Story cover for Afroground by yeeyahyou1
Afroground
  • WpView
    LECTURES 67
  • WpVote
    Votes 2
  • WpPart
    Chapitres 3
  • WpHistory
    Durée 17m
  • WpView
    LECTURES 67
  • WpVote
    Votes 2
  • WpPart
    Chapitres 3
  • WpHistory
    Durée 17m
En cours d'écriture, Publié initialement nov. 14, 2020
An national underground organization in the afrofuturistic city of Walemini called Afroground works to stop the evil clutches of President Muhara from sending out his troops to destroy Walemini. Will they be able to avenge Walemini, or fall to Muhara?
⚠️TRIGGER WARNING⚠️
R*PE
HOMOPHOBIA
Tous Droits Réservés
Inscrivez-vous pour ajouter Afroground à votre bibliothèque et recevoir les mises à jour
ou
#1westafrican
Directives de Contenu
Vous aimerez aussi
Vous aimerez aussi
Slide 1 of 9
The Grey In Black And White {COMPLETED} cover
𝐎𝐌𝐘𝐑𝐈'𝐒 𝐄𝐓𝐄𝐑𝐍𝐈𝐓𝐘.  cover
Tevun-Krus #119 - AfroFuturism 2 cover
The Monster & The Conspiracy (BWWM) cover
MALE FACTOR [BxB] cover
RISING cover
She Bleeds for Us: The Galactic Consortium 3 cover
Different [wlw](EDITING) cover
Mirror Mirror cover

The Grey In Black And White {COMPLETED}

21 chapitres Terminé

The teenage period is usually not always easy. You make mistakes, you learn from them. It's like a moulding phase towards adulthood, which tends to be harder than adults make it sound. Especially in this generation. Growing up in a society where having a psychological condition means you're a freak, abnormal or an attention seeker. Where gender inequality is still seen as normal and right. Where anything other than Heterosexuality means you're possessed or the spawn of the devil. Where showing your emotions as a guy means you're soft and weak, because toxic masculinity isn't seen as a problem. Also, having anything to do that's related to these "atrocities" means you're set for an even bigger social stigma. Being a teenager becomes harder than hard. Just a group of teenagers trying to find a place for themselves in midst of a backward society, realising that life can't be all black and white. Growing in an African home is hard but what's harder is being a Nigerian. O le gán. "It is better to be hated for what you are, than to be loved for what you're not." -André Gide