Back from 'hell', Fury helping
others fight their demons
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[August 23, 2019]
By Rory Carroll
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Former world
heavyweight champion Tyson Fury said he "tasted death" during the
mental health crisis that brought him to the brink of suicide but is
back and on a mission to help others.
The British fighter shocked the world in 2015 when he defeated
long-reigning champion Wladimir Klitschko to capture the IBF, WBA
and WBO belts.
But he was stripped of those belts the next year after alcohol and
drug use rendered him unable to compete.
He ballooned in weight and few, including Fury himself, thought he'd
ever see the inside of a ring again.
But he rediscovered his love of boxing and the sport he walked away
from proved to be his salvation.
"I've been to hell and back and I've been given a second chance at
life," he told Reuters.
"I turned my life around from 420 pounds and suicidal thoughts on a
daily basis to getting back to the top of the heavyweight division,"
he said.
"To almost taste death and to come back to this level has definitely
been a blessing."
Fury said he is passionate about helping others who struggle with
mental health issues and has embarked on speaking tours in the UK
and Europe to spread the word to those suffering that they can get
better.
"On the second return journey, I'm doing as much as I can to help
others in needy positions and as much as I can to spread the word on
mental health and smash the stigma because everybody deserves a
second chance."
The response has been overwhelming.
"People are flying in from all over to say thank you. You've saved
my brother, my uncle, my cousin, my wife. One guy flew in from
Malaysia to thank me personally and give me a hug.
"So it means the world, it means so much to get the recognition for
the help," he said.
Fury credits his own turnaround to the purifying effects of
exercise, something he recommends but only up to a point.
"Anyone in the midst of a mental health crisis should immediately
contact a doctor," he said.
"I believe that if you do suffer from mental health, and I know a
lot of people out there do, having a little training program really
works," he said.
"I don't mean like a high-performance athlete, I mean just on a
regular, day to day basis. What you can manage as an individual.
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Tyson Fury celebrates winning the fight REUTERS/Mike Segar
"Whether it is a little 10-minute walk or a jog, whatever you can
manage. And if you can maintain it like a daily thing, I think it
really does help."
FEELING 'FANTASTIC' AHEAD OF UPCOMING BOUTS
Fury said he feels "fantastic" ahead of his Sept. 14 bout with Otto
Wallin and his highly-anticipated Feb. 22 rematch with Deontay
Wilder but said mental health struggles always lurk in the
background.
"There's a great song the Eagles wrote called 'Hotel California,'"
Furry said while, appropriately, speaking to Reuters in a hotel room
in downtown Los Angeles.
"You can check out any time you want, but you can never leave," he
said.
"I believe that's mental health because you can get well -- you can
check out any time you want -- but you can never leave it because
you're born with it.
Fury, who in February signed a reported $100 million contract with
Bob Arum's Top Rank Promotions to have his fights broadcast on ESPN,
said he is now content to live in the moment.
"I don't have long term goals, I only live day to day," he said.
"My long term goal is to be happy and well and healthy. And anything
after that is a real bonus. Nothing is guaranteed in life and
nothing is promised.
"We're not even promised tomorrow morning so we've got to live and
enjoy the moments we have in time, and that's all we have is moments
in time," he said.
"I'm making the best of every moment in time I have as of late."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
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