The Queen is the most powerful piece on the chess board. We all need connection. We all need recognition. But when external validation becomes the
The Queen is the most powerful piece on the chess board.
We all need connection. We all need recognition. But when external validation becomes the cornerstone of your life—your identity, your healing, your self-worth—it becomes a cage disguised as comfort.
The problem with building yourself on what others say, think, or feel about you is that the “you” that emerges isn’t truly you. It’s a performance.
It’s a patchwork of approval ratings, social cues, and unspoken rules. You end up navigating your life like a contestant on a show you never signed up for, always looking for applause, likes, or a nod of approval just to feel real.
But what happens when the applause fades?
When the people change?
When your truth makes others uncomfortable?
Here’s the truth: if external validation built it, external disapproval can break it.
External validation is unstable.
It shifts with trends, moods, projections, and misunderstandings.
It can be given for the wrong reasons and withheld for reasons that have nothing to do with your worth.
It’s a risky foundation to build your healing, your existence, your self worth, your identity, your growth, your boundaries—or even your dreams—on.
You deserve a stronger foundation. One rooted in self-awareness. In values. In internal clarity.
That way, applause becomes a bonus—not the blueprint.
Criticism becomes feedback—not a crisis.
And your healing becomes a home—not a stage.
Let people clap if they want to.
Let them question if they must.
But never let their noise define your direction.
You were not made to be built from the outside in.
You were made to stand strong from the inside out.
AFFIRMATION
“I was never meant to live for other people’s claps.
My worth was written in the stars, whispered by my ancestors, and sealed by the Most High.
I honor myself first. I listen to the wisdom within.
Let the world have its opinions—
I have my peace, my power, and my purpose.
And baby, that’s more than enough.”