The Day I Decided I Was Worth a Diamond
It wasn't a birthday. It wasn't a promotion. It was the day I looked in the mirror and decided I was done being ordinary. I deserved extraordinary.
The Mirror Moment
It happened on an ordinary Thursday.
No milestone. No celebration. No dramatic life event. I was standing in front of the bathroom mirror, wearing yesterday's t-shirt and tomorrow's worries, and something clicked.
I was thirty-four years old. I'd spent my entire adult life being careful. Sensible. Practical. Buying things that were "good enough." Wearing colours that were "safe." Making choices that were "responsible."
And looking in that mirror, I realised: I'd been so busy being responsible that I'd forgotten to be extraordinary. I'd been so focused on what I needed that I'd ignored what I deserved.
I deserved a diamond.
Not because a diamond would fix my life. But because choosing a diamond — choosing to treat myself as someone worthy of the rarest, most brilliant substance on earth — would fix something in my self-perception that had been broken for years.
The Internal Negotiation
The voice in my head pushed back immediately:
"Diamonds are for engagements." — Says who? Says an industry that profits from telling women their diamonds should come from someone else.
"It's too expensive." — I spend money on things that add far less joy. A diamond lasts forever. That latte I had yesterday doesn't.
"People will think you're showing off." — People think what they think. I'm done curating my life around other people's comfort.
"You don't need it." — I don't need a lot of things that make life beautiful. That's the point. Beauty isn't a need. It's a right.
The voice lost. For the first time in thirty-four years, the voice lost.
Choosing My Diamond
I walked into Riolls Jewels with zero knowledge about diamonds and infinite certainty about what I deserved. The person who helped me didn't ask who it was for. They asked: "What do you want to feel when you wear it?"
I said: "Invincible."
They showed me a diamond pendant — a single, brilliant round stone on a gold chain. Simple. Powerful. The kind of piece that doesn't scream but can't be ignored.
I tried it on. I looked in the mirror. And the woman looking back at me was different from the one I'd seen that Thursday morning. Not more beautiful — more certain. More like someone who knew her worth and had the proof hanging around her neck.
What Changed
The diamond didn't change my life. It changed my relationship with my life.
I started saying no to things I didn't want. I started asking for raises I deserved. I started wearing colours I'd been afraid of. I started taking up more space in rooms where I'd previously shrunk.
The diamond didn't give me confidence. It gave me permission to access the confidence that had been there all along, buried under years of "be practical" and "don't draw attention" and "who do you think you are?"
I know exactly who I am. I'm a woman who wears a diamond she bought herself. And if that intimidates anyone, good.
Your Diamond Is Waiting
You don't need to wait for a proposal. You don't need to wait for a birthday. You don't need to wait for permission.
The only thing you need to decide is: are you worth it?
The answer is yes. It's always been yes.
Choose your diamond. Choose yourself. Choose extraordinary.
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Riolls Jewels — for women who choose extraordinary. GIA-certified diamonds, handcrafted in Surat. Shop now.