Logo - Feel The Words

Charlotte Flair Quotes

Most Famous Charlotte Flair Quotes of All Time!

We have created a collection of some of the best charlotte-flair quotes so you can read and share anytime with your friends and family. Share our Top 10 Charlotte Flair Quotes on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

I wish I was more like my character. In character, I am the queen. I am strong. I am confident, sometimes cocky. I'm hard to beat. Out of character, I am a daughter, a sister, an aunt, a best friend and just the girl next door that likes Ben & Jerry's ice cream.

When I first started in the WWE, I had a really hard time because I didn't look the part.

My dad was my favorite wrestler growing up, obviously.

The hard part for me was not the wrestling - it was showing emotion, telling a story, and being able to connect with fans. Coming out as Ric Flair's daughter and being called athletically gifted, it's hard to say, 'Hey, like me! You can relate to me!' It wasn't working, so I completely switched my character.

I was always around wrestling. I went to shows, but I never pictured myself where I am today. My brothers, David and Reid, were more into wrestling. When they wrestled, it was hard on my brothers because they were always compared to my dad.

I've played sports, and I've been a tomboy my whole life.

Everyone always says, 'You must have always wanted to be just like your dad.' But my dad's career had nothing to do with my journey.

The biggest moment in our business is when you walk through that curtain, and if you don't believe in yourself, the fans won't believe in you or invest in you, and they see that.

I want to be the first female to main-event WrestleMania, and I just want to continue to get better and better and continue my dad's legacy.

My character, Charlotte, is very confident, and I try to be more like my character in real life. Not that I'm not confident, but I've really found my personal growth through work.

With injuries, every match varies. The black eyes are accidents. The broken noses are accidents. But the bumps from when we land on the mat, they're hard. I think it looks easier, or the fans don't really understand what's happening, but it does take a toll.

I want to be a Roman Reigns; I want to be a John Cena.

I idolize my dad because he was such a hard worker.

I do want to carry on my dad's legacy, but I also want to carve out my own path. I have to work harder, I think, just because I do have that last name. I don't want people to think that's why I am where I am in this industry. I put in the time, and I want to be just as good as my dad was.

My job is healing to me. Charlotte is the woman you want to become. A strong, groundbreaking, independent female in a male-dominated world.

I could do a standing back flip at 13.

I spent my whole upbringing in sporting camps. I didn't do cotillion.

I'm built for wrestling. I have a high pain tolerance. My nose has been broken a couple times. Black eyes.

When I won the NXT women's title from Natalya at Full Sail, becoming the second-ever woman's champion for NXT, that's when I knew, 'Okay, I'm doing the right thing,' and that I could do this.

I think what people don't realize is the transition from NXT to the main roster is a big jump. It's getting a whole new audience familiar with a certain character. If you debut too many women at one time, it's hard for the audience to get to know, understand, and see the rise of that character.

I want to be a larger-than-life superstar who is known worldwide, outside of the WWE.

If you look at the Rock's crossover, Stone Cold, my dad too, in his era, I want to do that. I want to mean that much to the industry. That's just a matter of working harder every single day.

I've always been a big fan of the Body Issue. Growing up as an athlete and having a very athletic body, I was always able to relate to them and look up to the athletes who posed for it.

I'd love to be an action hero.

My dad was just so charismatic and witty. One day, I hope people say that I was just as good as my dad on the mic in my own way. I will never be saying 'Space Mountain' or 'limousine riding,' but I hope people say I can control an audience, that I was as captivating as him.

It's so hard to tell people I'm in a video game... just because I grew up with my dad being in a video game.

I think Asuka is a superstar. She is incredibly talented, and she made a name for herself even before coming to NXT.

For so long, I was ashamed of my past, and I think that crippled me a lot in having confidence.

When I started wrestling and then turned into the Evil Queen, I created this character who I needed in my personal life. This woman who is strong, intelligent, confident, empowering. That's what I needed in my personal life.

I think with the Mae Young Classic, bringing in 30 women from all over the world shows what an impact women have in the company.

I never saw the female 'Ghostbusters,' but that's mainly because of my job, not because I wouldn't enjoy it.

I'm so proud of my body. I'm so proud to be an athlete. I wouldn't change anything.

I don't think there's anything else in the world that my dad loves talking about more than wrestling.

I didn't even think about good guy, bad guy when I started. I was that unfamiliar with the business.

I won the NXT championship as a heel; then the fans grew to respect - not love, respect - me. I was popular because I was seen as the next to get called up.

Anyone can enjoy a wrestling match, but it's how you feel about that person that takes it to another level.

I guess because I never pictured myself wrestling, I find myself wanting to push every limit possible in this industry.

I never felt comfortable in my own skin, and I feel like I missed out on a lot of high school experiences because I was so worried about where I fit in because I was so confused.

I started very late in the game, and it hasn't changed my path to success.

Negative comments in terms of body image are the hardest thing the women probably struggle with. But I think the best thing that we can do as WWE superstars is taking that negativity and using it in a positive way, because there are so many young kids on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter to not send the message of hate on to.

No one ever has a chance to get to know the real me because I do play a bad guy, and sometimes it's hard to soak in the comments or the negativity because that's the response you want to elicit. I am a normal person, but that's part of the job. I'm playing a character, and that's my role.

To know how far I've come as a person and an entertainer and a businesswoman, I just hope I represent independence and intelligence and athleticism - everything that a woman should want to be.

That is a message I hope to send and that I know all the other women hope to send: that no matter what your job is or what you want to achieve in life, anything you set your mind to, you can do.

I spent 26 years watching my dad, and I didn't know anything about the business until I started myself.

Nothing is more important in our industry than respect.

Charlotte Flair is continuing her father's legacy but paving her own, and she's opening the door for women all over the world to be superstars in a male dominated industry.

Professionally, I'm a perfectionist, and to allow people to see that maybe I wasn't always perfect or put together - that my actual personal life was very messy at times... it was scary to let people know that.

That's my message: I'm not alone, and neither is anyone else.

If you find something that you're passionate about, your world can change.

I didn't want to hurt my parents' feelings about how hard certain things were in my 20s, how hard it was when my dad left my senior year before I went to college.

I know, some kids, their parents have nothing in common and don't ever talk. I can call my dad at 3 o'clock in the morning, and I know he is going to answer.

I wasn't used to people critiquing how I looked. And then always hearing, 'God she looks like Ric Flair.' Yes, he's my dad. Who am I supposed to look like? I took it so serious and to heart.

Why do something unless you are going to be the best at it?

I started in NXT when we were still FCW in Tampa.

Having new opponents re-energises us as talent, as we're not having to make new out of something that's been the same every week.

You don't want to get complacent and just accept things - just because we've had those moments and we have come so far, you don't want to ever take that for granted, because the moment you do, it can all go away.

If someone says something vulgar to you and you retweet it, now you're giving them a voice, and you never want to give hate a voice.

The most important thing is for women not to tear other women down. Everyone in our division is helping each other, and that's a message we send behind the scenes: that we are a unit and working to make the best product and highlight women as strong and independent superstars.

I walked out very nervous, my first WrestleMania, and I had my dad beside me.

I look at myself in NXT, and then I look at how far I've come on the main roster. I just think in my mind if I keep working as hard as I do and keep giving it my all that I will continue to get better.

Obviously, having my dad's last name, I think that's more the chip on my shoulder because it has been a mixed blessing. I always will have the Flair stigma, and I think that's where I deserve to be there or this, or I'm not just his daughter. I think that's the chip on my shoulder.

I almost think there's a mystique to not knowing everything about me.

I didn't start my career or, really, my life before I came to Florida.

I don't know if me and my dad have necessarily touched on this because we talk about Reid but not a lot. But me wrestling, I think, ultimately saved my dad's career and not only saved my life but definitely put a whole other chapter that no one saw coming because it could've been rock bottom after my brother passed away.

I didn't think of my size as an advantage or as something that I could use to be dominant. I didn't carry myself in the ring with the confidence that I should have.

The reason I don't do the Flair Flop anymore is because women's wrestling is being taken so seriously. I'll only perform something comedic like that at a house show.

My dad was able to wrestle so many great Japanese wrestlers.

When the fans were watching my dad, you could never tell if this was real or is this fake, and that's what made him so special. Every ounce of energy went to being The Nature Boy.

Guys, we are trying to share Unique Charlotte Flair Quotes, so you will not get to read the same things again and again on our website. You can also share your favorites on Facebook or send them to a friend who loves to reading quotes.

Today's Quote

My dad played junior college basketball, and he always showed me clips of Michael Jordan.

Quote Of The Day

Today's Shayari

चलो अच्छा हुआ, जो तुम मेरे दर पे नहीं आए,
तुम झुकते नहीं और मैं चौखटें ऊँची कर नहीं पाता...!

Shayari Of The Day

Today's Joke

शिक्षक : इरादे बुलंद रखना चाहिए,
क्योंकि कहते हैं कि इरादा बुलंद हो तो पत्थर से भी पानी निकाला जा...

Joke Of The Day

Today's Status

A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool.

Status Of The Day

Today's Prayer

I’m seated in heavenly places in Christ Jesus, I rule over situations and challenges, and I’m victorious all the days...

Prayer Of The Day