That obviously exaggerated grin just made him give her a tired look that said she was lucky he liked her, for as much as she exasperated him.
"You don't, and I don't, and once again, you're having to figure out something without a teacher," he said. "This is no different from that, and if you'll recall, trying to do it by someone else's ideas of how to do what you need to do didn't work out. You're a royal daughter of Hyrule, and you may think that only puts pressure on you, but those of us who lived outside the castle and saw generations of your family leading us knew that that fact alone was enough."
He raised an eyebrow expectantly. "Remember what I said yesterday? You descend from the goddess, your people know you as our queen by instinct. Just because every Zelda has had her own unique traits, doesn't mean you haven't all had that same power and grace. Those have stayed true in your family for about a hundred thousand years, give or take a century. So do what comes natural. It's already there."