← The JournalSelf & Confidence

From Insecurity to Confidence: My Jewellery Journey

I used to think I didn't deserve nice things. Then I started wearing gold — and slowly, piece by piece, I started believing I was worth it.

Riolls Atelier·June 23, 2026·6 min read

The Girl Who Didn't Deserve Gold

I grew up believing nice things were for other people.

Other girls wore earrings. Other women had necklaces. Other families had jewellery boxes filled with gold. Not us. Not me. Nice things were for people who were prettier, richer, more deserving. I was none of those things — or so I believed.

This isn't a story about poverty. It's a story about the poverty of self-worth. Because even when I started earning well, I couldn't bring myself to buy jewellery. I'd walk past jewellery stores and think: That's not for someone like me. I'd see beautiful rings online and close the tab. I'd receive compliments on the rare occasions I wore anything sparkly and feel like a fraud.

The jewellery wasn't the problem. My belief about who deserved it was.

The First Piece

It started with a pair of tiny gold studs.

My therapist — yes, this is that kind of story — suggested that I buy myself something beautiful as an exercise in self-worth. "Not something practical," she said. "Something purely for pleasure. Something that says 'I deserve beauty.'"

I bought the smallest, most inexpensive gold studs I could find. And I felt like I was getting away with something. Like at any moment, someone would tap me on the shoulder and say: "Excuse me. Those aren't for you. Please return them."

Nobody did. I wore them for a week. Then two. Then a month. And slowly, incrementally, something began to shift.

Piece by Piece

The studs led to a thin chain. The chain led to a simple ring. The ring led to a bracelet. Each piece was a small act of rebellion against the voice in my head that said I wasn't enough.

With each purchase, the voice got quieter. With each piece, the mirror reflected someone a little more deserving, a little more whole, a little more like the woman I wanted to be.

It wasn't the jewellery that changed me. It was the act of choosing it. Every time I walked into a store and said, "I'd like to try that on," I was choosing myself. Every time I swiped my card and walked out with a small bag, I was investing in my own worthiness.

What Jewellery Taught Me

Jewellery taught me that beauty isn't reserved for the beautiful. It's available to everyone. It taught me that self-adornment isn't vanity — it's a form of self-respect. It taught me that the woman who wears gold isn't performing confidence; she's practicing it.

Today, I have a small but meaningful collection. Nothing extravagant. But every piece represents a step on my journey from "I don't deserve this" to "I deserve all of it."

Your Journey

If you're someone who has ever thought you weren't worthy of jewellery — of beauty, of luxury, of being adorned — I want you to hear this: you are.

You don't need to earn it. You don't need to justify it. You don't need to be a certain size, a certain age, a certain income level. You just need to believe — even for a moment — that you are worth something beautiful.

Start small. A pair of gold studs. A thin chain. Something that touches your skin and quietly says: "You belong here. You deserve this."

And then notice what happens. How your posture changes. How your confidence shifts. How the voice in your head — the one that says "not for you" — gets a little quieter every day.

Begin your journey. One piece at a time. One act of self-love at a time. Until the girl who didn't deserve gold becomes the woman who wears it like a crown.

---

Riolls Jewels — for every woman who's learning she's worth it. Explore our collections.

Written byRiolls Atelier

Never miss a story.

New articles, collection drops, and exclusive atelier access — delivered monthly.

← All Articles
From Insecurity to Confidence: My Jewellery Journey — Riolls Jewels