I'm from Fort Albany First Nation, which is over a thousand kilometers from Toronto. I'm from my reserve. I came here for school. Then after I finished school, I started doing stuff, like this and that. I've been here [in Toronto] five years now.

I sleep a lot. Most times I get dreams. Even if I take naps. Some of them are just so real. I see… like, how do you say this, I see like, visions, too. I see it before it comes, it tells me something's gonna happen later, in the future. Usually tells me about a warning. Or something bad. Something bad coming. Every time I say something like this... no one believes me when I say something about this.

I share the dreams with my First Nation chief back home at reserve. Bad things gonna happen to my reserve, or out here, or just wherever I be.

I remember I had dreams when I was going to school [as a] kid. I remember right back [to] when I was kindergarten. I remember those kind of dreams. I was so small. I remember playing around, playing out in the school field. I remember all my friends. I remember my first best friend, his name was Eric. Yeah. When I always had these kinds of dreams, we used to play a lot together and just play good things, this and that. Like, you know, swings, slides.

Right now, everything's going okay. I have some bad days. But when something happens, like that, it changes to bad dreams. I see bad things that I don't want to see. Kind of scares me too. It wakes me up.

The visions are a new thing. It's [usually] about a natural disaster about to happen. I tell them that, but most often they don't believe that. My reserve. I told them that something's gonna happen, but they don't believe what I said to them. I said it four times already, honestly. Yeah. Four times and they haven't believed me. Then after that it happened, it did happen. You know when you dream you see something, like, it feels so real? Yeah, you ever get those kind of dreams for yourself? Yeah, those, those are the dreams that I always get now.