The way you hold your head high when life has tried to bow it down.
The way you speak truth when silence would be easier.
My crown is invisible, woven not of gold but of scars, lessons, and laughter.
My throne is the ground I stand firm upon.
My jewels are the people I love, the battles I’ve survived, and the dreams I refuse to let go of.
And I know I’m not alone.
From a village girl in Africa to a street artist in Brazil, from a student in Pakistan to a mother in Italy — our crowns may differ in shape, but the royalty of spirit is shared.
We are all born with dignity stitched into our bones.
So no, I don’t have a tiara on my head.
But every day I rise, walk, speak, and dream as though I am already royal — because I am.
And so are you.
Self-Worth
Personal Growth
Resilience
Identity
royalty of spirit
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