From Damsel to Warrior: How Disney Princesses Shaped My Memoir
Once upon a time, women were taught to wait. Wait for Prince Charming, for the shoe to fit, for the happily ever after. But what happens when you realize life doesn’t come with a fairy godmother to wave her wand and grant your dreams? You grab a sword, get on a white horse, and get yourself there.
That’s exactly what I did—and what Disney did, too.
A Doctoral Discovery That Changed Everything
I never expected to find the framework for my memoir while researching for my doctoral dissertation. But there it was, buried in an article by Peggy Orenstein in The New York Times: a deep dive into how Disney rebranded its princess franchise in response to the women’s movement. Society’s expectations for women had changed, and the characters needed a makeover. Gone were the damsels in distress; in their place rose warrior princesses like Mulan, Merida, and Moana.
I was fascinated. Not just because it was a brilliant marketing move, but because it mirrored my own journey. I had grown up believing in the fairy tale—marriage, kids, the traditional script for women of my generation. And for a while, I played the part. But life had other plans, and I chose to evolve, just like Disney’s princesses.
Years later, during the pandemic, I started writing down family stories, intending to create something for my children. But as I wrote, I realized I wasn’t just capturing memories—I was charting a transformation. And I needed a structure to make it more universal for other women. That’s when I remembered Orenstein’s article. What could be more relatable than Disney?
The Power of Storytelling: From Snow White to Moana
Disney’s princess evolution became the perfect lens to tell my own story. These characters—so familiar we know them on a first-name basis—represent the shifting expectations of women over the past century.
Snow White and Cinderella? They endured suffering until a prince saved them. That’s how I was raised—to believe that a man would be my ticket to security and happiness. But then I had to navigate real life—divorce, single motherhood, a high-stakes corporate career—and I realized that waiting for someone else to rescue me wasn’t an option. I had to be my own hero.
Enter Belle, the first princess who really resonated with me. She wanted more than a provincial life, just as I imagined a world beyond my small-town Indiana roots. That longing took me across the globe, riding camels and elephants and rappelling down the Great Wall of China, all while raising three children. I understood Belle’s hunger for adventure, but like her, I also learned that true transformation comes from within.
Then there was Mulan—brave, strategic, willing to break the rules to protect those she loved. When I reentered the corporate world after years away raising my children, I felt like her: stepping onto a battlefield where I wasn’t expected to win. I worked harder, smarter. I climbed the ranks, becoming a vice president at a few Fortune 500 companies, one of the rare females in the C-suite, and later earning my doctorate. Like Mulan, I had to prove my worth in a world that wasn’t built for me.
Rewriting the Fairy Tale
By the time I wrote the later chapters of my memoir, I saw myself in Tiana and Moana. Hardworking, determined, unwilling to take shortcuts. Tiana kissed a frog, thinking it would lead to happily ever after, only to find herself in a swamp—much like how my second marriage turned out to be anything but a fairy tale. But she fought her way through, as did I.
And then there’s Moana—the princess who sets out on an uncharted path, not to find a prince, but to help her people. That’s what I’d done for my three children. I didn’t write Forget the Fairy Tale & Find Your Happiness to tell women what to do. I wrote it to show them that they have choices. That they are not bound by the stories they were given as children. That their happiness isn’t in someone else’s hands—it’s in their own.
A Framework That Made Writing More Powerful
For women writers, structure is everything. Finding a way to frame personal experience into something universal is often the key to crafting a compelling book. For me, the Disney princesses became the anchor I needed. I didn’t just use them as references—I wove them into the fabric of my book, using their stories as epigraphs at the beginning of each chapter to foreshadow my own story beats.
Using this structure made writing Forget the Fairy Tale & Find Your Happiness a way to connect with readers. Women know these characters. We’ve sung along to their songs. By paralleling my journey alongside their evolution, I found a way to make my own experiences resonate beyond my personal narrative.
The Story Isn’t About Finding a Prince—It’s About Finding Yourself
As writers, we are always searching for meaning in our stories. What I discovered through this process was that my life—and the lives of so many other women—was never meant to fit into an outdated fairy tale. And neither is yours.
Every woman is a princess—not in the helpless, waiting-to-be-rescued way, but in the sense that we all have a crown to claim, a journey to take, and dragons to slay. But in the end, the journey isn’t about finding a prince—it’s about finding ourselves.
Fun fact, check out my playlist on the book website for a chapter-by-chapter account of the Disney princess songs I couldn’t stop humming while writing the memoir. Later, I created other versions featuring Taylor Swift songs, country music and pop. A magical music adaptation.
DEB MILLER’S life is a tapestry of adventure and achievement, weaving together experiences from her small-town Indiana roots to business opportunities across the globe. Her job as a hardworking Fortune 500 executive led to rappelling the Great Wall and riding elephants in India, all while remaining a devoted mom.
Now a part-time marketing professor, Dr. Miller cherishes the opportunity to learn from her global students as well as her beloved children and grandchildren. Deb resides in an enchanted forest outside of Seattle, where the landscaping projects are endless and enjoyable. Find out more about Deb and the book at https://forgetthefairytale.net/
Follow Deb Miller on social media:
Facebook: @Forget-the-Fairy-Tale-and-Find-Your-Happiness
Instagram: @forget_the_fairy_tale
Goodreads: @Deb_Miller
Forget the Fairy Tale and Find Your Happiness
In this uplifting debut memoir perfect for fans of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Deb Miller discards the myth of Prince Charming once she realizes he can’t get her to happily ever after and instead gets on the white horse herself, safely straps her kids on behind her, and figures out how to get there on her own.
In Forget the Fairy Tale and Find Your Happiness, Deb Miller learns to slay the myth of Prince Charming and redefine what it means to live happily ever after.
When Deb’s college sweetheart can’t deliver the fairy tale she expects, she takes charge and creates her own. Her love of tennis opens new professional doors but also leads to a tumultuous second marriage. This powerful memoir chronicles her transformation from a Midwest housewife to a global executive as she navigates societal expectations, personal setbacks, and professional triumphs.
Throughout her journey, Deb draws fascinating parallels with Disney’s ever-evolving princesses, who have moved from damsels in distress to courageous, independent characters who embrace their unique strengths and forge their own paths. Along Deb’s winding, bumpy course to happiness, she learns a few lessons worth sharing. Her story will empower other women who might be taking a different path than the traditional one they were taught to tread. This is her tale of resilience, pursuing a better life for her children, and finding genuine happiness for herself.
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