Kianna Styles & Her Rebirth
Kianna Styles | Music Marketing & Management
Give the Girls Their Flowers
Kianna Styles on Motherhood, Ownership, and Trusting Her Voice
Some women grow quietly.
Others grow publicly.
Kianna Styles is doing both at the same time.
In this season of her life, she calls it Rebirth. Not in the aesthetic sense. Not in the trendy way we throw the word around. But in the real, stretch-you-open kind of way. Motherhood reshaped her confidence. Faith deepened her instincts. Success took on an entirely new definition.
This conversation is about ownership. About trusting your voice. About becoming the example.
Main Character Energy
Q: If your life right now had a chapter title, what would it be?
Kianna: Rebirth
Q: What’s something about you that looks effortless but actually took years to master?
Kianna: Getting over imposter syndrome. From the outside, it might look like I’ve always been confident in my creativity and instincts, but it took years to fully trust myself. I had to unlearn the need for any external validation and realize that I was in the rooms I was in for a reason. I’ve always had the ability to see vision and execute it, but believing in that without questioning myself was something I had to grow into. Now, I trust what I bring to the table without hesitation.
Q: What’s a soft flex you don’t talk about enough?
Kianna: I don’t talk about my accomplishments as much as I probably should, but I know I’m exceptionally good at what I do. Creatively, marketing, events, building things from scratch, I’ve always had the ability to see something in my mind and bring it to life. It’s a gift, and I’m done downplaying it. 2026, I’m owning that more loudly.
Q: When do you feel most powerful?
Kianna: Honestly, becoming a mom has made me feel more powerful than anything else. And I’m surprised more women don’t talk about that part. A lot of women talk about how hard it is, but no one really talks about the strength it unlocks in you. There’s something about carrying life, bringing life into the world, and then being responsible for shaping it that shifts you. It made me more decisive, more protective of my time, and more certain in my voice. I don’t move the same anymore.
Q: If your aura had a color this season, what is it and why?
Kianna: Pink. Soft, but powerful. It represents rebirth, growth, and emotional depth. Pink feels like love, healing, and rising into a version of myself that feels honest and whole.
Becoming a mother made me understand that choosing myself isn’t selfish, it’s necessary.
The Depth
Q: What belief about yourself did you have to unlearn to become who you are today?
Kianna: I had to unlearn the need for a second opinion to validate my own voice. Perspective is valuable, but I stopped treating it as a form of permission. When you’ve experienced imposter syndrome, it’s easy to let outside opinions feel more factual than your own instincts. As a creative, especially one who dreams big, I had to accept that not everyone will see the vision the way I do, and that doesn’t make it any less real. Trusting myself 100 percent has allowed me to stop second guessing myself and move through life with confidence. Becoming a mother solidified that trust in a way nothing else ever could.
Q: When did you choose yourself in a way that changed everything?
Kianna: The moment I found out I was pregnant changed everything. It was the beginning of my own rebirth. It gave me a level of confidence and clarity I hadn’t experienced before. I understood that I had to become the example. The life my daughter lives will reflect my choices, my discipline, and my faith. Choosing myself means no longer staying in stagnant spaces or accepting anything that doesn’t contribute to my growth. Because when I don’t choose myself, it affects every part of my life. Becoming a mother made me understand that choosing myself isn’t selfish, it’s necessary.
Q: What does success mean to you now that it didn’t mean five years ago?
Kianna: Success means something completely different to me now. I’ve de-centered success from only being tied to my career. Before becoming a mom, I was always chasing the next milestone and never sitting in my wins. Now success is about ownership. It’s about how I show up for myself, the freedom I create, and the life I’m building for me and my family. My success is no longer defined by titles or external validation. It’s defined by the stability, peace, and legacy I create on my own terms.
I want my legacy to be everything I’ve built that sets my family up for success long after I’m gone.
The Roots
Q: Who watered you when you didn’t know you were wilting?
Kianna: One of my best friends, Kahh Spence. He showed up for me during one of the most vulnerable periods of my life. He poured into me consistently. He dropped off self-care gifts, spoke life into me, prayed for me, and reminded me that I’m still that girl. To pour into someone while pouring into your own business is something I will never forget.
Q: What kind of support actually feels good to you?
Kianna: Support that feels intentional and consistent, not performative. The people who check in privately, who pray for me, who cheer me on when no one is watching. Motherhood showed me who really shows up. I focus on pouring back into the ones who pour into me.
The Legacy
Q:What are you building that will outlive you?
Kianna: I want my legacy to be everything I’ve built that sets my family up for success long after I’m gone. Not just financially, but spiritually, emotionally, and mentally. I’m committed to being a generational curse breaker. My legacy is freedom, faith, and a new standard for what my family can expect and achieve moving forward.
Q:What does having your flowers actually mean to you?
Kianna: Today, it means giving those flowers to myself. Being able to sit in my growth, acknowledge how far I’ve come, and not rush past my own milestones.
If She Were a Flower This Season
A pink lotus.
It represents rebirth, growth, and becoming something beautiful after moving through uncertain and uncomfortable seasons. This chapter is about rising into alignment and becoming who she was always meant to be.
Still Fun. Still Her.
Unstoppable anthem
Nice by The Carters or Get Up 10 by Cardi BRomanticize-your-life ritual
Long showers. Fresh flowers. Bubble baths. Skincare. Matcha. Slowing down and appreciating the small moments.Small luxury she refuses to give up
A good fragrance.Quote she lives by
Be at peace, not in pieces.Quote she thinks is a scam
Stay humble.
Kianna’s story is not about becoming louder. It’s about becoming clearer. Motherhood did not soften her ambition. It sharpened it. It gave her boundaries. It gave her ownership. It gave her a reason to trust herself fully. Rebirth is not always dramatic. Sometimes it is quiet. Sometimes it is pink. Sometimes it is simply deciding that you no longer need permission.
Follow Kianna on Instagram @KiannaStyles
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