The Christian Guide To: Highschool

The Christian Guide To: Highschool

  • WpView
    LETTURE 12,461
  • WpVote
    Voti 1,117
  • WpPart
    Parti 13
WpMetadataReadIn corso33m
WpMetadataNoticeUltima pubblicazione gio, giu 28, 2018
Hi there! I'm your everyday, crazy, wierd, and short Christian Girl. In this book, I write about the struggles I face, and that's almost EVERYDAY. Highschool. It's scary, I know. God never promised us this would be easy, but he did promise us that he would never leave us :) Join crazy Ol' me in this book: "The Christian Guide To: Highschool" God Bless Ya'll :) ❤
Tutti i diritti riservati
#50
tween
WpChevronRight
Entra a far parte della più grande comunità di narrativa al mondoFatti consigliare le migliori storie da leggere, salva le tue preferite nella tua Biblioteca, commenta e vota per essere ancora più parte della comunità.
Illustration

Potrebbe anche piacerti

  • The Grey In Black And White {COMPLETED}
  • Donnica story: My days at Blake high School
  • The Unpredicted Summer || ✔️
  • Of The World
  •  Love In Boxing Ring
  • Teenage Girls Are Christians ✔
  • Mute
  • Broken Pieces
  • Until The Whole World Hears?
  • Serendipity

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

Più dettagli
WpActionLinkLinee guida sui contenuti