You have abs. Everyone does. If they’re not visible, it’s because your body fat percentage is too high. You can do a million crunches a day and still not have ripped abs if you don’t decrease your body fat percentage. Abs are made in the kitchen, not the gym. It’s way more about your diet than whatever exercise you’re doing.
Crunches are pretty worthless anyway, to be honest. Lifting heavy with compound movements (squats, deadlifts, rows, etc) engages your core better than a crunch. I know plenty of people with visible abs that don’t do “ab work” at all. If you insist on doing some, do planks instead of crunches. Remember to work your entire core and not just your abs – that means you obliques and lower back as well.
Keep in mind that achieving visible abs is hard and it takes a lot of time and a lot of dedication. You must be eating at a caloric deficit in order to lose body fat. “Eating healthy” isn’t going to cut it if you’re not eating less calories than your body is burning throughout the day. If you’re not willing to count calories, then that’s your choice, but chances are achieving this goal of yours will take even longer.
Also keep in mind that, while eating at a deficit, you’ll lose fat and muscle. In order to minimize the amount of muscle you lose, you should be doing strength training and making sure you’re not eating at too much of a deficit. Eating too little is just as bad as eating too much.
I once dreamed of having ripped abs until I saw what people I know have to do to get them and maintain them. Endless cutting/bulking cycles didn’t appeal to me, so now I just focus on gaining strength and getting killer arms, legs, and booty. My stomach is flat, so I don’t worry too much about seeing my abs anymore.