&&. announcing her royal highness, ( xue jin ), the ( 36Â ) year old ( princess ) of ( china ). she is often confused with ( fan bingbing ). some say that she is ( self-centered & overly confident ), but she is actually ( driven & patient ).
Okay so here is Jin Xue, the sister to the emperor of China.
The Jin family has been ruling China the past five decades, meaning the Qing dynasty is very much going strong and has been the last five hundred years.
So her father died some time ago, so now her younger brother is the emperor.
She grew up watching her father build a nation up from dust and she admired him very much. Her admiration was what drove her to become who she is now. She has always worked hard to do well by her father. She got into politics after graduation, and has never regretted her decision.
She is a relatively social and curious person. While she absolutely loves her own country and its culture, she has always wanted to explore foreign countries and cultures. She is somewhat like an ambassador for China â she mainly works outside of her home country. Xue and her brother work like a well-oiled machine: his concerns lie within their borders while she pays more attention to whatâs happening elsewhere in the world. She very often makes moves and decisions without consulting him â and he doesnât mind, they usually agree on most issues and her judgment is generally trusted.
She loves the power she has and will hold onto it until her hands are bleeding. She doesnât like it when people get too close to her projects --- she even keeps her brother a good distance away.Â
In her mind, she is never wrong and everyone else are just shortsighted or simply stupid. She is not one for constructive criticism --- unless sheâs the one giving it, of course. Once she has made a decision, formed some sort of a plan of action, it is nearly impossible to make her change her mind.
She chooses the people she respects very carefully: for her, age and experience are the main factors. Titles donât matter to her that much. She doesnât care if someone is a monarch of some sorry excuse for a country â as the Chinese emperorâs sister she practically has just as much power as a king from a micro state if not more.Â
She has her opinions and she will voice them even if she knows theyâll make people narrow their eyes. She doesnât mind if someone questions her views and offers another one, what she cannot stand is when people tell her that her opinion might hurt someoneâs feelings or that itâs not appropriate for the situation.Â
She doesnât bring up her more controversial opinions unless she thinks they should be brought up. She is diplomatic enough not to tickle the bear when itâs not necessary.
Her straightfowardness can be mistaken for rudeness but she doesnât see it that way. For her, rudeness is excessive use of sarcasm or unnecessary comments. Rudeness is disrespect. Itâs not the lack of sensitivity.











