Mim | Reine Sobre
So I write these words as my coronation oath. I will not wait for someone to place a tiara on my head. I will not seek validation from a kingdom that does not see my light. From this day forward, I am reine sobre mim —queen of my choices, my body, my time, my story. The reign begins now. And it is magnificent.
For years, I lived as a subject in the kingdom of others. I handed the scepter to expectation, to the gaze of the crowd, to the loud voices that told me who I should be. I learned to curtsy before approval, to measure my worth by the applause of a room that was never truly mine. In that court, I was a servant—polite, accommodating, exhausted. I built altars to "should" and burned my own desires as offerings. reine sobre mim
Since this is a poetic and slightly ambiguous title, I will interpret it as a reflective, first-person essay about self-sovereignty, identity, and the reclaiming of personal power. Below is an original essay written in English, but structured to honor the lyrical, bilingual spirit of the title. "Reine sobre mim." So I write these words as my coronation oath
Sovereignty over the self is not tyranny. It is not the cold isolation of a monarch who rules alone. On the contrary, a true queen knows that her strength lies in the delicate art of boundaries. She can say yes to love without saying no to herself. She can welcome others into her kingdom without handing them the keys to her soul. From this day forward, I am reine sobre