Sounds to me like he is not completely out of it yet. He just replaced one goal with another... but once he can't box professionally anymore, what high is there gonna be that could possibly match this?! Reminds me a bit of Maradona's spiral into drugs after lifting the World Cup. Wish him the best.
@@castronator29 100% brother, I know a guy that killed himself , he never made a thousand social media posts like the attention seekers do, he never even had social media
What an absolute legend. I struggle with mental health issues and this guy motivates me to get help and become the person I know I can be! Stay healthy out there friends
Tyson has done more for mental health charities and mental health awareness than any other athlete in the UK. He gave his full purse from the first Wilder fight to mental health and children’s charities, yet no one in the MSM mentioned it. Not once. He’s a great fighter but a better human being.
I met Mr. Fury once and chatted him up for about 5 mins before he had a flight. Nicest, most gentle soul I've ever met. He is so down to earth and so humble, it's impossible to not love this man.
It already is! Dude watch this video essay/documentary thing about him told by a guy with a dirty mouth (MixedMollyWhoppery if anyone else has heard of him): ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-SLiiNeeBB2U.html
I really needed to hear this today. I’ve been thinking it’s absolutely impossible to overcome my depression/drug addiction, even though I’m closer than I’ve ever been since it all started a decade ago due to cancer. This just proved I’m wrong and that it’s 100% possible if I continue this hard work. God fucking bless these two men. The world needs ‘em both
As someone who fractured their spine at the age of 12 wrestling for middle school, spent 5 years in a wheelchair, had 7 major spinal surgeries and a spinal cord stimulator implant put in to walk again, and spent almost 2 decades from the ages of 14-32 on fentanyl, dilaudid, xanax and klonopin all combined until it almost killed me; you can 100% do it! I ended up on the max FDA legal dose of each individual medication, all combined, around the clock, 24/7, until I had 3 cardiac arrests and 2 grand mal seizures in 2016. By the grace of God, I was able to get off it all on my dozenth try, after tortuous withdrawals that lasted a good year before I started feeling right again. It's the suffering that takes us to our knees and closer to one another and God. Perseverance is crucial. I was never spiritual or sought after that, until after I died a couple times and saw the other side and came back. It *is* there. Pharmacea = "sorcery" for a reason. They knew that all the way back to the Greeks. My battle was with opiates and benzos and you may be facing something different and altogether more terrifying, but nothing is impossible! Even taking a crippled and addicted kid who almost severed his spinal cord; from a wheelchair, to walking, to off 4 of the most potent drugs on planet Earth, all while becoming a professional drummer. Nothing is impossible for God, but you have to seek before being answered. Don't give up, I know there's a lot of suffering out there, and I still haven't escaped all of it myself either. But, giving into the darkness isn't a viable option, and it's through that perseverance we are made stronger in the end. Keep up the good fight, and ask for help! Love conquers all.
I’m 8 years sober from alcohol. I used it to try mask my anxiety and PTSD and after waking up in a hospital bed one morning after a night of binge drinking and hearing what I’d done and said to my family I immediately vowed to never drink again. I took a few counselling sessions and then went on to research these disorders and can proudly say I’m in control of myself each day, even though the darkness looms daily I conquer it with my mind and choices. Good on you Tyson for sharing your story.
@@huambo hey thanks! I’m doing very well in life, taking life head on and enjoying my family my job my doggies. Alcohol is not a struggle I have to deal with anymore, I look at it like a bottle of the most toxic household cleaner on the shelf. 😃
@@stopandsmelltheroses104 I used to do the same imagine a skull and crossbones on the bottle as it was poison to me. Love the Fury’s that they openly talk about faith and without praying I wouldn’t be sober
Tyson Fury is a c great communicator and very good story teller plus Joe allowed him to vent cos he was breaking down his bout with depression and how he over came it, 👍🏾👊🏾✌🏾🇳🇬🇺🇸
@Andrew Towey Lol, you're definitely an insecure little beta bitch if you think it's that. Bryan, Joe and Brendan are close friends and they talk over each other all the time, but in a friendly and a spontaneous way. But you wouldn't know cause you have no friend you little sensitive bitch Lol.
I’ve been living under a rock, and I just found out who Tyson Fury was leading up to Fury Wilder 3. I respect this man immensely for letting people like me know that mental illness can be conquered.
This is very important for men suffering alone with depression. Men need to see someone who is now Heavyweight Champion of the World being so honest and straight forward about a condition that can take down their strongest of men.....and come back. I have been there.
I think it's great that he's being honest... But I don't think many people can pray their way out of depression. Faith is important, church might be a supportive thing, but thus sounds like clinical depression which is a major medical issue. You need a doctor.
That's it. It's the coal to the furnace that is depression. It "works" the first few times but it only feels like it helps. Once the drugs go away you're worse off and now throw tolerance into the mix and it's a recipe for demise. 100% of the time it's bad for you and the best outcome is somehow making it out of that Hell. Few go in and ever come back out. Most that make it out are never really out. They left something - often a lot of things - in that furnace. A tiny fraction of a fraction get out and are able to move on in life successfully as Fury has.
It's kinda obvious because the drugs not only make you feel up but they also get rid of the depression which basically doubles the desire to take them again.
I've suffered depression my whole life since a child. Didn't get it until I was older but created a wreckage before I knew what I was suffering..had a child a 15. Drugs and alcohol right after. Lost a child. Prison...I've been collected and out of trouble. Bad choices for 10 years now... still suffering from depression. Have everyday...it's so great knowing your not alone. Thank you Champ for sharing your story.. Someone as great as you deals with the same pain but has accomplished so much..gives hope..may God Bless you
I’m an 18 year old mma fighter, diagnosed with depression at the age of 14 because of my little brother dying. I got into mma at about 16. Everyone wrote me off. But the day of my first fight I was thinking to myself “there’s only one man standing between me and who I really am” I went out at knocked him out in 20 seconds. I’m now 11 and 0 and I got through depression. If you beat your inner demons, there’s nothing in the world that can beat you.
So true. Depression is like a constant black cloud hovering over you blocking any light or warmth the sun gives. Black cloud is the mental illness. The sun is all the good things in life: friends, family, whatever would normally make ppl happy. Master yourself and you are greater than armies. Good testimony.
I lost a dear friend of mine a few months ago, leaving behind a lovely wife, two daughters, and many friends. He loved boxing. Watching this just made me drop tears. I'm so happy to hear this man say he decided to choose life and seek help.
Exactly, he knows when. He can banter back and forth with the comedians but when shit gets real he sits back and listens. And I think it is because he is genuinely interested to hear what they are saying.
+Ariel Dominguez; Exactly my case. I buy almost every UFC PPV throughout the year, except this past weekend when I decided to buy the Fury vs Wilder card. There is something in this guy that is so special. He made me watch Boxing, and I love his style, so slick, elusive and with a very high fighting IQ. After watching this interview I am Fury fan 101 % what a fighter in all senses of the word.
@@thankshi2815 yeah Vasyl Lomachenko, I know that guy too. I have never bought a fight of his but I have watched highlights of his wins. I have also seen him helping/training with some of our guys [T.J. Dillashaw]. Loma has magic footwork. He is a very quick sharp shooter and has Hyena-like Stamina. Great to watch. I wish he could come to MMA and help the guys honing their Boxing skills and with their endurance. The other guy you mentioned, Alexander Usyk, I have not heard of him before. Will have to look it up.
Tyson is building a legacy that will live on forever in England, hes a normal bloke, hit rock bottom, worked his arse off and climbed and clawed his way back to the top. Hes done more for mental health awareness in the UK than anybody, his life is a blockbuster film. Regardless of his fights in the ring and the fight with himself, his story will live on
Praying for you brother. I myself have given up on life before. I still have my good days and bad days battling depression and anxiety. The Devil himself is behind all of it. He wants you to feel unloved and to give up on life. God loves you. Once I finally broke down and asked him to help me with my problems things in my life changed. I found a purpose and I found God’s love. His love is the greatest blessing of all. It’s honestly what keeps me going everyday. I promise once you allow him to put his hand on your life you will feel a love and a relief that you’ve never felt before. God bless🙏🏽
Anybody who’s suffering from anxiety and depression. Your not alone friend. I beat it after a 10 year battle. Addicted to Drugs and all. You are loved. You are loved. You are loved.
God bless you my friend. I’m suffering from generalized anxiety disorder myself and us people suffering from anxiety should talk more together. We shut down and push everyone away and feel worthless and it leads to self destruction
@Elias Gonzalez Congrats bro thats inspirational as hell would you say porn addiction can be a source of depression because Id say i Have an addiction to it and thats the most likely reason why I have no motivation and stuff
After watching this interview after the Wilder vs Fury 3 makes this man one of the most inspirational heroes of our times. He's been through it all and come out victorious. Deserves a movie on his life asap.God bless the Gypsy King.
Had to come back to this after last night’s fight. Tyson Fury is a fucking inspiration man, from a alcoholic drug addict dealing with crippling depression on the edge of suicide, to the lineal heavyweight champion of the world. This man is a living example of how you can achieve anything you set your mind to. All hail the Gypsy King 👑🇬🇧
This man is a true champion. Strong physically and mentally. He's such a good role model to young lads world wide. I like how he's brutally honest with himself
Maybe this man is more of a man than you are because maybe he has faced his demons and now the external world ie. people like you don't bother him and maybe he is brave enough to have a man bun
Props to Big John as well, literally slept in the same bed as his grown son just to make sure he'd be alright. Big John is a great father apart from all that as well.
I had absolutely no idea Tyson. I’ve suffered from mental health issues and addiction and I’m clean now but still struggle every day. This is so inspiring. Thank you for sharing, this made me feel like I wasn’t alone and shouldn’t look back at the demons begging me to relapse or hurt myself today.
Watching this after seeing Fury Wilder 3, now seeing this, the depth of truth and honesty and humility made Fury a champion for the ages. He truly is a giant. A King.
His life is an actual movie imagine being his therapist! thinking he's about to commit suicide and a couple of years later he comes back and becomes the heavyweight champion again!
I’ve dealt with this my whole life . I’m an attractive man , In high school I was an all star athlete , I’m so talented , charismatic . Not to boast my self but I literally have the most amazing life , yet I felt like this . It was so draining . Then it created guilt problems because i knew I should be thankful for my life , but instead , I would pray for a scenario that maybe I could go out like a hero , or in a way where my family wouldn’t hurt when I was gone . Ten years later i over came, but it wasn’t the final battle . After the pandemic started and i was forced to work at home and not a good routine that I needed , my depression came back 10 fold.. but now I have three Kids and an amazing wife . I don’t know what I’m really getting at . It’s just nice to get this off my chest . It just feels like I’m so pathetic and weak . I can’t speak like this to my family . No one really cares anyways . But I’ll get through this again. I know I can . I chose last week that I want to live . My stress was so bad I felt I had a heart attack , and I couldn’t believe how scared I was . And I realized , deep down I wanted to live . So instead of thinking, I’m going primal baby.lol i might even eat a steak with my bare hands . Thank you for who ever reads this . I hope you’re doing okay as well
Good for you getting that shit off your chest man. It’s a rough road feeling like you know you have enough but feeling somethings quite not right. Ive dealt with multiple attempts on my life even while in the military after a plane crashed into my family’s house. At least an hon discharge. Put myself in super dangerous work conditions. 5’4 woman in an all male Super Max security prison getting into legitimate fights. I loved it because it got rid of the dead feeling of being 21 and divorced. But pulling away I saw how self destructive my behavior was. Great book that has absolutely cured every ounce of depression and anxiety has been “The Power of Now”. 💯 recommend. I wish the best for you. Read that book and know you have people out there that feel your same pain. Warriors bleed. And there’s no blood without wounds of battle. Fight on.
Hey man I'd love to chat with you some time if you'd be down. I am in a similar situation but have absolutely no clue what to do. My stress has resulted in tons of random things happening but I shouldn't be stressed at all with how well my cards are in life.
@@AnnaBarrowMusic thank you so much Anna . You’re reply is greatly appreciated . I’m so sorry to hear about your situation :/ you seem like an awesome friend to have . I will Definitly check out that book you’re recommending
What an amazing human being. In and out of the ring. He looks like a man who has a lot of love in his heart. He doesn’t have the snarl on his face most fighters have. His smile has a kindness to it, but without a doubt would be your worst nightmare if you fought him
TheLeanup I know he’s the Lineal Champion, that’s not what I mean, I mean he’s more than titles, he’s a Symbol. He can become an Icon but you need the Gold to get the Spotlight. Let’s not be naive, he needs more Gold not to be great but to keep other bums away from Gold that they don’t deserve.
Bro ive appreciated this video numerous times. Because the way he explains depression and what he's done with that has just made me respect him incredibly more
I was heavily rooting for Wilder, but after not only seeing the skill of Fury, but also just now seeing this video, I have the uttermost respect for fury. He earned ever single thing he has and is definitely an inspiration. I’m glad he won
I’ve never rooted for Wilder for anything, he’s a cocky, arrogant yet amazingly uneducated and ignorant living embodiment of American entitlement yet complains of being a victim bc he’s black. I hoped Fury knocked every bit of terrible grammar out of his dim whit brain. Btw, I’m a black man from even worse living conditions than how Wilder grew up. Can’t stand the guy. Kudos to Fury. God’s Champion and a REAL man’s man.
There’s is nothing better for beating depression/addiction than hearing someone who’s gone through speak honestly about it. Tyson is the real deal anyone who’s gone through it can tell. Seeing him get up after wilder knocked him down runs on a loop in my head daily and has helped me beat my drug addiction and start working on the depression.
"I look back in it now and think would I change that? I wouldn't, I wouldn't change a thing because I needed to get tested to see what kind of character I was" -- Tyson Fury I can relate. Amazing words. Life changing words.
I love the conversation, but I hate when people say, "you beat mental illness." You never beat mental illness, it's always there. Learning how to manage it is the goal.
As someone who has suffered with severe depression and anxiety for my whole entire life, this story was so relatable to me. It takes a lot of balls to tell a one stranger, let alone millions who watch JRE about the demons one fights within. This story was incredible and it gives me hope. You gained a huge fan in me, Tyson.
I used to suffer terribly from anxiety and depression for years .I would sit terrified and think for hours about how I was going to get over it ,I read books and tried smoking weed,took many different pills prescribed for anxiety. Then I gradually realized I was doing it to myself.so I thought or read if you change you're mind you change you're life.very slowly I'd catch myself before I felt the anxiety and change my mind and less and less anxiety came.today I'm so grateful to be calm and not be worrying everyday.try guided hypnosis on RU-vid,they really help you relax and plant new seeds that grow.
I have suffered and I am currently in the pits of this again. Shit is really bad for me now. I understand what this guy talks about fully. I'm trying to get things right, but it isn't easy. Respect to all that deal with these demons. I'll keep battling them. I suggest you do the same.
So proud of this guy for raising awareness on this issue. More depression and disassociation in society now than at any other time in recorded history. Life is precious man. Well played Mr Fury.
I love Fury. So glad he’s British aswell makes you proud. An absolute inspiration of a man, one of the best boxers to ever live in my opinion and an absolute gem of a man. Wish him nothing but the best in life. Thanks for everything Tyson.
I have to admit it’s not easy for me to gain motivation from hearing someone talk but Tyson Fury always motivates me to keep going he is a true legend .
@@hendrikalla4567 wilder also came from a hole. His only determination is caring for his disabled daughter and thats how he got to where he is now. That is enough to make a man kill
The Lord really has a sense of humor doesn’t he ...The Lord will get our attention one way or another even if he has to put a 400 lb man in a skeleton costume to show him the error of his ways.You’ll never know Jesus is all u need until he is all u have.
What an inspirational man, to overcome the mental health issues when everyone counted you out is bigger then any belt could ever compare. Equally bringing awareness in such an honest way shows the type of person he is, if only 1 person it inspires / saves his purpose on earth is justified. God bless that man
I hope Rogan remembers this interview the next time he pokes fun at Christianity. I doubt he will, but I hope he does. He gets so snarky about our faith it would be hard to not get defensive. Kudos to Tyson for being so kind.
He's right, being depressed is being in a state of "deep rest" no matter how much you hate it, it will build your character and wisdom as long as you can make it to the end. You will be a new man
Just having a dopamine deficit from not being high has given me a glimpse of what depression is like. Its unbelievable that Tyson is beating depression. The fight will never be over until he's gone but i hope the best for him and i hope the best for all of YOU who are in this fight. Take each round at a time. I may not know you but I'm in your corner.
I liked the video besides him thinking he's old at 29. In the world of athletics it brainwashes young people to think they are getting old because of ages when some athletes stop or wanna stop and slow down but that has nothing to do with being old they aren't old lol gotta change that weird mindset 20s is young
I always thought he was a bit of a cunt, but after watching this I realise he had issues. Actually quite like him when he isn't talking shit or running about in a batman costume, just hope he stays this affable.
“Then I just had the easy task of losing 160 lbs” Joes face is priceless I’m here after he finally got that revenge on Wilder in their second fight 💪🏻🥊🇬🇧
His explanation about depression near the beginning of this video is so accurate. A lot of people are aware they have a lot of things going for them, yet their mind works against them. It’s killed way too many men, it’s so sad
I'm a HUGE Wilder fan but Fury seems determined! I wish I could play this podcast for my cousin man, if he would've heard this he might not have took his life. Rip Cal
Sorry for your loss bro, I hope you have found peace in yourself and you're doing well. I beat anxiety and depression myself as a young man but it was touch and go at one stage. I'd had a bumpy road from very young and hadn't had a strong male role model (which is much more common than it should be). I was living alone as a teenager and just drifting really. Anxiety had me convinced I was dying and that I'd drop dead at any moment. I made some sort of peace with it and decided that I'd stop letting fear of death stop me from living. I realised that we all live until we die, whenever that comes so just get on wit living. Then fatherhood sorted me out properly. Turns out ultimately I just needed a purpose. Everyone that goes through this stuff have their own causes and potentially their way through it too. Seems like the taboo is shifting and people finally talking about this stuff. By people I really mean men. Women been talking about feelings forever but macho bs been getting in the way for us fellas. time to make a change ✌
This man is an inspiration to all the average people that fight with their situations. He is so normal and down to earth, in comparison to Mayweather or other champions. Lots of respect!
People who experienced depression are so compassionate to each other in their own ways, because they know how it was, it cant be explained in words. Im in my early 20s and lost in life right now, trying to find the light and still not giving up. We'll get there some day guys, just keep fighting 👊
As a lifelong British boxing fan, I’ve never had time for Fury, never considered him a quality boxer and wrongly perceived him as a typical traveller bare knuckle boxer that got lucky. After his draw on Saturday (he clearly won by a big margin) I’ve totally changed my opinion on him as a man and as a boxer. Totally take my hat off to him and have nothing but massive respect for what he’s achieved. Fair play
Liwkewise, I am a lifelong MMA fan and although seen Tyson Fury fighting before, he never impressed me that much until I watched the Klitschko fight, where he caught my eye on how skilled the guy really is. Now after the Wilder fight, we MMA fans from all over the world now respect and admire this man.
Could not agree more.... great performance but an even greater man. I am so sorry that I wrote you off as a lucky gypsy fighter. You talk so much sense and hold yourself in interviews so well, I wish you all the best.
Tarek El Kholy a traveller is a family / group that don’t confirm to usual ways of living, in houses and such. A lot of travellers and showmen move around a lot and don’t usually pay taxes, etc. They are not to be confused however with Pikeys.. pikeys are the mostly Irish contingent that are the ones that steal from old people and cause shit wherever they go. They live in mobile homes and move all the time depending on if the police can get to them first. The pikeys give all other travellers and showmen a bad name !
Jüstin__Sixx it’s from the New Testament in the Bible its simply saying that no matter how much riches and financial gain u get you will never be satisfied and it can cause u to lose your life literally or just depressed ect. Because our goal on earth isnt for material gains but it’s to have a relationship w Christ and strive to b like Him. I hope I wasn’t to forward or anything just trying to except lain that to you
The pain of living with severe depression is truly hell, throw in regular insomnia and you feel there’s no escape. If you’ve experienced it at that level then you know how unbelievably scary it is to feel like that
Adrian Stevenson that’s what’s truly impressive. He got up, started moving like he did in the earlier rounds, and started tagging wilder. Add on that wilder is one of the most powerful punchers in the history of boxing and it adds another level of bad assery on top of it. He shoulda probably won the fight, he out boxed him by a wide margin. There woulda been no doubt if fury didn’t get knocked down though. Wilder-fury 2 is gonna be epic.
Harry Paul Oh but he did. You have no idea how saved he is. Mark 10:14 “Let the little children come to me; and do not hinder them. For the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.” They get direct access to the kingdom of God.
Harry Paul cancer sucks. My biggest hero was my grandfather, decorated ww2 vet. I never got to meet him or my grandma cuz that goddamned disease. Maybe someday they’ll release the cure to us common peasants
Gold Chef it’s not a morale story, it’s a comeback story. The fact that he came back from being 400lbs and dealing with severe depression, something most people deal with, makes him relatable, and inspiring. Mental game is something else
Having suffered from depression for 2 years I got emotional seeing this. This happened a decade ago while I was living in the UK and at his same age, 27, I thought life was over. Tyson is an inspiration to all of us and a blueprint of what to do and what not to do. Thanks champ.
Something clicked with me when he said “whenever I could have a beer I could come home and say I was going to regain the heavyweight belt again, I was stuck reliving the glory days”. I don’t know how many times I’ve told myself that I was going to set running records some of the local running races. I committed years to training in the past and would do the exact same thing, telling everyone and they’d say yeah yeah yeah. For some reason that statement calls me to get back out there and start again, and commit to it. I’m starting this afternoon after work. I’m doing it. Best of luck to all of you out there, you aren’t alone. Thank god got Tyson’s story 👊🏼
7 years of doing absolutely nothing except getting drunk and getting high. Out of those 7,I was treated for depression and anxiety for 6. It all started when my grandma passed away. My family was financially stable and I grew up in a loving environment,so it was even more perplexing why I was feeling the way I was. My relationships suffered,I was jobless, was admitted to rehab twice and even my family had started to admit that I'll never be anything but a drunkard and probably be dead by the time I was 40. But I turned it around. I never drink now. I'll do some weed occasionally and that's it. I joined college again and topped the class every time and in a few days I'll be getting a job. Life is good now,finally ☺
@@joatmon8954 forgive me for giving a possible answer but he wrote that he went to rehab twice. I know people who've been to rehab. Those that are ready and follow the rules do really well. They've got to be ready. I think it's about getting support at the right time. The right support for you might not be the right support for someone else. If you're asking the question looking for an answer for yourself then all I can say is contact someone. Try calling a rehab place. That first step is what counts. They'll be able to give some advice.
One time I knew this guy who would get withdrawals if he didn't smoke enough weed. Eventually, weed cost him his job and marriage, so he finally managed to quit. Then sometime later, when he had almost fully recovered, this dumbfuck decided that he could only smoke weed once in a while and everything would be fine. One thing led to another, and now he's high off his ass permanently, living on shit welfare money (which he uses to buy strong weed and is therefore broke) and he lost all hope and aspirations- back to square one. Not saying this will happen to you, but I would completely quit if I had previously been addicted. Good story though, and good luck!
Depression is a helluva thing to beat. I always thought ppl who admitted they were depressed or suffered from anxiety were (mostly) attention-seeking exaggerators, esp in the 2010’s, when it seemed like EVERYONE had some sort of mental health issues. But then, it happened to me. All of my previous misconceptions went out the window. Here I was, a recovered addict for nearly 4yrs (at the time). I had BEATEN addiction & knew I was never going back, but then in early 2019, it was as if I had fallen off a cliff onto rock bottom after I had two reconstructive surgeries on my legs & feet back to back. 4mos after my second surgery, depression & anxiety ran over me like a semi truck. 11 straight months of absolute hell. I had social anxiety so badly that I was shaking & having panic attacks until I got home, where I retreated into my bedroom, which made my depression worse. To this day, I still believe the anesthesia was partly to blame since I’ve never reacted well to being put under. Either way, I knew it may take a year, but eventually, I’d come out of it. And I did :) I had faith in Christ & He carried me through it!
I believe that anesthesia was partly cause of it cause a year ago I had surgery when I woke up when they were pulling the tubes out my mouth as I was grasping for air… after my surgery I’ve experienced minor anxiety attack and car sickness but I never knew it was anxiety until about 2 weeks ago I had my first major anxiety/panic attack and now I realized I was having small anxiety attacks but never knew… I’m my anxiety is built up because I worry about taking a deep breath if I don’t catch that deep breath it starts to act up, my chest hurts every morning because of how much deep breaths I take they out the day… idk I feel like I’m in a vicious cycle and just want to be normal again…. Praying for anyone dealing with mental illness 🙏
I listened to this straight and thoroughly enjoyed this. I’ve been in a slump for a few months now and this really got my eyes opened. One thing I’ve wanted to try but am scared of is signing up at a boxing gym. I’ve been looking and driving by this place for over a year now and still get nervous just to walk through those doors. I’m going in there tomorrow. Thank you Tyson.
Just know that everyone in that gym started with day 1 just like you. I've been training for almost 10 years and have to say it's the best thing to feel yourself improve or work on something every day. And those people in the gym who you will train and learn with. They will become a second family. A good gym will train you hard but stick with it. You'll be surprised to see how far you've come once you look back. Good luck and take care out there!