Sarah doesn’t sit by the phone analyzing emojis. Sarah knows her worth.
In 101, we learn to block the toxic ex. In 202, we learn that his opinion is irrelevant to our empire. Taking what you want means realizing that you don’t need permission slips from anyone—not your parents, not your partner, and certainly not that insecure coworker.
The Move: Stop asking, "Is this okay?" and start stating, "This is happening." Whether it’s negotiating a higher invoice rate or setting a boundary with a friend, state your terms clearly. No apologies. No over-explaining. bossbabe baddie sarah takes what she wants 202
The "I take what I want" philosophy applies heavily to your own peace. Sarah protects her energy like it’s the Crown Jewels.
She takes her rest seriously. She takes her boundaries seriously. She says "no" to draining obligations without feeling guilty. Taking what you want also means taking the time you need to recharge so you can come back harder. Sarah doesn’t sit by the phone analyzing emojis
The “Bossbabe” productivity lore says Sarah wakes up at 5:30 AM. But more importantly, she takes the first 90 minutes for non-negotiable deep work—no email, no Slack, no kids’ requests. This is her taking control of her energy before the world takes it from her.
Based on social media breakdowns of the “Bossbabe Baddie Sarah” trend, here are five signature moves associated with the persona: you check the price
You don’t get what you deserve; you get what you negotiate.
1. Kill the "Good Girl" Narrative Society teaches women to be agreeable, humble, and patient. The "Sarah" archetype rejects this. You are not mean, but you are no longer "nice" at your own expense.
2. Expect the "Yes" When you go after a promotion, a date, or a deal, walk into the room expecting it to be yours. Desperation smells foul; confidence is intoxicating.
3. Treat Life Like a Boutique Imagine life is a luxury store. You don’t beg the mannequin to give you the outfit; you check the price, decide if it’s worth it, and buy it. If you can’t afford it yet, you don’t sulk—you go get more money.