TheTrews
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- Jul 1, 2015
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It's like dried leather.
Recently I saw a young Ethiopian woman sitting in sandals. She was objectively fairly aesthetic, but her skin was horrible.
Not only was it dark in colour, but it looked hard, tough and ugly. It looked especially gross around her knuckles, elbow and FEET.
Se legit reminded me of the bog bodies I've seen in the British museum.
Black people's skin is hard, tough and usually dry (they have to take extreme measures like using cocoa butter and vaseline religiously every day to prevent getting 'ashy' - an unknown condition to white people).
On the occasions I've held hands with black people at school or sports events, they felt noticeably hard and tough, like they'd done manual labour all their lives. It felt like holding a monkey's hand.
Recently I saw a young Ethiopian woman sitting in sandals. She was objectively fairly aesthetic, but her skin was horrible.
Not only was it dark in colour, but it looked hard, tough and ugly. It looked especially gross around her knuckles, elbow and FEET.
Se legit reminded me of the bog bodies I've seen in the British museum.
Black people's skin is hard, tough and usually dry (they have to take extreme measures like using cocoa butter and vaseline religiously every day to prevent getting 'ashy' - an unknown condition to white people).
On the occasions I've held hands with black people at school or sports events, they felt noticeably hard and tough, like they'd done manual labour all their lives. It felt like holding a monkey's hand.