 I worked for the National Prosecuting Authority of South Africa for four years. I understand that the story was unique. Here I was modeling and I'm a lawyer and I have albinism. The combination is quite rare. I didn't know when to talk about albinism. I kind of felt hyper-vigilant because it felt like whatever I said would reduce me to a stereotype. But at the same time I wanted the activism to still stand. So I did want to speak about the issues but I felt like I was boxed by them at the same time. It literally made me as a person and I just felt like I was reduced to a condition. Nation, race, albinism and gender, those are the identities that I feel like I'm most confronted with on a daily basis. The people who celebrated the cover with me were not just people with albinism. It was South Africans, it was women in general who felt like the culture didn't validate their dreams. And the beauty of that is it always makes your voice louder.