Description
Always the Princess, Right? is a Christian cultural wake‑up call for women who were told they were “princesses” but were never truly prepared for partnership, family, or adulthood. Blending biblical truth with clear-eyed cultural critique, the book exposes how modern training created tired women, absent men, and fragile relationships by celebrating entitlement, emotional outsourcing, and self-focus while quietly erasing responsibility, structure, and mutual sacrifice. Instead of flattering women or shaming men, the author performs a “cultural audit,” asking uncomfortable questions about how boys and girls were actually raised—what boys were expected to give, what girls were taught to demand, and how both were left unprepared to build lasting homes, marriages, and communities. With direct language and Scripture woven throughout, the book shows how princess culture promised identity without discipline, status without stewardship, and provision without participation—and why that model inevitably produces resentment, instability, and broken families.
Always the Princess, Right? then turns from critique to reconstruction, calling women to become the kind of adults, wives, and mothers who create peace instead of chaos, stability instead of drama, and order instead of confusion. It emphasizes self-development over self-worship, emotional regulation over emotional leverage, and contribution over constant demand, arguing that men do not commit to potential—they commit to peace. Anchored in Scripture and real-world observation, this book challenges women to trade affirmation for accountability and fairy-tale expectations for godly, grown-up responsibility, so they can become the women worth the journey in a culture that has forgotten what true royalty requires.
