Before the world knew her as Patti LaBelle, she was Patricia Louise Holte, a girl from Philadelphia with a voice that could rise from the church floor
Before the world knew her as Patti LaBelle, she was Patricia Louise Holte, a girl from Philadelphia with a voice that could rise from the church floor and shake the rafters loose.
Then came the name: LaBelle.
Beautiful.
What a word to place on a dark-skinned Black woman in a world forever trying to make beauty smaller than truth. What a word to carry in an industry that has too often looked at Black women and tried to measure us by somebody else’s mirror.
LaBelle was more than a stage name. It became an announcement.
Beautiful is not something the world gets to ration out.
Beautiful is not reserved for pale skin, delicate permission, quiet womanhood, or whatever narrow little picture somebody inherited and refused to outgrow.
Beautiful can be deep brown. Beautiful can be loud. Beautiful can sweat under stage lights. Beautiful can wear feathers, sequins, church power, kitchen wisdom, and a voice so mighty it sounds like somebody kicked open a door in heaven.
Patti LaBelle’s perseverance is not only in the decades of music. It is in the way she kept becoming. Girl group. Rock-soul futurist. Ballad queen. Actress. Businesswoman. Pie legend. Auntie of the century. A woman who did not freeze herself in one era just because people were comfortable with that version.
For Survivors, that is a lesson.
You may have been named by pain, by insult, by rejection, by somebody else’s limited imagination. But you can live long enough to outgrow every false name. You can rename yourself with your choices. You can step into the room with your full color, full voice, full history, and full right to be seen.
Let the world catch up.
Today’s affirmation:
I am beautiful without apology.
I do not have to shrink for anyone’s comfort.
My color carries glory.
My voice carries history.
My name belongs to me.
I can become again, and again, and again.
