ROYENTATION is not a book about reclaiming crowns. It is a book about reclaiming orientation.
Across the global African diaspora, millions live with inherited dislocation - identity fragmented by displacement, dignity confused with performance, authority pursued without formation. Beneath the visible wounds of history lies a quieter loss: the removal of inner bearings that once anchored people to memory, responsibility, and future. This book names that loss-and completes the work of restoration.
Royentation introduces a new framework: royal orientation. Not royalty as title, bloodline, or fantasy, but royalty as discipline-the capacity to govern oneself, restrain power, carry responsibility, and live with dignity across generations. Rejecting exaggerated claims and performative identity, the book reframes liberation as formation and belonging as responsibility rather than territory.
Written with moral clarity and philosophical depth, Royentation is not a manifesto of outrage or a work of nostalgia. It is a formation text. It guides readers away from identity performance and toward durable dignity, steady leadership, and continuity in a Kingdom Without Borders.
Identity is not invented here. It is returned-carefully, truthfully, and for the sake of the future.