Part 4: Life Lessons from Boxing
Boxing had to take a back seat after a wood-shop accident in high school led to surgery. What I thought would be a six-month break turned into years. I didn’t step into a boxing gym again until my junior year of college.
I was out of shape, but I knew boxing was the one thing that could get me back right. I found a gym, began training, and fell in love with the game all over again. I took a few licks in sparring, but that inner animal was out of the cage. In no time, I was back in shape… sharper and smarter than before.
Training with guys 600 miles from home, without the only trainers I had ever known, was different. But this sport taught me how to find comfort in the uncomfortable. At that point, I knew I’d probably never compete again, but to get back in shape, I turned to what I knew best. I did it for the thrill of the challenge, the intensity of training, and the love I’ve always had for the sport of boxing.
After graduating in 2012, I started working on the railroad… my first real, good-paying job and at the same time, I became a new father. Life got busy. Boxing and fitness took a back seat, and I made every excuse not to train. But even then, the fighter in me never left.
As I worked my way up in railroad management, the challenges got real… adversity, politics, setbacks, and pressure. But one phrase continuously played in my head: “Life is easy for no man.” I’ve been preached that since I was a kid by my trainer, my grandfather.
So when things got heavy, I didn’t fold.
Work stress break me? Not a cold day in hell.
Boxing built this mindset and mentality.
It taught me how to take shots, in the ring and in life, and to always keep pushing forward.
Failures, hate, pressure? That’s just part of the fight.
And I’m built for it. You can be too.
I’m not saying life and facing adversity is easy, it’s far from it. There were times I wanted to crack.
But those are the moments that reveal where your heart’s at… what kind of man you truly are.
Even during the time away from boxing, I carried it with me. The mindset, the discipline, the grit… it never left.
Boxing gave me a foundation. It taught me to stand tall, even when life attempts to rattle me. And that’s something I’ll always be grateful for.
📍 Check out Part 5 next Friday and find out how I started teaching the art.
This series is for anyone who’s ever wondered about the positive effects boxing and training can have on your life… the valuable, intangible things that stay with you far beyond the sport.
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What Boxing Means to Me – Part 3: Even Coaches Need Coaching
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