Everyone not the same, what works for others may not work for next person. Can’t say somebody is right or wrong when u don’t know that person individually.
As a former professional boxer, Tank is right. While I was training and fighting, i used my childhood trauma as fuel to push me along and fuel my fury. The minute I went to therapy, I started seeing boxing in a different light and actually questioned what I was even doing. I ultimately quit some time after therapy bc my therapist had extinguished the hatred I was carrying all those years. Take Wilder, for instance. When he was talking about catching bodies, he was dangerous but after he turned all nice, we started seeing his downfall.
As a person who used to be 500lbs & now being 220 it took the same fire but I think when your life is constantly on the line + the need to be great against oppositions you definitely need that fire. Deontay wilder should be an example big dawg you’re wrong but it’s subjective
Tank is 100% correct. When you’re an athlete you need a fire to continue being the best. He’s the best in his weight class and undefeated. He’s using the correct fuel. He can be soft after his boxing career.
@Brix Fitness actually your wrong that's like saying if you don't read music you cant play it so some people operate different on different energy and sometimes they don't work for some .as long as when the dude is done he checks himself in the end everyone is different
Everyone not the same, what works for others may not work for next person. Can’t say somebody is right or wrong when u don’t know that person individually.
As a former professional boxer, Tank is right. While I was training and fighting, i used my childhood trauma as fuel to push me along and fuel my fury. The minute I went to therapy, I started seeing boxing in a different light and actually questioned what I was even doing. I ultimately quit some time after therapy bc my therapist had extinguished the hatred I was carrying all those years. Take Wilder, for instance. When he was talking about catching bodies, he was dangerous but after he turned all nice, we started seeing his downfall.
We saw Wilder’s downfall cause he actually started fighting top level opponents, he was fighting nobodies beforehand
@@Crucialrobbie08 two things can be true at once.
tank is right .. it's different when u work as a fighter bro ..it's different something that can't be explained
Exactly! What works for some don’t work for everybody
As a person who used to be 500lbs & now being 220 it took the same fire but I think when your life is constantly on the line + the need to be great against oppositions you definitely need that fire. Deontay wilder should be an example big dawg you’re wrong but it’s subjective
Tank is 100% correct. When you’re an athlete you need a fire to continue being the best. He’s the best in his weight class and undefeated. He’s using the correct fuel. He can be soft after his boxing career.
Facts especially Combat sports
Anger is not the only way.
Anger is Fuel 🔥 🏃⛽🏋🔥
@Brix Fitness actually your wrong that's like saying if you don't read music you cant play it so some people operate different on different energy and sometimes they don't work for some .as long as when the dude is done he checks himself in the end everyone is different
I get what Tank is saying. However we see hella fighters like Mike Tyson crash out with that pent up trauma.
Not everyone the same he is own man