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Alaina✂️🎀
Alaina✂️🎀
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Thursday 29 May 2025 00:46:59 GMT
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This one is specifically for the men, because (after all) I am a men’s life and relationships ship coach. I want you to picture this for a moment: you’ve got a crown on your head. Not just any crown—it represents your dignity, your value, your self-respect. It’s not flashy jewelry. It’s not something you bought. It’s who you are. Now imagine she comes along—maybe it’s a girlfriend, maybe it’s a wife, maybe it’s someone you trusted—and she tries to take that crown off your head. And she places it on someone else’s head. Most men in that situation panic. They scramble. They start chasing her, begging, pleading: “Please, don’t give my crown away! Please, come back!” They think that crown was hers to give in the first place. But here’s the truth: a king doesn’t lose his crown. A king doesn’t negotiate his worth. If someone tries to take it, he grabs it back, he slams it on his head, and he walks away. Because he knows—his crown was never hers to give away in the first place. That crown belongs to you. And psychology backs this up. Decades of research on self-respect and boundaries shows that people with a strong sense of self-respect report higher life satisfaction, healthier relationships, and more resilience after rejection. The philosopher Kristján Kristjánsson—one of the world’s leading voices on respect—argues that self-respect is actually the foundation of all other respect. Without it, you’ll tolerate behavior that chips away at your dignity. Think about it: if you don’t respect yourself, why would anyone else? If you’re willing to accept someone who tried to take your crown—who showed you, with their actions, that they did not value you—what message does that send to the world about your own value? Now, I get it. I know the temptation. She leaves, she gives her attention to someone else, and then she comes back. And your heart whispers, “Maybe this time it’ll be different. Maybe I should hand her the crown again.” But kings don’t operate out of desperation. Kings operate out of principle. And the principle is this: if you try to take my crown, you lose access to me. Here’s the kicker: when you walk away with your crown firmly in place, you reinforce one of the strongest psychological truths out there—self-respect breeds external respect. People may not always like you for it. They may call you arrogant, stubborn, prideful. But deep down, they will always recognize it. History is filled with men who refused to let others take their crown. Think about great leaders, men of principle—when someone tried to strip them of their dignity, they didn’t beg to get it back. They stood tall. They knew their worth wasn’t up for debate. And even their enemies respected them for it. So let me say this again: if she attempts to take your crown and put it on someone else’s head, remember who you are. Remember your worth. Slam that crown back where it belongs. And walk away without hesitation. Because at the end of the day, crowns are not given. Crowns are claimed. And kings—real kings—don’t beg to be respected. They live in a way that demands respect. So hold your crown. Guard it with everything you’ve got. And when the day comes that someone tries to take it from you, don’t panic, don’t plead. Stand tall, wear it proudly, and keep moving forward. Because a king without his crown is just a man. But a man who keeps his crown—no matter who tries to take it—becomes unstoppable. #creatorsearchinsights #healing #man #king
This one is specifically for the men, because (after all) I am a men’s life and relationships ship coach. I want you to picture this for a moment: you’ve got a crown on your head. Not just any crown—it represents your dignity, your value, your self-respect. It’s not flashy jewelry. It’s not something you bought. It’s who you are. Now imagine she comes along—maybe it’s a girlfriend, maybe it’s a wife, maybe it’s someone you trusted—and she tries to take that crown off your head. And she places it on someone else’s head. Most men in that situation panic. They scramble. They start chasing her, begging, pleading: “Please, don’t give my crown away! Please, come back!” They think that crown was hers to give in the first place. But here’s the truth: a king doesn’t lose his crown. A king doesn’t negotiate his worth. If someone tries to take it, he grabs it back, he slams it on his head, and he walks away. Because he knows—his crown was never hers to give away in the first place. That crown belongs to you. And psychology backs this up. Decades of research on self-respect and boundaries shows that people with a strong sense of self-respect report higher life satisfaction, healthier relationships, and more resilience after rejection. The philosopher Kristján Kristjánsson—one of the world’s leading voices on respect—argues that self-respect is actually the foundation of all other respect. Without it, you’ll tolerate behavior that chips away at your dignity. Think about it: if you don’t respect yourself, why would anyone else? If you’re willing to accept someone who tried to take your crown—who showed you, with their actions, that they did not value you—what message does that send to the world about your own value? Now, I get it. I know the temptation. She leaves, she gives her attention to someone else, and then she comes back. And your heart whispers, “Maybe this time it’ll be different. Maybe I should hand her the crown again.” But kings don’t operate out of desperation. Kings operate out of principle. And the principle is this: if you try to take my crown, you lose access to me. Here’s the kicker: when you walk away with your crown firmly in place, you reinforce one of the strongest psychological truths out there—self-respect breeds external respect. People may not always like you for it. They may call you arrogant, stubborn, prideful. But deep down, they will always recognize it. History is filled with men who refused to let others take their crown. Think about great leaders, men of principle—when someone tried to strip them of their dignity, they didn’t beg to get it back. They stood tall. They knew their worth wasn’t up for debate. And even their enemies respected them for it. So let me say this again: if she attempts to take your crown and put it on someone else’s head, remember who you are. Remember your worth. Slam that crown back where it belongs. And walk away without hesitation. Because at the end of the day, crowns are not given. Crowns are claimed. And kings—real kings—don’t beg to be respected. They live in a way that demands respect. So hold your crown. Guard it with everything you’ve got. And when the day comes that someone tries to take it from you, don’t panic, don’t plead. Stand tall, wear it proudly, and keep moving forward. Because a king without his crown is just a man. But a man who keeps his crown—no matter who tries to take it—becomes unstoppable. #creatorsearchinsights #healing #man #king

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