This is the second in a four-part guest blog series by Hannah Roque discussing her MAO journey. You can find part one here and part three here. I am honored to be able to present them, and hope you'll read and share them all. -S36F
That next year, I got to watch my best friend, Danielle Morse, be crowned Miss Vermont 2021. I was (and still am) Danielle’s #1 fan, and watching her live her dreams reignited my own. Watching my best friend have once in a lifetime experiences, make lifelong friendships, raise thousands of dollars for the Vermont Children’s Hospital, and compete on the Miss America stage was everything I needed to remember why I loved the organization and rediscover the joy. I used that energy and excitement to finally convince myself to return to the competition stage, nearly 3 years after my first appearance. Leading up to the 2022 competition, I struggled significantly with self doubt. After being the 2nd runner up in 2019, I was holding myself to incredibly high standards. Rather than focusing on myself and my own preparation, I was focusing on the expectations of everyone else. It didn’t help that, in the years between 2019 and 2022, I had gained some weight and was very conscious of the fact that I was the biggest girl onstage. Ultimately, my self consciousness and self doubt hurt my performance. When I look back at photos and videos of the competition, I see a version of myself that is nervous and afraid to command space on the stage. Truthfully, it makes me so sad. It’s an age old saying in the pageant world, that you will win when it’s your time; I’ve been told this time and time again, but it is abundantly clear that I did not win or place because I was not my best self. I knew that there were people that expected me to never come back if I didn’t win that year, but my experience actually achieved the opposite. Because I didn’t win or place, I felt free of external expectations and my own doubts. Even after not placing at the 2022 competition, my time off allowed me to rediscover my why.
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