It’s time to continue our paranormal cryptid/evil monster mythology. Yesterday, I talked about the legend of the wendigo; today, let’s tackle another popular monster with a Native American pedigree: the skinwalker.
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More than just a mindless werebeast that changes to animal form whenever the moon is full, the skinwalker is instead someone who gains the ability to shape change through witchcraft. The most plentiful stories come from Navajo lore where skinwalkers are believed to be people who have broken a cultural taboo – much like the wendigo does in Algonquin lore – and gain the ability to change their form into that of an animal.
In addition to shapechanging, Navajo skinwalkers were all accomplished witches, and not the kind that float around Munchkinland in a big pink bubble, either. No, these witches were specialists in dark magic; that cultural taboo they needed to break in order to get their nefarious powers was usually something like murdering a sibling, committing incest, necrophilia, or grave-robbing. In other words, these aren’t your misunderstood gentle nature worshipers hanging out in the city park buck-naked at 3 in the morning – skinwalkers were violent and dark-hearted monsters even before they took the visage of a four-legged creature.
The notable thing about skinwalker lore is that this isn’t ancient history. It’s very hard to uncover modern day stories of skinwalker encounters, especially since most Navajo are reluctant to share these stories with non-Navajo. (Indigenous people not trusting the white man? How completely out of character!) Despite this, there are urban legends that recount skinwalkers causing deadly mischief by banging on the doors and windows of houses late at night in order to terrorize the inhabitants, or even cause car accidents by jumping out into the road in front of unwary drivers. They don't just make appearances as animals, either - some reports of skinwalker run-ins recount a monstrous humanoid hybrid with the head of a coyote, like a low-rent minotaur or an extra from Stargate SG-1. It’s understood that skinwalkers can mimic the sounds of any animal – or any human being they hear – which can add to the terror; imagine chilling with your friends inside a cabin somewhere when you hear the voice of the person sitting next to you - or your own voice - calling out from just outside the door.
The most sinister ability skinwalkers are believed to have is most definitely that of taking on the face and appearance of a specific person. Meeting the gaze of a skinwalker supposedly means allowing him into your soul, granting him power over you, and allowing him to take on your likeness. After this happened, the skinwalker would usually “disposed of” the victim in some way, in order to more easily impersonate the person they just copied – and with their already dark reputation, it’s not uncommon to hear stories of skinwalkers murdering and consuming people before slipping seamlessly into the void left in their lives, sometimes living that way for decades.
The idea of the skinwalker isn’t confined to Navajo territory, though. There are other myths and urban legends that circulate throughout the United States and Canada, and there are some apocryphal stories of viciously territorial “goat-men” that haunt the forests east of the Mississippi. Supposedly sourced from a Menominee myth, the goat-man is different than a Navajo skinwalker in that it's less of a human witch and more of a malevolent supernatural spirit, having more in common with the wendigo (it’s important to note that the Menominee are an Algonquian tribe, which is also where the wendigo legend originates).
If anything, goat-men are even more terrifying than skinwalkers. Fiercely territorial, goat-men possess many of the same abilities as a skinwalker – the shapechanging, the mimicry of voices, and even the adoption of human form – but they delight in psychologically torturing any who venture into their lands. Supposedly accompanied by a strong smell of burning blood and ozone in some stories, goat-men stalk those in their territory in the night and purposely disturb the undergrowth, though never enough to reveal their presence clearly to their prey. They gibber in a guttural manner to disorientate and terrorize their prey, then adopt the form of a human to slip in unnoticed to a group of people, often sowing chaos when the group realizes there’s one more person among them than there should be – and then promptly disappears once there’s another headcount.
If anything, the goat-man presents as even more sinister than a Navajo skinwalker, simply because of the seemingly alien intelligence behind it. A skinwalker, while in possession of the powers of dark witchcraft, is at least still of human origin. The goat-man by comparison is incomprehensible in its motivations, seemingly only dedicated to preserving its territory by psychologically terrorizing any trespassers. It’s not even limited to the wilderness areas of the Americas, either; much as modern Navajo skinwalker stories exist, there’s folklore for goat-men that take the guise of a hapless victim in order to pass among humans in a more urban area. The only way to tell a goat-man has replaced one of your friends is to watch them for strange behavior such as halting speech, unbroken, uncomfortably long stares without blinking, and a complete change in personality seemingly overnight.
Are you spooked yet?
Like yesterday's post, this is an expanded version of an article from a series on cryptids from my old blog, The Amateur Professional. You can find the original here.
Nope, not spooked. :) Thanks for the information.
We used to live near Ignacio, Colorado, where there's a small reservation. Plus there's a larger reservation south of there, in New Mexico.
There are stories there of shapeshifters. One second hand account I heard was of a friend who saw a man walking along the property where they lived, who then walked away down a hill and out of site. When she got to the top of the hill, a coyote stood where she expected the man to be.
What to believe? I dunno. But it's certainly interesting.
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That is exactly what I'm talking about. Could it be a complete coincidence? Sure! Is that what happened? Likely. But wouldn't it be cool - and terrifying - if it was actually a shapeshifter instead?
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