There’s something deeply freeing about waking up one day and realizing: I don’t have to ask the world for permission to feel beautiful. I don’t have to shrink, tone, smooth, or edit myself to fit into someone else’s version of worth. Beauty isn’t a checklist. It’s not a prize handed out when you finally meet a standard that keeps changing.
Sometimes I feel beautiful in soft light, in quiet moments when my body is resting and I’m not performing for anyone. Sometimes it’s when I laugh loudly, or when I wear something that hugs my shape and makes me feel like myself. Sometimes it’s in the mirror, yes—but sometimes it’s in the way I comfort a friend, the way I parent gently, the way I move through the world with care. That’s beauty too.
I’ve spent too long thinking I needed to look a certain way to be enough. But beauty isn’t something I owe anyone. It’s not even something I have to prove. If I feel beautiful—deep down, in my bones and breath—then I am. That’s the only definition that truly matters.