WEBVTT
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This is a renewed original recording.
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Hello and welcome to Believe in People, a two-time Radio Academy Award nominated and British podcast award-winning series about all things addiction, recovery, and stigma.
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My name is Matthew Butler, and I'm your host, or as I like to say, your facilitator.
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Today on Believe in People, I'm joined by Joe Seely.
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Joe's known worldwide as a former cast member on the Real Housewives of Cheshire, a shown seen by millions across the globe.
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But what you don't always see is the reality behind the cameras.
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Joe opens up about his battle with cocaine and alcohol addiction, the impact of grief and loss, and how life unraveled while everything looked successful on the outside.
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This is an honest conversation about recovery, resilience, and what it really takes to rebuild your life one day at a time.
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I begin my conversation with Joe by exploring a revelation about cocaine that might shock some listeners.
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Well, straight from me off, I mean the the thing that I I think about is that, and I say it quite often and I hate it, is that at the start cocaine saved my life.
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By the end it stripped me of everything I was and and am.
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But at the start I'd gone through quite a lot of trauma, and over a short period of time I I lost my I was a footballer, lost my football career to an injury, and then a week later my dad died.
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Literally that Yeah, an heart attack in the street.
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So I got injured the week before, and then the following Sunday got phone calls at home.
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My dad my dad was a retired footballer, Premier League footballer, and I got a call and he was he he was dead.
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And so I'd lost everything that I wanted to be, everything I'd worked towards since I was a kid, and also my dad who did that job, who led my career.
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So I was lost and I didn't talk about it.
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I didn't want to cry because my mum and daddy's cover since they were 14 years old and I had a little brother, so I used to get in the shower in the morning and crawl crawl up in a bowl, shower would be hitting me, I'd be crying my eyes out, and I'd come out and try and be alright because I was thinking I need to be the man now, which I shouldn't have done.
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And about nine months after that, someone gave me a line of coke, and actually I felt better.
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I was probably suicidal without knowing, I was suicidal, I was deep in depression, and actually a lot of that period of my life I don't remember.
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So that period of my dad remember my dad dying, and then up to I do know when I took drugs for the first time.
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A lot of that period, I don't have a lot of recognition, I can't remember a lot of it.
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Like it's completely blank.
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Talk to me a little bit about the football career then.
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Yeah, so I started from young like everybody else does, and uh, my dad, a lot of people knew my dad, and he was a goalkeeper at Man United and other clubs, top clubs won a lot of stuff, and I was a centre back, and then when I was about 10, I said, uh, I want to play and goal.
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You know, it was obvious I had some sort of talent, and I started getting picked up when I was about 12.
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And he said to me, Is this something you want to do?
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Because he was my dad was always like, don't matter what you do as long as you're happy.
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Yeah, yeah.
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But if you want to do it, do it, do it properly, whatever it is.
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Even if you're a bin man, do it and do it, do it properly.
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So he's like, Do you see something you want to do, yeah, I want to do, or I'll help you, but it's not gonna be easy, it's hard.
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So he trained me and worked with me, and I'd be I lived in London, Essex at the time, and I'd be living, I used to live in Sheffield at the weekends and play for Sheffield Wednesday.
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I'd go down to Southampton and play there, and eventually I signed for West Ham when I was when I was 16 when I left school because I wanted to live at home.
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But like everything my dad did, he said to me, he didn't my dad at the time was at West Ham as a coach, and he said to me, You've got to make your own way in life in this career.
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So it used to be it used to be about eight miles by car from my house to Chadwell Leaf where West Ham trained.
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That was a two-hour train journey because you had to go into London and back out, and he made me get the train, he was going to the same place as me.
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So he'd drive past me and beep on the way home, and I'd be home two hours after, or I'd be leaving at six in the morning to get to eight, and he'd roll in at half past eight and they would have left the house at eight o'clock.
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But he said, I got but at the time I didn't respect I didn't understand it, but looking back, that taught me a good that taught me a lot of you know, it taught me about life.
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I suppose the good thing with that is any success that you'd you would have had in football, no one could ever have claimed it was through like nepoters, I mean.
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That's what he said.
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So he also said because he didn't want me to go to West Ham now.
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I chose to sign for West Ham because I I got a lot of offers at that point, and I was in England, I was involved in the England youth system and stuff like that, but it was the only club I could live at home with, and I wanted to live at home.
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Plus, some clubs at the time didn't have a goalkeeper coach, some did, and to be honest, he was a good goalkeeper coach, and I liked working with him, but he didn't want that people thinking that, so he made it harder for me.
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It was hard, yeah.
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Was it harsh on you in like front of the boys and everything as well?
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Yeah, worse than probably too much.
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Okay, but he got sacked about two years in, and I and I'll be honest with you, I was happy.
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Okay, I I felt a relief from that.
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I've I felt a relief from him not being there every day because I felt more stressed.
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He never treated it never went into a home life like it, it was always kept separate, like that should because I think because he was in that job, and it's a job, like I got brought up to it, like my dad telling me, yeah, people know, but this is my job, like so different.
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I feed you by playing football, but on the outside, people think it's saying kills, but it's not.
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So at home it was still doing what's only fools and horses or minder or whatever we were watching.
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And I had a great childhood.
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I mean, I've got a loving mum and dad, I've got a brother, nothing ever happened to me.
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I mean, I had a I had a blessed childhood, I was always fed nice house, went to school, played football, looked after, always warm.
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Never had anything happen to me until that week, and then it all happened to me at once, and it changed everything.
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I suppose to unpick that as well, sometimes when we look at the root causes of addiction, we often talk about aces, which is adverse childhood experiences, and it's often people who come from broken homes or homes where there is trauma.
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It's interesting to hear your story of how good you had it, but then for it all to go wrong in the space of a week, that still creates a trauma, which as you described it as, which has led obviously to substance misuse problems.
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Tell me about the injury then.
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What was it?
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Shoulder.
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So I I got it, so I I was a goalkeeper.
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This is a cut in my shoulder when I was 16 twice, and I had to have a full reconstruction, which meant I'm cut around around the hole of my cuff, and then I had like I had to do you seen the film This is that far?
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Yeah, I had to wear a bodysuit for six months that kept my arm.
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I wasn't allowed to move my arm.
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So I had this up and then I wore this bodysuit, and then when they took that off, I couldn't move my arm.
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So it took another six months of them literally.
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I mean, it was agony every day.
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They lay me on my back at Masseurs, put the knee in my hand, and forced my arm open and rub out the muscles.
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Oh, it was terrible.
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So I was I was injured when I was 16 for a year, and I come back, but when I had the injury, they said, Look, there's too much trauma to your body.
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If this happens again when you have this off, there's nothing we can do, and you're gonna end up paralyzed if it goes, like you can't keep doing it.
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It's too much time out of football as well.
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And I was okay for a couple of years, and then I was in training one day, ball come through, I should have held it, it spelled out.
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I got up, and as I got up, I put my hand dived and put my hand on top of the ball, nothing um knew my shot went bang, pop.
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Yeah, and I knew I was done.
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I knew instantly it was over for me.
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And I remember being taken to the hospital, and then I went to a place called Holly House in Buckers still, and my mum and dad walking through the double doors, and I remember breaking down crying because it was like that's all I ever wanted to do, and and I didn't know anything else, like I didn't want to do anything else, and I thought my whole life was gonna be that.
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And then and then I suppose I didn't really talk about it with my dad.
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My dad had sorted out when after he died.
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I found out that a lot of the stuff that then I was doing all gonna happen to me, career-wise, and from my insurance point of view, he'd sorted out with the clubs and and all of that.
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So all that was done for me, he'd done it all, but we never spoke about it.
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And football was the most important thing in my life until seven days later, and then I realised it wasn't.
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It was the first time ever that when he died, and I thought football don't matter because it did matter to me.
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Like it's all I want to do.
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I didn't drink when I played football.
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I didn't, I wouldn't, I wouldn't socialise with you if I got rid of all my friends at school because they smoked weed.
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Because I thought, this is how naive I was, I never ran anything, that if I was in your house and you smoked weed, or I was walking down the street, I'd breathe it in and I could fail a drug test.
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Yeah, so I fucked off everyone that was any any around me that was like that.
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And I think a lot of players do do that to be honest, but I was petrified of it and I didn't I didn't drink.
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My dad didn't drink really.
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I saw him drink twice.
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My mum had a drink when she was 16 and didn't drink, so I wasn't in a house full of alcohol or anything like that.
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I never saw any of it, anything like it.
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What caused your dad's heart attack?
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Do you know?
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No, playing fit, so it was a random basically the art, one of the art is flood.
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Okay, and it could be happening to me and you every every day.
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So I'm thinking it's quite terrible.
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When you said your dad was obviously, it sounds like similar to you, do you know, quite career-driven, sporty, doesn't drink, you know, whatever that may be.
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And then to still have a heart attack.
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Well, you've so it was it's not really a heart.
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So when you play professional sport for a long time, your heart's a muscle not an organ, so it grows.
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So it's heart say his heart was twice the size, which is normal.
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Yeah, a lot of players have it, same thing as Christian Erickson, Mark Vivinfoy died of it as well.
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His artery fluttered.
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Now they said even if he was a guy that weighed 50 stone that couldn't move, you wouldn't even know it was happening to you if you've got a normal heart.
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But where his heart was that big, and it is called something because billions, as it fluttered, his heart pumped, that much blood in it, it blew up basically.
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Made his heart explode and it killed him instantly.
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And he had all his checks, he he was well, there was nothing wrong with him.
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It's quite terrifying that though.
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I mean, I'm funny enough, yeah.
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I'm thinking of um familiar with professional wrestling, British Bulldog.
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British Bulldog, huge guy had a massive heart attack, you know, and it's like you look at him, a lot of people said, Oh, it's from steroid use, it's from this, that and the other.
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But as you've just said, I never knew that.
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But if you're a professional athlete, it grows.
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Yeah, it grows.
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If you look at it, a lot of play a lot of people, not just in football, have these art tacks on football pictures, rugby pictures, yeah, athletics, and it's always due to that.
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Okay, the size of your heart.
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Jeez.
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So that's that is scary that that could be happening to any number of professional athletes right now, and they would have absolutely no idea.
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Because it it's not something that starts a year before.
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So you'd have these you have a scan every year when you played sport, you're having ECGs, wouldn't show.
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Yeah.
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I'm just trying to get my myself into your position.
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So how old was you when you're 18, 19 years old.
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And I think at that point, you you kind of have this idea of how life's gonna work out for you, don't you?
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Do you know?
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I think in a way, sometimes it's from I mean, I used to think this were like the the way the media influences us like we're all gonna leave school and somehow become famous and rock stars.
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But I suppose with you, you're experiencing an actual career path by the time you're 18, 19, anywhere.
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And when I look back at it, I'd lived in that because of my dad.
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Yeah.
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So like what I struggled with, and this this is this sounds amazing.
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Like, if I needed a doctor when I was a kid, my dad, my doctor was the main united doctor.
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He came to my house.
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Okay, yeah.
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If I needed a dentist, they'd we got taken to the dentist by the club.
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It was all club related, not just when I was playing, but like that my whole life because of my dad.
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Yeah, so I didn't even know how to go to the dentist.
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Like, I I mean it.
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I seriously had a problem when I was about 22.
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I went to the club dentist and still said I was a player and got a club to pay for it.
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I didn't know how to live.
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Yeah, because your meals are done.
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Here's your tracksuit, here's your boots, here's your trainers, beer at nine o'clock, get on this coach, eat your lunch, train again.
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So routine, isn't it?
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I love the I love a routine, I love a routine now.
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I'm kind of picturing almost like uh coming towards the end of an 18-year-long road, yeah, and it the road finishes, and then you just stood in front of a wide field.
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It's like, where do I go?
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What do I do?
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That's exactly what it was like.
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Talk to me a little bit about that then, about that transition into going from such heavy routines, yeah.
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Your dad passing away, which obviously was instrumental as part of that routine, and then into to Northers.
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Where does where does your life go from that point?
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Well, my my dad at times sorted out with my agent, and he owned part of this agency, which had now the the world's biggest agency, they're called Stella, CAA Stella.
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My dad started that business, so I got given a job as an agent that he'd sorted out after my injury before he died, but I never knew.
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So I went straight into that after he died, uh, and I hated it.
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I hated it because I hated football.
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I really hated football.
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Did you or was that because of your dad passing word?
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I think it was a bit more.
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I think more my injury, I think I was bitter.
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Yeah.
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I I resented that other people could do it, yeah.
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And I really struggled with my identity not being a footballer.
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Yeah.
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Nothing else was good enough.
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Yeah.
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Uh I weren't good enough.
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You know?
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And that took me a long time to work that out.
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Is the truth.
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And yeah, it was like that.
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I was given this fantastic job with good pay and a nice car, and I didn't want to do it.
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I didn't want to be there, I didn't want to be around it.
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I didn't, I just I didn't know any I didn't know what they say, I didn't know what I didn't know, I didn't know anything.
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Yeah.
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But I thought, you know, so it was all an act.
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It was all an act.
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So what happened after how long was you doing that job for?
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Well I did that I did that there for 80 months and I eventually sat on my own business and I did sell that when I was 32 for quite a lot of money.
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But what was your own business that you were doing?
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Sports agent.
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Okay, yeah.
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So I represented a lot of players, I did Floyd Mayweather, I did the Clitch Goes, but again, Mark I did marketing, more marketing with them in Europe.
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But footballers, I did about a hundred of them.
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But I hated it, he would I hated it too.
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I hated it, I tell you what, I hated it up to a point of when my son started playing football, yeah, and him enjoying it so much made me like football again.
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Okay, he gave me the enjoyment back, but up to that point, like anyone that I had played with, I didn't want him to do well.
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I couldn't help it.
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If they were playing in cup finals, I used to want them to lose.
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It's terrible.
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Yeah, it was a terrible way of beating.
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I was just full of hate and rage.
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Like my my temper inside was horrendous.
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Like I couldn't.
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How do you deal with that then?
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I didn't.
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Okay.
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I mean, I I didn't.
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I'd have starting to paint a picture here kind of what's going on, you know.
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I didn't, I didn't uh I didn't deal with it.
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I didn't deal with it at all.
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I dealt with it in the worst possible way.
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Okay, you know.
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Talk to him about the first time you used cooking.
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Yeah, uh interesting.
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So I actually lived, so I lived in Essex and I didn't know anyone that did drugs in well living.
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I'd never been around drugs, and yeah, yeah.
00:13:59.440 --> 00:14:04.480
And I'd gone out, so I've got taken to Manchester, actually 500 yards from where I currently live.
00:14:04.559 --> 00:14:04.639
Right.
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The pub at the bottom of my road the pub at the bottom of my road.
00:14:07.679 --> 00:14:10.080
It used to be called the Rectory, now it's called Brown's.
00:14:10.480 --> 00:14:18.399
And I come up with a guy called Michael Edward Hammond, right, who at the time was Danny Minogue's boyfriend and meant to be a TV producer.
00:14:18.559 --> 00:14:22.159
He went to prison about eight years ago for breaking into Buckingham Palace and pretending he was a police officer.
00:14:22.320 --> 00:14:22.879
Do you remember him?
00:14:23.279 --> 00:14:24.000
I vaguely remember the.
00:14:24.399 --> 00:14:25.279
He said he was CID.
00:14:25.600 --> 00:14:26.000
That was him.
00:14:26.639 --> 00:14:42.799
So I go in the car from London to Manchester, and we're going out with some people in Coronation Street, and we go out to this pub at the bottom of where I now live randomly, and I go taken back to this house in Whitefields, and they put cocaine on the table in the kitchen.
00:14:43.039 --> 00:14:46.559
So they're doing it, people lining it up, have on a bit of that, and I do it.
00:14:46.799 --> 00:14:49.759
And I thought, I'll be honest with you, I did it, I think, because of peer pressure, because who I was with.
00:14:49.919 --> 00:14:51.519
I was gonna say, did you need convincing to do it?
00:14:51.679 --> 00:14:52.720
Or was it a bit of like a big fit?
00:14:53.679 --> 00:14:54.559
I think I'm trying to fit in.
00:14:54.639 --> 00:14:56.799
Yeah, but it instantly made me feel better.
00:14:56.960 --> 00:14:57.200
Okay.
00:14:57.600 --> 00:14:59.519
It it instantly changed how I felt.
00:14:59.600 --> 00:15:01.600
And in what way?
00:15:02.399 --> 00:15:03.759
I felt happy.
00:15:04.320 --> 00:15:07.519
Was that a feel like the first time you'd experience happiness in a long period of time?
00:15:08.080 --> 00:15:08.320
Yeah.
00:15:08.639 --> 00:15:09.120
Yeah.
00:15:09.519 --> 00:15:10.720
Looking back at it, yeah.
00:15:10.799 --> 00:15:16.480
It took me out of myself, it took away my feelings, and it instantly made me feel better.
00:15:17.279 --> 00:15:25.600
And I did that one line, I talked shit for five hours, then asked for another one, but they'd obviously all done it because that's what people do, and there was no more, and that was fine.
00:15:25.759 --> 00:15:32.960
And I got on with my life and my week or whatever, and but I'd end up going up to Manchester once a month and having a party.
00:15:33.679 --> 00:15:37.600
Very normal at that at that point for about six months.