At a certain point, many women recognize that love should not come at the cost of their voice, their boundaries, or their sense of self.
Make It Reign is a reflective, empowering guide for women who are no longer willing to settle for less in relationships, love, or life-and who are ready to reconnect with themselves through clarity, confidence, and self-respect.
This book does not focus on blaming partners or labeling relationships. Instead, it explores the subtle and familiar patterns that lead women to shrink, over-give, remain silent, and abandon their own needs in the name of love. Through awareness and honest self-examination, readers are guided toward recognizing these dynamics and learning how to interrupt them.
Drawing from lived experience and years of supporting individuals through major life transitions, Adrianne May offers grounded insight and compassionate guidance for women who feel emotionally depleted, disconnected from themselves, or uncertain how they drifted so far from who they once were. With both empathy and directness, she examines why so many women settle for less, how survival patterns often disguise themselves as loyalty, and what it truly requires to choose oneself without guilt.
Rather than offering quick fixes or surface-level affirmations, Make It Reign emphasizes self-trust, personal awareness, and rebuilding identity from the inside out. It meets women wherever they are-whether they are questioning a relationship, healing after one has ended, or recognizing that they have been living on autopilot for too long.
Inside, readers will find:
Insight into common relationship patterns that quietly erode self-worthThoughtful reflection prompts that encourage honesty and self-awarenessGuidance for reclaiming boundaries, voice, and personal powerSupport for navigating endings, transitions, and personal awakeningThis book is intended for women who are tired of waiting to be chosen, tired of explaining themselves, and tired of negotiating their worth. It is for those who are ready to stop settling-not only in relationships, but in how they show up for their own lives.
Readers are not asked to become someone new, but to remember who they were before they learned to settle-and to reclaim their worth with intention and clarity.