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Following the life of: Essynce Aaliyah Glenwood is an Afro-Belizean female who was born on June 14th at St. Fiacre Hospital in South Central Los Santos, under circumstances as complicated as the life that would follow. Raised in the dense, violent corridors of Chamberlain Hills until age ten, Essynce was the result of a one-night stand and a failed abortion—details her mother never hid, and ones that colored every moment of their strained relationship. Her father was never known, and her mother, riddled with resentment, treated her with more coldness than care. The two moved into a modest, low-income apartment in Morningwood with Essynce’s grandmother, settling at 209 Cougar Avenue. Though the location changed, the emotional climate did not. Their apartment was cramped, their conversations short, and the atmosphere thick with bitterness and tension. From an early age, Essynce understood that survival wouldn’t come easy. At thirteen, she started working off the books at Chido Taqueria to help cover bills. By fifteen, she had a legal job at the Xero gas station in Pacific Bluffs, where she remained until she was fired at seventeen. The dismissal stemmed from an incident in which a customer called her a racial slur; when she stood up for herself, management labeled her “a disturbance” and let her go. That experience solidified what the world often told her quietly—people like her weren’t meant to speak up. Essynce is outspoken and headstrong. Her confidence, though sometimes mistaken for arrogance, has become armor—a self-built shield against a world that often made her feel unwanted. Materialistic and image-conscious, she proudly wears counterfeit designer pieces sourced from DHGate, pairing her aesthetic with an undeniable street smarts. She's been stealing since she was young—not out of thrill, but out of need. From boosting skincare to cutting tags off clothes, she’s become a quiet expert in doing what it takes to make it through the day. Her body, chubby and soft from years of poor nutrition, stress eating, and a lack of routine, is just another thing she carries without apology. With no formal guidance or care, she’s simply tried to cope with what little she’s had. At fifteen, a drunken outburst led to her mother kicking her out. Essynce found herself alone, eventually renting a room at the Perrera Beach Motel—where no one questioned her age so long as she could pay. The motel sits on the edge of chaos: streetwalkers pacing the sidewalk, drug deals unfolding just outside her window, and the occasional scream breaking the silence of night. It’s far from safe, but it’s the only consistent thing she’s had in years. She's currently looking for a new place in Morningwood—nothing fancy, just enough to exist. Life taught Essynce to be her own parent. When she got her first period, she didn’t have anyone to turn to. She opened her old burner phone, typed “why am I bleeding” into WhoTube, and pieced together what she needed to survive the moment. That was how she learned everything—how to shave, how to cook, how to deal with depression, how to ask for things without sounding desperate. She grew up alone in a house full of people, and the internet became her lifeline. She has always been her own big sister, her own guide. She currently attends Los Santos High School and for much of her school life prior, her grades were poor. She never had the support or energy to care. But once high school hit, she started to understand that a diploma might be her only ticket out. She still struggles, especially in English, but she’s improving. Spanish, her first language, is what she’s most comfortable with, having grown up in a household where it was used frequently, especially during arguments. Her mother of Mestizo descent and her father African American, her cultural identity sits at the intersection of two marginalized worlds. Outside of academics, she found peace in cooking—something she turned to out of necessity at first, but later learned to love. Trying new recipes helped her cope with hunger and loneliness. Hair was another escape. When she couldn’t afford to get hers done, she taught herself. Over time, this turned into a side hustle. While she dreams of owning a shop one day, she knows dreams cost money, and money is something she still doesn’t have. Essynce has witnessed the full spectrum of gang life across both South Central and Morningwood, never as a participant, but always within arm’s reach of danger. Growing up, she saw the territorial disputes between the Rollin’ Crip sets (60s, 40s, 90s, and 108 Block Crips) and Blood factions like the Madd Swan Bloods, Black P Stones, and Inglewood Family. Tagging crews morphed into hardened Sureno cliques—Traviesos Gangster 13, South Los 13, and Varrio Hoover 13—many of which constantly clashed over turf, drugs, and legacy. In Morningwood, her daily reality was shaped by the silent war between Del Perro 13 and the white supremacist Del Perro Skinheads, alongside tension from the Blasting Fools Gangster Crips and Playboy Gangster Crips. She witnessed neighborhood divides deepen with the presence of Northside Longos, Tiny Oriental Posse, Morningwood Russians, Hye Mafiya, and outfits like Beyond Control and Aktivität. Still, she never affiliated with any of them. The bodies, sirens, and bloodstains on the pavement were enough of a warning. Being online shaped a different, subtler threat to her self-worth. On Bleeter, she scrolls through endless threads about “alpha males” and “high-value women,” watching grown men go viral for calling girls like her too loud, too fat, too dark, too poor. She sees the microaggressions turn into macro-abuse, sees herself in the girls who are constantly picked apart for simply existing. The hostility toward Black women—especially those who speak their minds—has become a normalized punchline. As a young girl still trying to figure herself out, these posts don’t just sting—they shape her thinking. She doesn’t trust men. She doesn’t romanticize relationships. She has seen too many examples of love as manipulation and control. The misogyny, the ridicule, the casual violence—she takes mental notes, guards herself accordingly, and keeps her vulnerability buried deep. She doesn’t dream about romance; she dreams about safety. Essynce Aaliyah Glenwood, now eighteen, is a girl hardened by survival. Her story is not one of rescue or transformation—yet. It’s one of endurance. She knows how to make her way through shadows, how to build a life out of scraps, and how to speak even when nobody’s listening. She hasn’t figured everything out, but what she does know is this: in a city that never gave her anything, she’s carved out her own space, and she intends to keep it. Physical Characteristics: Height: 5’2” (157 cm) Weight: 200 lbs (classified as obese for height range) Body Type: Short stature, curvy frame; fat distribution primarily gluteofemoral — concentrated in the hips, buttocks, and upper thighs; consistent with a curvier, pear-shaped lower body profile; slimmer facial features with notably full cheeks Foot Size: Estimated US Women’s Size 4.5–5; notably small/petite feet Skin Tone: Dark complexion (Afro-Belizean heritage noted) Hair & Grooming: Hair (Natural): Dark, very thick, tightly curled; typically worn in tight braids underneath cosmetic hair installations Hair (Styled): Wears full black bundles via wig installs; maintained and changed regularly Nails (Hands): Long acrylic nails, typically decorated; coordinated with personal aesthetic Nails (Feet): Hot pink French tip acrylics with rhinestone detailing applied Eyebrows: Thick, visibly filled in Eyelashes: Wears long false lashes ("falsies") daily Voice & Communication: Speech Pattern: Fast-paced urban Southern Central Los Santos accent; informal, regionally influenced vocabulary Nonverbal Expression: Frequent hand use while speaking; expressive gestures amplified by long acrylic nails Scent & Fragrance: Personal Fragrance: Common scent includes Bath & Body Works’ "Strawberry Poundcake" body spray/perfume; sweet/gourmand profile Hygiene: Regular cosmetic maintenance noted despite economic limitations; prioritizes appearance and grooming Glenwood's Facebrowser Glenwood's Beauty Brand TLDR
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DIRT GANG BREAKDOWN — The Rollin 30 Harlem Crips (R30) also known as “Dirt Gang” (DG) or Dirty Money Boys (DMB) / Dirt Money Girlz, or sometimes known as the Original Harlem Crips (OHC) reputable set resided in Los Santos, San Andreas. The 30s mostly consist of African American and Belizean Creole descent, although you will find quite a bit of Hispanics here and there. The OHC’s comprise of a few cliques like the Avenues, Denker Park, 35th Street, 37th Street, and 39th Street. They usually go by the blue flag but sometimes they can be seen with some brown flags here and there. Although the Rollin 30s are a street gang they dabble in Organized Crime and that’s what makes the 30s more versatile and different when it comes to other street gangs. The R30s fall under the Rollin 0's umbrella and unlike the 40’s - 100s they don’t claim Neighborhood and are strictly Rich Rollin, this makes them the ONLY Rollin Crip set that does not claim NHC, this doesn’t stop them from cliquing up with the Rollin 40s though. The Rollin' 30s Harlem Crips have had a long history with other sets who they have battled with and gotten cool with to prove themselves. They claim all of the NHCs as allies and as previously mentioned before they are cliqued up with the Rollin 40s Neighborhood Crips, they also have managed to expand their connections throughout Los Santos and solidify alliances with the Grape Street Crips, Four Tray Gangster Crips, Bacc Street Watts Crips, Holmes Street Watts Crips, Paramount Gundry Blocc Crips, East Coast Crips, and the Rollin 100s . For the contentions though, the Rollin' 30s Harlem Crips rival against The Rollin' 20s Neighborhood Bloods, Black P Stones, School Yard Crips, 53 Avalon Gangster Crips, All Hoover Criminals, All Brim Blood Sets, All Gangster Blood Sets (Heavily including Inglewood Family Gangster Bloods.) OPERATION THUMBS DOWN — In 2010, the Rollin 30 Harlem Crips were the reason for more than 1,000 robberies inside the Los Santos Province area. In 2013, almost 100 cops caught an immense bundle of the Harlem 30s in Operation Thumbs Down, a 30-month examination that zeroed in on people of the Rollin 30 Harlem Crips. The assessment was begun in 2011 to target people of the Rollin' 30s because of the viciousness and ruin they were unleashing inside the Los Santos district. They were known for a ton of viciousness inside the local area where they guarantee as to their domain. During the assessment, the law requirement discovered how much the gathering was remembered for drug appropriation all through Los Santos. As effectively communicated the group has various sets and coteries that different various pieces of the pack. Each set cases unmistakable domains all through the group's by and large guaranteed region and has its huge homies. During the Operation Thumbs Down examination, these huge homies are who law implementation followed. Around 21 individuals from the road group were arraigned governmentally in Los Santos and from that point forward more than 100 individuals from the posse were accused of weapon and opiate infringement regarding Operation Thumbs Down. BELIZEAN ANCESTRY — Since the 1960s, individuals have left Belize and advanced toward American shores. One of the significant center points of Belizean foreigners has been South Los Santos, all the more especially, the Western, Normandie, and Vermont hallways. Belizeans began joining South LA posses in the 1980s, mixing Black culture with their own local culture. Nowadays, essentially every pack from Venice to Florence among Vermont and Crenshaw is prevalently Belizean. Packs that brag hefty Belizean enrollment incorporate the Fruit Town Brims, Rollin 30s Crips, 52 Hoover Gangsters, Trouble Gangster Crips, Van Ness Gangsters, Rollin 20s Bloods, Rollin 40s Crips, and Black P Stones. HARLEM GANG DRILLAS — The Dirt Money Boyz / Dirt Money Girlz commit a large scale of crimes, from home invasions to burglary, robbery, murder, drug trafficking, and believe it or not despite them being a street gang the Rollin 30s dabble in organized crime and move as an organization in some instances. This is what makes the Rollin 30s unique and what helps them consist of more variety when it comes to other sets in Los Santos. Nowadays with petty scam methods and fraudulent crimes taking over the streets, you will often find the younger individuals participating in petty scams, carding, and just fraudulent activity in general. The Rollin 30s are more money-oriented and more focused on getting money and they are currently on the rise when it comes to rappers like ‘Johnny Rose’ ‘DMB Dai’ and other rappers. They are heavily known for their musical influence in Los Santos. After numerous more established individuals from the Rollin' 30 Harlem Crips who were there for direction got detained because of the prosecution set down on the group, the exercises eased back down briefly. The Rollin 30s Harlem Crips used to claim “DNA” which stands for Denker Parc, Thirty-Ninth Street, and Avenues. This is more of an older tradition and you won’t catch any of the younger ones claiming DNA anymore, the newer generation of the 30s claim Dirt Money Boyz (DMB), or for the HGs (Home-Girls) they claim Dirty Money Girlz (DMG). The name Dirt Gang originated from a diss to the Rollin 30s, rival gangs use the name ‘Dirties” to diss the Harlem Crips but the Rollin 30s figured out how to embrace the moniker. Unlike some Crip hoods in Los Santos, the Rollin 30s don’t groove with any Blood sets and often push the term ‘NSA’ which stands for ‘No Slobs Allowed’ (Diss to all Bloods) and often show strong hate for all Damu sets, especially the neighboring ones. Such as the Rollin 20s NHB, Fruit Town Brims, Van Ness Gangster Brims, and the Harvard Park Brims. The Rollin 30s often sport different kinds of logos and brands to represent where they are from. The Minnesota Twins is a logo that represents a TC (Thirty Crip), they also often wear Detroit Tigers gear which can stand for Denker Park, or Dirt Gang, Texas Rangers which can represent the Thirties, Los Angeles Angels or any ‘A’ hat can represent Avenues and Houston Rockets which can represent ‘Rollin’. Other hats and brands are also worn as well but these are just the basic brands that can be found around the area and are commonly worn.
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