Even though WrestleMania 32 isn’t far behind in the rearview mirror, WWE women’s champion Charlotte has already started thinking of at least one thing for next year’s mega-event.

“Just the robe,” explained the three-time Women’s Champion. “I want to do something special for my robe again. The blue one at ‘Mania was basically pieces from my dad's old one that he wore when he retired. So, I want to do something special like that but in terms of who I'd like to wrestle, I just hope at this point that I'm on the card because it's still so early. The division has so many talented women, anything could change.”

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Tickets for WrestleMania 33 go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. ET. The event will take place on Sunday, April 2 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla., and will broadcast worldwide on the WWE Network.

Charlotte took a huge step in cementing herself as the top female star in the company this past April at her first WrestleMania when she defeated Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch in a show-stealing match to win the newly renamed Women’s Championship.

Even when Charlotte watches it back, she laughs thinking about how it all went down.

“It's crazy because I had no plans for my entrance and it just seemed surreal the timing of the fireworks and when I lifted up my robe,” she said. “It all just came together. Sasha had the entrance with Snoop (Dogg) which they needed to rehearse but I was doing the same old entrance with the same music, had my dad and was just going to walk down the aisle but it looked extremely epic. I thought it was just meant to be. It wasn't even rehearsed; it just pieced itself together. Then there's a spot where I'm walking down the aisle and Becky thought for sure the camera would be on me but the camera was on her and she was smiling like 'oh, this is so lovely' when she was really supposed to be hating me. It's hilarious to watch Mania back and see her. She's like 'dang it, why was the camera on me?'

“To watch back the three of us and to know that we were running that match a year prior to WrestleMania 32 in front of like 20 people in Lakeland, Florida (while in NXT). From Sasha wearing Eddie's (Guerrero) gear to Becky's full-on steampunk (entrance), the whole match. I wasn't really nervous in terms of the wrestling part because there's no two girls I know any better than Becky and Sasha. It was just knowing we were on that huge stage together.”

Now the question going into next year’s extravaganza will be how she could possiblly top that performance.

“I think my character as a whole — and I would say Becky and Sasha feel the same — we are better talent today than we were even at WrestleMania 32,” Charlotte said. “We don't look at it as topping it; we look it as a whole different match for whoever is on WrestleMania 33.”

Charlotte, whose real name is Ashley Fliehr, has always had big shoes to fill in the wrestling business considering her father is the legendary “Nature Boy” Ric Flair. While thinking about work can be all-consuming, she admits that there have to be limits.

“It's a matter of not driving yourself crazy the other however many hours in the week,“ the 30-year-old said. “Yes, I do think about what I'm going to do a lot, but it's being able to turn off when you leave that moment. When I get to 'Raw,' I'm not texting my friends. If I have a promo to work on, all my energy and focus goes to 'here's another opportunity to get better. Here's another opportunity to show another layer of your character.'

“When it's Tuesday and I fly home, you have to shut off because when you become obsessed, that's when I find people start to lose their character. Every week you get an opportunity, so it's a matter of finding a happy medium. Yes, I do think about it a lot, but I can't dwell on it.”

At the same time, Charlotte admits that she still has plenty to improve.

“My dad once told me this is a business ... he still learns things," said Charlotte. “It's the people that think I know it all — no. You want to get better every week. Even little adjustments in promos or being a heel, different mannerisms in the ring, every week there's something I can do better. The only time I get flustered is when I try to do too many things at once. It's better to do one thing each week and work on that.”

This coming Sunday is the latest big WWE event — Survivor Series — airing on the WWE Network. Charlotte will be part of Team Raw in the 5-on-5 elimination matches against "SmackDown" with bragging rights on the line. It will also see a reunion of sorts with her, Sasha Banks, Becky Lynch and Bayley, all former NXT stars, coming together on a WWE show.

“'Raw' wants to be the better brand, 'SmackDown' wants to be the better brand,” Charlotte said. “A bunch of alphas on both brands. I had a blast stealing Nikki's (Bella) spotlight on 'SmackDown' this past Tuesday. It will be the first time all of the Four Horsewomen are all on the same pay-per-view together since we all debuted on the main roster, which is crazy to think. I'm looking forward to being on the other side, not Nattie (Natalya) again.”

Charlotte has been vocal that the women deserve their due in the company, especially in this new era of talented females. She hit one of her goals of being in the main event of a pay-per-view in October at Hell in a Cell where she defeated Banks to close out the show and win the championship for the third time.

Ask her about it now and she said it didn’t feel any different that other shows. At least not yet.

“I was more amped up on how to feel being inside of the cage,” Charlotte said. “I still haven't processed that we main-evented the pay-per-view yet. I think we need to main-event another pay-per-view.”

Going into the first-ever women’s match inside the Hell in a Cell, there was a belief maybe Charlotte would try a huge, show-stealing move off the structure. In fact, her father has claimed bigger things were planned for the match.

“If you're referencing my dad (laughs), my dad likes to glorify things,” Charlotte said. “No, I thought Sasha and I killed it. I thought for the first ever women's Hell in a Cell — I don't regret anything. We were nervous about how to ... because we had never been inside the cage or knew if we could climb up it or anything or what our parameters were going to be before the match, what they would allow us to do.”

Outside of the ring, Charlotte is working on a book titled “Second Nature: The Legacy of Ric Flair and the Rise of Charlotte,” which is set to be released in July.

Excited to share the cover for SECOND NATURE, a new book by me and my dad @RicFlairNatrBoy Pre-order now: https://t.co/GmA8SE6Njw @WWE pic.twitter.com/huobXSIxJG — Charlotte Flair (@MsCharlotteWWE) November 14, 2016

“Obviously, for my dad, he talks about his career after 'To Be the Man' (his autobiography) up until he went to WrestleMania 32 with me,” Charlotte said. “For me, I talk about early childhood, NXT and it covers what it was like to be at WrestleMania 32. It's been a roller coaster of emotions working on it just because I've changed so much and my life has changed so much since I started wrestling. I get to share a lot about the world that they don't know. I'm really nervous but at the same time, I'm really excited.”

The book will also go into how much she has changed since devoting herself to the wrestling business.

“I never pictured myself as an entertainer or a superstar or a model or anything like that,” Charlotte said. “I played volleyball in college. I was the girl next door, never wanted to be in the limelight. Then my little brother Reid had this dream (of becoming a wrestler) and I was personal training at the time in Charlotte and in the best place in my life. I was like 'OK, I'll go to Tampa with you' and then he ended up going to Japan and I was in Tampa and then he passed away. My family went through a lot of different changes. Wrestling brought my family back together, me wrestling did.”

Brian Fritz can be reached at btrfritz@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @BrianFritz and listen to his Between The Ropes podcast on Blog Talk Radio.