When one door closes, another one opens, isn't that the popular saying? That's how I choose to look at my current situation. I came to the City of Ottawa, province of Ontario, a while ago and I honestly hated the place and didn't want to be there. And then I enrolled at Carleton University, made lots of friends across racial, religious and cultural backgrounds and I realized something. It's not the place, it's the people that make the whole thing worthwhile. Considering who and what I am, that's ironically a very human thing to say, isn't it? The name is Antony Guerrier, but everyone calls me Anton.
I was born in the City of Calgary, province of Alberta, to an Aboriginal mother and Haitian immigrant father. My father, Etienne Guerrier came to the Confederation of Canada from the island of Haiti in 1987. Just another young immigrant seeking a better life for himself. He met my mother, Alexandra Tzulahem, a Cowichan Tribeswoman, while wandering around downtown Calgary. He was looking for City Hall and Calgary being Calgary, no one felt like helping the big and tall black guy with the thick French accent. The place hasn't changed all that much in the twenty-plus years since if you ask me...
I guess that's why my mother stood out so much in dad's eyes. Alexandra Tuzahem was the only person in all of Calgary who would give directions to a tall, dark-skinned stranger, I guess. My parents have told me this tale many times. Mom walked dad for ten blocks until they came within view of City Hall. Ah, the kindness of strangers. He got her name and remembered her when they later crossed paths as students at the University of Alberta a few months later, and the rest as they say is history. They fell in love, got married and had little old me. To say that I am the son of two worlds would be the understatement of the century, I guess. I'm Afro-Caribbean and Aboriginal, definitely a combination you don't see every day. That's me, baby. Born and bred in the most redneck part of Canada.
What if I told you that I am even more unique than you might think? Remember how in an earlier paragraph of this text I hinted that there might be more to me than meets the eye? I actually meant it, ladies and gentlemen. Can you guess what I am? To Native Americans, Aboriginals and First Nations people, my kind are Skin Walkers. To the rest of the world, we're known by a moniker of ill-repute. Werewolves. I bet you that word caught your attention, eh? So much has been said and written about werewolves in recent times. Just about every chick who's ever read a Twilight novel considers herself an expert on all things supernatural. Thank God that's not true!
Let me separate myth from fact as much as I can, please. In order to create a wolf-person, you need a werewolf daddy and a werewolf mommy. Humans cannot become werewolves and werewolves cannot become human. We're two completely different species, even though we look a lot alike. By the way, it's not the light of the moon that transforms my people into wolf-like monstrosities. We are what we are pretty much 24/7. When we get really riled up, our eyes turn bright red, our teeth elongate and sharpen, becoming wicked-looking fangs and our fingernails turn into claws. Our bodies rapidly sprout hair, far more hair than any mere mortal has any business having, but that's about it. We don't become wolves or anything like that. The hairy, red-eyed, sharp-fanged and clawed persona dwells within each and every last one of us.