The first time I saw her at the Vietnamese Student Club, I knew I had to have her. The tall, curvaceous and golden brown sister with the killer booty and sweet smile simply took my breath away. At the time, I was dating a Vietnamese chick named Miranda Nguyen, a romance that was doomed to fail since Asian parents seem to hate seeing their daughters with Black men. As a Haitian guy raised in Ontario, Canada, I consider myself as open-minded as the next person, but many in this world don't share my viewpoint.
My name is Steven Guillot and I'm a brother with a story to share with you. The tale of how I met my future wife, Arianne Chisholm Lee. Born in the City of Vancouver, British Columbia, to a Jamaican immigrant mother, Anne Chisholm, and a Chinese-Canadian father, Eric Lee, Arianna or "Ari" as I call her, was destined to be exotically beautiful, brilliant and sinfully sexy. The first time I laid eyes on the tall, fair-skinned cutie with the booty and exotic features, I could tell that she was mixed but I didn't know with that.
You don't see a lot of brothers with Asian women or sisters with Asian men. By and large, Asian culture seems to be quite hostile to Black folks, yet they apparently worship all things white. I swear, man, Asians love whites more than their own kind. That's why I was so surprised to hear that Ari's father was Asian and her mother was Black. What Asian family would welcome a Black person into their ranks? These people seem allergic to those of us who have Melanin in our skin.
I've seen Chinese girls with white guys and those broads usually act like they're on cloud nine, man. I shouldn't talk about people's dating preferences. You see, Ari is the first and last Black woman I've ever been with. I was raised in the City of Toronto, Ontario, by a gay white couple, Justin Edwards and his life partner Martin Guillot. I know I was born on the island of Haiti but I was adopted early on and remember very little of that place.
Growing up Black in a multicultural city like Toronto wasn't so bad since it's so diverse, but I was made to feel unwelcome by the Black youths at my old high school. You see, there aren't a lot of brothers out there who play hockey in high school and like chess, instead of loving football and basketball. I even did a two-year stint on the varsity swimming team, and when I wasn't enduring racist taunts from the whites, I got hassled by my Black peers. I was an odd duck. I was too Black for the whites and not Black enough for the Blacks.