The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] People don't know about this.
[1] I had to keep it a secret.
[2] It's really, really difficult.
[3] Rwanda, you were voted the best female athlete of all time.
[4] What was it that made you the person that sits in front of me today?
[5] So, when I was a kid, it was tough.
[6] My dad, he ended up taking his life when I was eight.
[7] And in school, I got picked on a lot.
[8] I actually dropped out when I was 16 and moved away from home to train full time.
[9] But a lot of the coaches thought that being abusive to the athletes is what gave them the best results.
[10] My first coach is located my job.
[11] People don't know about this, but I'll get concussions all the time.
[12] And every time you get a concussion, it's easier to get another one.
[13] So by the time I got into MMA, I had to be able to finish the person off immediately.
[14] It was those experiences that made me the world champion.
[15] And you stacked up a bunch of records, including the fastest ever win, faster submission, fastest title defense.
[16] But then that loss to a wholly home.
[17] Yeah.
[18] My whole world turned upside down.
[19] I had to disappear for a while.
[20] And we decided to move on to the WWE.
[21] You don't have nice things to say about it.
[22] Vince McMahon just created a fundamentally sick environment, and I think he still is running the company to this day.
[23] Why?
[24] Before this episode starts, I have a small favor to ask from you.
[25] Two months ago, 74 % of people, that watch this channel didn't subscribe.
[26] We're now down to 69%.
[27] My goal is 50%.
[28] So if you've ever liked any of the videos we've posted, if you like this channel, can you do me a quick favor and hit the subscribe button?
[29] It helps this channel more than you know.
[30] And the bigger the channel gets, as you've seen, the bigger the guests get.
[31] Thank you and enjoy this episode.
[32] Rhonda, when I interview people, I often ask them to tell me the most sort of pertinent first event and their story that went on to shape who they are.
[33] And with you, from reading through your story, it's quite clear that the first potentially significant event happened as you were being born.
[34] Yeah, I was born in Zey and Bull Corrid around my neck and I was like a zero on the Apgar scale, which is like the health of a baby when they're born.
[35] I was blue, like that I was dead.
[36] It took a while to revive me. And I had some damage from that, some neurological damage, which expressed itself as a motor speech disorder called aproxia, which is basically I would have words formed in my head and try to say it, but there was a kind of disconnect between my brain and my mouth, and it would come out differently than how I said it.
[37] So I ended up having to do many years of speech therapy to be able to get over it.
[38] And sometimes I struggle a little bit, but I've, you know, dealt with it well enough or people don't notice.
[39] But, you know, doing things like pro wrestling promos and stuff where everybody, like, will scrutinize you for, like, saying a single syllable or, you know, not producing every single, not pronouncing every single word perfectly.
[40] Like, if I had just stuttered like I did just now or mispronounce something like I did just now in a wrestling promo, I would be, like, hung over it.
[41] And so, you know, there's little things like that that still express themselves to this day, but mostly it's not noticeable now.
[42] The umbilical cord is wrapped around your neck.
[43] The doctors gave you a zero out of ten in terms of your health when you were a baby.
[44] What age did you learn to speak properly?
[45] I didn't really speak like in full, intelligible sentences until I was like around five or so.
[46] When they did brain scans, did they notice anything different in your brain at that point?
[47] because of your, because of the umbilical cord incident?
[48] No, no, I never, like, did a brain scan or anything like that.
[49] I got tested for deafness for a long time, autism.
[50] A proxya didn't exist as a diagnosis until after I'd kind of really gotten over it.
[51] It was actually like a fan mom and her daughter that brought me like a pamphlet and it was like, we've heard your story.
[52] It's been so inspirational to us.
[53] We think what you had is this thing called aproxia.
[54] And, and I was like, oh, my God, this actually fits everything that we experienced perfectly.
[55] And we ended up having a walk for a proxy here.
[56] I got to, like, meet a bunch of different kids and stuff that were dealing with similar things.
[57] But, yeah, it's kind of, like, newer in the field, people being aware of it.
[58] But I think that's what made me delve into sports so much because, you know, with judo, especially, you like, communicate physically with a person.
[59] You have to put your hands on another person who have to talk and interact with that person.
[60] And so when I was having a hard time, when we moved back to L .A., like really socializing with other kids, sports, you know, specifically judo made it like kind of as like a conduit for me to be able to like connect with other kids and have something to talk about.
[61] What was home life like for you before the age of 10?
[62] I mean, I thought everything was perfect and awesome.
[63] My dad passed when I was eight, though, and I didn't know, but he had broken his back in a studying accident when we'd first moved to North Dakota, and he had like a rare blood disorder where he couldn't heal from it.
[64] And so he had been receiving diagnoses, basically saying he'd become like a paraplegic and then a quadriplegic and then a quadriplegic and eventually die.
[65] And we didn't know that he was going through this.
[66] dealing with chronic pain or anything like that.
[67] So he ended up taking his life when I was eight, but he'd been going through that for years, but had kept it from us.
[68] And so then like my kind of my whole world turned upside down.
[69] And then my mom ended up remarrying a couple years later.
[70] And then when I was around 10, 11 is when we moved to ride the border of Santa Monica in Venice.
[71] Your father had a sledding accident.
[72] and he's told that he's going to be a quadriplegic soon?
[73] Yes, at some point.
[74] He broke his back, and his disease called Benarutsulia syndrome makes it difficult to clot your blood.
[75] It's like a platelet, you know, your platelets are malformed.
[76] And so he wasn't able to heal, basically.
[77] And they put a rod in his back to try and help but his spine was just crumbling away.
[78] So his spine was basically like falling apart.
[79] He died by suicide.
[80] Yeah, he said he didn't want our last memories of him to be laying in a bed with tubes running in and out of him.
[81] He was in a lot of pain all the time, but didn't like being, you know, doped up on painkiller.
[82] So he just wanted to go out his own way.
[83] Did you have any idea that he was suffering at that time?
[84] None at all.
[85] Completely kept it from us.
[86] So one minute he's there and then the next minute he's not.
[87] Yeah.
[88] How did you find out that he did.
[89] died by suicide?
[90] My mom told me, right, you know, right after it happened.
[91] How does a mother explain that to an eight -year -old child?
[92] I mean, she's a PhD in educational psychology, so very, you know, technically, I guess.
[93] You know, she just kind of laid the facts out of this is what happened and this is what's going on and we wanted to keep it from you because, uh, She said that my dad just wanted us to be kids and not have to worry about it.
[94] She told you the details of his suicide.
[95] Yeah.
[96] What impact does that have on you?
[97] I mean, in the long run, I felt like it just kind of gave me this feeling that even if I feel like everything's okay, that everything can come crashing down at any moment.
[98] And I guess I lost any feeling of security of even when everything is going great.
[99] I feel like the ball is about to drop, you know.
[100] And that's something that I had to like, you know, work through till this day.
[101] And I feel like mostly I'm, I can feel pretty secure of my life and where I'm at.
[102] But yeah, it plagued me for a long time.
[103] You were close to him.
[104] Yeah, I was big time daddy's girl.
[105] Yeah, but as part of the speech therapy was that my sisters were talking for me. And so he had to work a little bit of a drive from the house.
[106] And so he would be in Devil's Lake during the week and we'd come home to my not on the weekend.
[107] And so the speech therapist said I'd just spend one -on -one time with a parent so that I'm forced to speak.
[108] So my sisters can't translate my gibberish for me. And so it'd be me and him during the week and we'd come home on the weekend.
[109] So it was like, you know, my whole world.
[110] It's almost unimaginable for an eight -year -old to try and process that in reality.
[111] And like because I think at eight years old you don't understand the concept.
[112] of suicide or why a human could die by suicide?
[113] And at that age, what is the story you tell yourself?
[114] In the book, you talk about how you would tell yourself that he's just gone away on business and that he's going to return at some point?
[115] Yeah, well, that's the only time that he would really be gone away from the house for extended periods of times because he had like a business trip or something.
[116] And so that was just kind of like what I told myself to cope for a while.
[117] And I found out later that my grandfather committed suicide as well.
[118] So he was a second generation suicide.
[119] Your siblings and your mother, the impact of the loss on your dad on them, was that noticeable?
[120] Did you notice a change in them?
[121] My sisters didn't ever really want to talk about it.
[122] And I think, you know, my, yeah, no one really wanted to talk about it at all.
[123] It wasn't like the kind of thing that we would bring up all the time.
[124] your mother at this time she's a champion in her own right yeah in everything she um got a perfect score on the SATs at 16 graduated college at 19 um then she won the world championships in judo the first american to ever win the world championships in judo while she was working as a single mother engineer and getting her PhD in educational psychology wow yeah she's incredible she when i was reading about her and doing some research on her she sounds sounds like a little bit of a superwoman.
[125] So I went and found, I wanted to see her.
[126] I found this picture of her.
[127] Yep, that's mom.
[128] She looks like a badass.
[129] She is badass.
[130] She was the original Arm bar lady.
[131] She actually tore her knees out when she was 17 and had to learn how to win, basically, just on the ground.
[132] So she was the one that would always win by Arm Bar.
[133] Oh, really?
[134] Yeah.
[135] And she was kind of like taught me how she did it.
[136] and, you know, I added to it and learned things as well, but it's become, like, kind of a family heirloom is the arm bar, yeah.
[137] The family arm bar.
[138] I often think that our childhoods and those sort of early formative experiences and the traumas that we experience, they leave fingerprints on us in various ways that follow us for the rest of our lives, for good, for bad, and sometimes for ugly, when you think about those sort of first 10 years of your life in the fingerprints it left on you as an adult and the person that sits in front of me today, what are those things that are most sort of ingrained in you from that time of your life?
[139] What's most ingrained in me from being a kid?
[140] I think, like, you know, losing a parent is a huge formative event.
[141] Have you ever read a blink by Malcolm Gladwell?
[142] No, but I've spoken to him on the podcast, but no, I haven't.
[143] Yeah, he mentions that kids that lose a parent before they're 10 and actually end up being more successful statistically later in life.
[144] And it's like, well, he's the one that delved into it into his book.
[145] But, you know, when I was reading, I'm like, oh, you know, I could see.
[146] I could see how that makes sense in a way.
[147] And the aproxia and stuff, like, really pushing me towards sports and, like, being physical and things like that and being the youngest of a sister.
[148] So, you know, I was the one that was getting beat on at the house.
[149] So it made me tougher and wanted to constantly be able to.
[150] like prove myself as, you know, not just being a little baby, but deserving of respect and stuff like that.
[151] And those kind of like made me into the kind of kid that would, when I first started swimming, I wanted to win the Olympics in swimming.
[152] When I first started judo, I was like, I just don't win the Olympics in this now.
[153] And, um, but that was just how encouraging my parents were, you know, if they're like, oh, you want to swim, you're going to, you can win the Olympics and swimming, you know?
[154] And so I was just always fed that expectation that I could do everything.
[155] And at sort of 10 years old, you moved to Santa Monica, and you had your first attempt and try at judo?
[156] Is that right?
[157] Yeah, I, well, I was swimming here, but I wasn't so much into swimming.
[158] It's kind of boring.
[159] And I didn't like waking up in the morning and jumping in a cold pool.
[160] I don't blame you.
[161] Yeah, so after a little bit of that, I was like, I want to do something else.
[162] And my mom, she trained here in the 80s back when she did judo and so she went to go visit a bunch of her old teammates that had all gone and opened up clubs of their own and I went and tried it and I remember my first day I didn't even have a hair tie my hair was all over the place crazy and I was like trying to figure out how to do judo and I had the most fun that I ever had because I love that there was no one way to do it if it worked it was right and it was kind of like mentally intriguing you have to figure it out you're like solving a puzzle you're having a conversation with the other person You know?
[163] And so because it was so, like, mentally engaging, I think that's why I liked it so much.
[164] And when I won my first tournament, I got that feeling of winning that I didn't quite get in swimming.
[165] I was one of the top kids in the state, but I wouldn't, like, really win swimming meets.
[166] And so the first time I won something, I got, like, addicted to that feeling, I guess.
[167] So I actually dropped out of school when I was 16 to be able to train and do judo full time and move away from home to train full time.
[168] What was your mother's opinion on you doing judo, seeing as she was a champion in judo herself when her daughter turns around and says, Mom, I want to do judo too?
[169] I mean, I can't always say how she felt, but I mean, I was kind of like identified as being like a prodigy of judo pretty young.
[170] And she wanted to kind of take an outside role of making sure that was training with all the right people at the right time.
[171] And she wasn't the person that was on, like, she, of course, taught me everything that she could.
[172] But she didn't really want to be that overbearing coach mom on the match.
[173] She was more of like, it was like, you go hero to show with this person.
[174] You go hero check with that person.
[175] It was like the overarching, like, architect of my career and everything like that.
[176] You enter your first tournament and you win the tournament with instant wins, epons.
[177] I don't know what an epon is.
[178] Epon is like if you throw someone flat on their back.
[179] Okay, right.
[180] So you win that first tournament, people start considering you to be this child prodigy in judo.
[181] What was it about, when you look back on yourself now with all the wisdom you have, what was it about you that made you excel above your peers judo?
[182] What was it about your character or something that you did?
[183] I mean, there had to be some sort of a genetic factor.
[184] Because like my mom and my dad are both like good athletes.
[185] But I think, yeah, a part of it was personality -wise, but I just really wanted to win.
[186] I had that.
[187] I cared.
[188] Why?
[189] I mean, winning felt good, but I also, it really hurt for me to lose.
[190] I hated, like, my first tournament I lost, I, like, locked myself in a room for, like, a week.
[191] I was so upset, but I was willing to get my heart broken.
[192] I was willing to care about something so much that my heart would be broken if I didn't, you know, achieve it.
[193] And I don't know.
[194] I think, I felt like the idea of being better at something than everybody else, like, made me special somehow.
[195] It was like proof.
[196] And it was also, it wasn't like I was dragging myself through doing it to be great at something because that's what it was.
[197] I really enjoyed like mastering the art of judo, like figuring it out.
[198] It was like endlessly intriguing to me at the time.
[199] And I remember when I was 16, I like realized while I was, you know, doing Nawaza, which was fighting on the ground that the end of one move was the beginning of another one.
[200] And that's when I moved from trying to memorize all these separate techniques to trying to combine them into like a path on like a web.
[201] And I didn't come up and, you know, Nahuaza and judo is not the focus of the sport really.
[202] Maybe it's like 20 % of the time people spend on the ground, maybe less.
[203] But it wasn't like gracy jiu -jitsu where they like show you like oh this is the way and this is a structure that i was very open -ended and so i was kind of like i had to create like my own like system basically my own fighting style and everything like that and that was i think the most interesting to me that i was like creating a philosophy and everything and concepts and how how did i piece everything together and so i think that was the most interesting part i could train for hours and hours and hours and hours and not realized and I'm tired because I'm trying to piece something together.
[204] But I also, I think we would call it like opposite ADD where I like fixate on things for like hours on end and I can't get off of it.
[205] And but if you tell me to like run, you know, I'm like, oh my God, the whole time I'm like, okay, I'm tired.
[206] I'm tired.
[207] I'm more tired than I was.
[208] But if you tell me like if I had to try and figure out how I'd like do a certain punch a certain right way or do a certain throw a certain right way, I would do it for hours on end trying to get it absolutely perfect and not realize all that time I'd pass.
[209] And sometimes that's like a negative thing or I'll fixate on something like something stupid I did it like several years ago and not be able to stop myself from thinking about it.
[210] But it's also the same thing that would keep me training on a single technique for hours on in, just trying to get it right.
[211] And my mom said when I was a kid, I would draw the same picture over and over and over again.
[212] I remember it was like a bunny in the middle and there was like a bush and bush and a tree.
[213] and a tree any side and like a sun with the cool glasses, right?
[214] My mom would be like, why do you keep drawing this picture over and over?
[215] Thousands of times I would draw the same drawing.
[216] And she said my answer was that I'm just trying to get it to match the picture in my head.
[217] I couldn't understand why when I thought of a bunny and a bushes and all the stuff, and I drew it.
[218] It didn't look exactly like a bunny.
[219] And so I would keep drawing it over and over and over again to try and get it.
[220] And I guess that's like, you know, my personality, I guess.
[221] It's something that I can't really control for better or for worse.
[222] And is that perfectionism?
[223] Is that how you'd kind of define that?
[224] This sort of obsessive pursuit of making the thing perfect as you see it?
[225] I don't think it's so much perfectionism as it is mastery.
[226] I want to like master and understand something completely.
[227] It's kind of like an unfinished puzzle, you know?
[228] Because I can live in squalor.
[229] I don't think like the perfectionism of everything around.
[230] me is really so important.
[231] But yeah, being able to understand something completely is something that nags me. If I don't completely understand it, I have to, like, keep going back to it.
[232] Big Jim.
[233] You go and train with Big Jim at 16 years old.
[234] You leave home at 16 years old and go and train with Big Jim.
[235] Who's Big Jim and why did you go and live with him, what, for eight months, roughly?
[236] Oh, God.
[237] And on and off for, like, years I was up there.
[238] Well, Big Jim was one of of the best coaches in the country and he trained his son little jimmy who had just won the 1999 world championships in judo and um i know judo is not that big in the u .s so the places that are good at it and have good coaches and good people to train with are few and far between and um pedro's judo was one of those places yeah leaving at home at 16 is um is unusual to say the least yeah what impact did that have on you It was tough.
[239] It was hard.
[240] I remember being homesick a lot.
[241] It was really isolating, you know.
[242] All I did was train all day.
[243] There wasn't any other kids my age.
[244] I was always around people older than me. You know, part of being like a sport prodigy is knowing your age is on your level, you know.
[245] So I was always training with people older.
[246] I also at the same time felt like I was in the middle of my montage to do something like amazing, you know.
[247] I thought I was going to shock the world.
[248] be the first American to win the gold medal in judo at 17.
[249] And so, you know, it was worth it to me. And at this time, you're 16, you have your first experience with what we call bulimia.
[250] And you talk about this in the book where, because of the pressure for you to make way almost every week, you struggled with bulimia for the first time.
[251] Can you, what do I need to understand about that?
[252] Because I don't understand what bulimia is in my full entirety, but I also, don't understand the circumstances that would lead a 16 -year -old to make decisions that would be categorized as bleemic?
[253] Well, basically, I had to be a wait on a deadline very often.
[254] And it's not really a weight that I could healthily stay at.
[255] And so I would have to cut weight to get there.
[256] And it started to give me a really unhealthy relationship with food where I would like hoard food while I was cutting weight, like candy bars and stuff like that.
[257] And then after I made weight, I would like gorge myself on it.
[258] Like I didn't know anything.
[259] I didn't have any resources to help me out with it.
[260] And so I just kind of spiral into a disorder.
[261] And that disorder would mean throwing up your food after you'd eaten at on occasion.
[262] Mm -hmm.
[263] Yeah.
[264] I remember the first time I did it was.
[265] I had like a childhood coach or something took me out one day and he like basically like forced me to have a chocolate shake and he was like, no, you got to have a chocolate shake.
[266] Come on, it's fine.
[267] You train all the time.
[268] You need to relax.
[269] You have a chocolate shake.
[270] And I felt like so guilty about the chocolate shake that I had to be like make weight or something like that weekend or something.
[271] There's no way I would be able to make it.
[272] And so like I made myself throw up the chocolate shake.
[273] And it was actually like, it was cold.
[274] It didn't hurt.
[275] It was that bad, you know.
[276] And I was like, oh, whoa, that wasn't even that terrible.
[277] And so I thought it was like a one -time thing.
[278] But the next time I, like, ate too much and I felt like really guilty about it.
[279] It just became like, you know, the panic button of if I ate too much and I had a deadline coming up where I had to be a certain weight.
[280] I felt like it was the only thing I could do.
[281] And I was a little girl that was growing, you know.
[282] I, like, grew four inches and, like, doubled my weight.
[283] in a short period of time.
[284] And so I just couldn't stay at a lower weight.
[285] So, but you have all this outside pressure to be able to maintain the same way, even though as an athlete you're growing and putting on muscle and even getting taller.
[286] So it was kind of like fighting nature.
[287] I read in your book that they called you Miss Man. Yeah, and in school, it wasn't cool for, you know, little girls to be muscular back then.
[288] And so before I dropped out at 16, you know, I was really muscular and people would like grab up my arms and make fun of me all the time to the point that I would just kind of like I'd wear a zip up hoodie all the time no matter how hot it was.
[289] I'd always try to like cover up my arms or how muscular it was, which is one of the reason why when I got older that trying to like fight that idea that being muscular was masculine was something that became important.
[290] important to me because that, you know, if you were a teenage girl in the early 2000s, it was a pretty unhealthy standard that was presented to us.
[291] So, yeah, I didn't fit the very narrow scope of what was considered attractive at that time.
[292] And now it's like considered like really cool for, you know, women have muscles.
[293] Now all the models have like stomach definition and stuff like that and like are doing boxing and all this stuff and want to look toned.
[294] but that wasn't the case back then.
[295] That wasn't the case back then.
[296] That was something that I got teased for a lot.
[297] By 18, you leave home and you go off to, you leave home, as you say, because you felt like you wanted to have some control over your life.
[298] And I think you were on route to the Olympics at this point.
[299] You were thinking about going to the Olympics at 21 years old.
[300] You actually competed in the Beijing Olympics and you were the first American women to get an Olympic medal.
[301] And then what I felt, really shocking is that you made $6 ,000 from winning that medal at the Olympics.
[302] Yeah, after I got taxed on it.
[303] There's $10 ,000 and got taxed on it.
[304] I actually pitched about it so much in the media when I was doing MMA that they got rid of that tax, but still you'd only get $10 ,000.
[305] Is there like a bit of a throughline in your story that starts very young about this idea of the importance of validation and respect from other people, this kind of bit of a chip on your shoulder that was driving you?
[306] Yeah, I think it started out as something that drove me and then it ended up being something that held me back that I had to kind of shake myself from.
[307] But, you know, I also benefited greatly from it.
[308] So I'm not saying I regret anything, but I know that it wasn't like a sustainable model for me to, you know, be happy in the long run.
[309] Because I spoke to Tim Grover who trained LeBron and Kobe, and he said the same thing to me. He said, you know, when he's talking about Kobe and all those years training him to be a champion in that our dark side and our light side are interconnected.
[310] When he's talking about our dark side, he's basically saying, like, the trauma, the difficult things about us, the things that we'd probably keep in the shadow if we could, they end up creating the greatness that we see on our screens.
[311] And it's like you can't separate out there too.
[312] You can't just have this person and not this person, unfortunately.
[313] But like, he makes the case to me that we all have a dark side.
[314] And unfortunately, as I say, it's responsible for our light side.
[315] And I see that throughout your story, this sort of just, journey to understanding that part of you.
[316] And as you say in your book, like liberating yourself from it, which is really interesting because I feel like I've been through this, I've been trying to do the same thing in my life.
[317] I've been trying to take back the control of some of it.
[318] Because as you said there, it can lead you to the top of the mountain and then it can sometimes bring you down the other side or it can make you miserable at the top of the mountain.
[319] I think I had to get to the top of several mountains to realize that, like, the mountain climbing wasn't really going to be what made me happy.
[320] And I had this idea that if I, like, if I collected or hoarded achievements that somehow, well, someday they would all add up to happiness that I would be able to, like, I did this thing.
[321] So now I could be happy forever.
[322] Like, my idea was if I'm, like, the first American to win the Olympics in judo, then I will be happy for the rest of my life.
[323] And it's not, it didn't really work like that.
[324] Like I could, yeah, achieve these great things and it would make me happy for a time, but your life goes on past that.
[325] And so I kind of had to figure out after hoarding all these bucket list experiences that I'd actually end up just forgetting at times.
[326] Like someone had to remind me the other day, remember when you flew with the Thunderbirds?
[327] I'm like, oh, yeah.
[328] And then they didn't equate to the actual happiness And I had to, I thought that if I, like, could make my past into something that I'd done all these great things and it would dictate my future.
[329] But I had to kind of figure out that, like, making myself happy with every day that I'm winning, that I'm living individually is what I needed to do.
[330] And there's no amount of accomplishments that you can, like, add to, you know, your trophy shelf that are going to equate to being happy forever in the future.
[331] It just is impossible.
[332] It sounds like you were living with a bit of a secret throughout your sort of early MMA career and the fact that you had what appeared to be a bit of a concussion -based brain injury of sorts because in your book you talk about how you realize that inspiring if someone hit you pretty hard in the head you'd end up seeing stars.
[333] Yeah, I mean, people didn't really know about CTE back when I was doing judo and I'll get concussions all the time and just be told that, you know, I Hey, my head hurts.
[334] I have photo vision.
[335] I would say it like stuff like that.
[336] And they'd be like, just stop being a pussy and like keep training.
[337] And so I would get, you know, dozens, dozens of concussions and never be allowed to stop.
[338] And I would have to keep training through them.
[339] And the symptoms would persist for weeks.
[340] So the point that I was experiencing concussion symptoms more often than I wasn't for a 10 -year judo career.
[341] I mean, that's the kind of thing that, like, you know, leads to CTE, all these football players that we're dealing with.
[342] We're having concussions repeatedly and not being allowed to rest.
[343] And so by the time I got into MMA, like, this is the kind of injury that accumulates over time.
[344] You don't, you know, it doesn't go away.
[345] Every time you get a concussion, it's easier to get another one.
[346] And so by the time I got into MMA, it was really easy for me to get concussion symptoms.
[347] And I'd rested for a couple years, you know, so at first it wasn't so bad, but it just got worse and worse and worse with time, even if I'm winning a fight and, you know, 14 seconds, and the other person doesn't touch me. There's 50 rounds of sparring that went into that training camp, and you're wearing, like, a headgear.
[348] and gloves, which are meant to protect you cosmetically, but these gloves are 14 ounces and you're wearing this head care solar, your brain is suspended in fluid.
[349] The larger the thing is, like, if the 14 ounces, it's easier, actually, to give you a concussion when you're sparring.
[350] And it's the kind of thing that I just didn't want to, like, say anything about, you know?
[351] I didn't want to address it myself or any kind of weakness in myself, and I just kept telling myself that, you know, I just have to be perfect and not allow these people to touch me. I have to create this fighting style that's so efficient that I don't take any damage.
[352] And it got to a point where I fought Sarah McMahon and she barely tapped me and I obviously had a concussion afterward.
[353] I couldn't bear to look at the lights.
[354] I had to have everyone turn the lights off.
[355] And I was looking for a way out, you know, because I know I couldn't sustain that forever.
[356] But, yeah, it's got to, it got to the point, or if I got, like, tapped at all with the, you know, instead of the point, and said Stephanie McMahon slapped me and gave me a concussion, you know, and, you know, a woman then that has never been a fighter in her life and even, you know, was past her slapping prime.
[357] If she can slap me across the face and give me a concussion, you know, I shouldn't be fighting anymore.
[358] Did you keep this a secret?
[359] I had to keep it a secret from everybody.
[360] my coaches Dana even like myself I just didn't want to face face up to it I just thought that I could keep it going forever and so that like I think was the most frustrating thing to me though like in my I first lost I got tapped in the beginning and I'd fallen down the stairs a week or so like maybe a week or so before that knocked myself out falling down the stairs at my house and then didn't say anything, went into the fight anyway, had a horrible weight cut, had the wrong mouth guard, which didn't have the protection of the back of the bottom teeth.
[361] So the first time she taps me, my teeth get knocked loose, and I'm out on my feet.
[362] Like, when I say out on my feet, it means that, like, I have no depth perception, basically, and I'm at a very limited capacity of what my brain can, the information that it could give me. And so I knew that if she knew that I was hurt, I wouldn't be able to defend myself.
[363] And so I had to keep coming forward without knowing how far away she was and not being fully, you know, hold of my facilities just to keep the fight going, hoping that I would recover, but I just couldn't.
[364] And so I think that that's one of the things that really dug at me for so long that so many people were like saying like, oh, Rhonda's game plan was bad or whatever, this.
[365] And, like, they didn't know that, like, I wasn't, like, present.
[366] I was, like, just trying to survive.
[367] I couldn't see how far away she was.
[368] I, um, it wasn't like, that was my game plan or anything like that.
[369] I was, like, completely disabled.
[370] And when I tried to fight again, and I was like, okay, I wouldn't give myself a break, and I'll make sure the mouthgolds perfect at this time.
[371] I'm not going to knock myself out right before the fight and all those things.
[372] And the same thing.
[373] got tapped and I was I was out you know even if I was out on my feet I was out so I just like just didn't have the hardware to continue fighting and a lot of people would say like oh you're fucking quitter you're this this or that and it's really difficult because I'd never had been more skilled as a fighter I'd never been better in my life but I just you know I just neurologically wasn't capable of continuing it to fight at that level and I couldn't say anything about it then because I wanted to go and do pro wrestling and they already had their own controversy.
[374] They had to deal with with wrestlers having, you know, CTE and all kinds of damage from concussions.
[375] And so it's such a volatile subject that I just, I couldn't say anything about it.
[376] And I couldn't say anything about it leading into my last fight because then I'd be basically telling the other person that, you know, that putting a target on my head literally.
[377] So I just had to stay silent about it for years and let people make their own assumptions about me. And, you know, it was tough because, like, in some ways, like, I've never been better as a fighter.
[378] I've never had a better grasp of everything than I ever had.
[379] I'd never been faster, stronger, everything else.
[380] But, you know, you only have so many hits that you can take it, unfortunately.
[381] I took the vast majority of them as a kid doing judo.
[382] I want to make sure I completely understand the context of what it's like to get a concussion and to live with a concussion that ends up compounding to make it even more sensitive.
[383] You take those big hits when you're younger, they ask you to fight through the concussion.
[384] By the time you're in the UFC, you've developed this incredible style where you basically get people out of there instantly.
[385] I mean, leading up to your fight with Amanda Holmes, I think, I remember the commentator saying at the time that you'd knocked or you'd submitted.
[386] everyone within sort of 30 seconds of the fight starting.
[387] So your style had kind of adapted to become, I'm going to get this person out of there immediately.
[388] Yeah, that wasn't an accident.
[389] That was the goal.
[390] That was the goal.
[391] The goal was I had to be able to finish the person off immediately because that was the only way that I could fight is to not take any damage.
[392] Because if they had hit you in the head at that point, there was a risk that you would get a concussion.
[393] And you were aware of that risk, but your coaches weren't.
[394] No. Were any of your coaches aware of it?
[395] No. Was Edmund aware of it?
[396] Nobody, I didn't tell anybody.
[397] I didn't, it was one of those things.
[398] I just didn't want to face up to having any weakness in myself.
[399] And also, like, like, Evan would have made me stop.
[400] I didn't want to stop.
[401] I didn't want anyone to be making that decision for me. I didn't want it to tell the company that I was having neurological symptoms because then they wouldn't let me continue to fight.
[402] I didn't want those decisions to be taken out of my hands.
[403] in your book you talk about the relationship you had with edmund and it wasn't always great in terms of his approach to coaching you talk about how he would physically strike you during training but more potentially even more severely he would emotionally abuse you during training i mean honestly i can't think of single coach that i had like a great like a great like a great relationship relationship with.
[404] Like, this is, like, a lot of the coaches were of that, like, Bella Crowley kind of generation of, like, they thought that being abusive to the athletes is what gave them the best results.
[405] And that was kind of what was, like, in vogue at the time.
[406] So, and, like, that as an athlete, you're just kind of like, all right, well, this is what I have to deal with in order to be the best.
[407] and especially with like these sports where you have no other choice.
[408] Like this is the national team coach and you have to get their approval and put up their shit to be able to fight at this level.
[409] And so like Edmund was, I think, not as bad as previous coaches.
[410] So that's why I put up with a lot because I felt like I at least had to say that I could talk back.
[411] The other coaches would just, you know, like little Jimmy, my first coach literally like just located my jaw as I was a little kid.
[412] I threw him once in front of everybody and laughed because I thought it was awesome.
[413] And he threw me on the benches on top of the table and everybody else's feet in front of all these people.
[414] And, you know, Big Jim had like grabbed me by the throat before to like drive his point home that women can't defend themselves.
[415] And so this is like behavior that I'd been conditioned to tolerate since I was like a little girl.
[416] And Edmund was of that same, like, Eastern European kind of, like, school of thought of, like, you have to be, like, really tough and in order to bring the best out of people.
[417] And what does that do to your emotions, though?
[418] Because we develop, you know, at the age when most of us are developing our emotions, you're having yours suppressed and you're being made into this really, quote, unquote, tough person.
[419] I think it kind of taught me from a young age to just, like, how to diffuse, like, coaches that were, like, getting out of hand.
[420] And so not, because if I stood up for myself, it would just make it worse.
[421] And so it just kind of, like, taught me to, like, okay, I got to, like, get this person to a good mood all the time, where I had to, like, butter them up or I have to, like, strategically find my way to, like, out of being berated or something like that.
[422] And so I think it's not so much one individual that's a huge problem.
[423] I think the whole system is the problem and that it really reinforces these power imbalances that are inevitably taken advantage of, that all these coaches have free reign of their little fiefdoms.
[424] And a lot of these athletes don't have any other option.
[425] and so like I don't see how like in school you can have like a teacher someone comes in to watch the teacher teach to grade them on their teaching like nobody does this for coaching and you know so I would hear these stories about like these sumo coaches that like would kill their athletes training them and I'd be like yeah you know I could see how that's going to happen and it's just it's it's not one person it's not one sport it's everywhere and there's like I can't say that I have all the answers for it, but I can say that, like, coaching in general creates a really, like, unhealthy power, like, in balance.
[426] That what I was able, how I was able to take my relationship with my coach Edmund and take it from off the rails back on track is to have very distinct boundaries.
[427] You know, a lot of times your coach is someone that you're, you know, It's tough on you, but they're also like, they care about you.
[428] They're a parent, they're a brother, they're a coach too, but a lot of times it becomes like an overbearing family member and a coach, and you can't be both.
[429] That's why my mom didn't want to be my coach.
[430] She didn't want to have to be my mom and my coach because being both of those at the same time is inevitably unhealthy.
[431] And when we put boundaries in place of like, okay, this is what your job is and you do not do anything outside of that.
[432] Then, you know, trading was better than ever, a relationship was better than ever, but I think like a lot of these lines and these boundaries get blurred and they need to be very, you know, very defined in order for it to work out.
[433] And how were those lines blurred with your coach?
[434] Just, just, he was crossing them in terms of the things he was able to say and do.
[435] Yeah.
[436] I mean, a lot of it was like, he just wanted to.
[437] wanted to know where I was all the time, and I needed to be constantly available and stuff like that, or else they would, like, end up turning into, like, a big argument or something like that, and I would just end up just trying to, like, do anything I could to not get in an argument.
[438] And, but, yeah, like, I had to, like, make a rule at one point.
[439] I was like, you're not allowed to FaceTime me, because I don't want you to just FaceTime me and know where I am at all times and what I'm doing because like it's my fucking business is my privacy and it was just he was always trying to push that boundary um that was always pushing back and stuff like that and um but i was like i don't know i a lot of times i'm like i just want to train like i don't i would be just to like placate him because if i like just stop talking to him in an argument then it would end up leaking into training the next day and so it just became like really like taxing of my energy in general.
[440] But like, I mean, I can't really think of a single like coach relationship that I had that was like perfect.
[441] But it worked, you know?
[442] That's the one problem that I had always had like debating.
[443] I'm like, well, it's working.
[444] I'm getting better.
[445] And so you would just put up with it because there's, there was no perfect option out there.
[446] You said at the very start that you were very, very close to your father.
[447] And then when your father passed these other men that almost take on what someone could like into a fatherly role are all coaches.
[448] Yeah.
[449] No, I mean, they were all like, what was it in Kill Bill that he was talking about?
[450] That Bill lost his father early so he collected father figures.
[451] Yeah.
[452] I collected them.
[453] None of them were as good as the original.
[454] But, yeah, I think that that constant need for, you know, validation from a father figure It was something that I was constantly like pursuing, but, you know, that, like, that philosophy of coaching of, you know, you see, like the Russian figure skaters, the gymnast that never smile because they've been, like, beaten into iron.
[455] That was basically the philosophy of all the coaches that I had.
[456] They would see someone like Bell Corolli and be like, oh, my God, like, he was their idol.
[457] And so they're all trying to, like, emulate that.
[458] Beating the emotion out of you.
[459] This is something that I've always wondered.
[460] about you because you've always had a steely exterior, you know.
[461] No, you have, especially in the fight in the UFC days.
[462] I watched some of your clips to remind myself of your fighting days before this and you know that you came in with that face, that er, that face and just in interviews around that time and so on.
[463] And this is why I asked the question about emotion and how, because you got into this at such a young age and you're dealing with these men who call you, you know, you're lacking discipline if you miss weight and all of these kinds of things.
[464] You go through that, the loss of your father, the unprocessed grief.
[465] I'm wondering what happens to Ronda Rousey's relationship with her own emotions.
[466] I mean, I was always really emotional, actually, as a fighter.
[467] I would cry on the mat all the time, all the time.
[468] I cried on the mat, like, every practice for years straight, and I would be yelled at for crying.
[469] You'd get yelled out for crying.
[470] I'd yell up for crying, so I'd cry, and then I would cry because I was crying, and I would cry because I was being yelled at for crying.
[471] And, yeah, I just, but it wouldn't be because something hurt.
[472] because, you know, something, I was frustrated by something I couldn't, I got thrown, or I couldn't make something work that was trying to make work, and I would cry out of frustration.
[473] And my mom said I had a tournament where it was full double elimination, so I ended up winning the tournament, but I lost a match earlier in the day.
[474] And every single match, I would come out crying, bow in, throw the other girl on her ass, beat her, bow out, crying, come into the next match, still crying, beat the shoddy other girl, bow out, crying, the whole day crying, until I beat everybody, beat the same, same girl that beat me twice in order to win on top of the podium, number one, crying still because I lost that first match earlier in the day.
[475] And so, yeah, I was always very emotional.
[476] I was extremely emotional as a fighter and in training and everything like that.
[477] And that was something I was constantly trying to, like, battle is like, if you get thrown in a tournament, don't start crying because that was just something that would happen to be all the time.
[478] And very, yeah, and it's such so funny, if people think that I'm like, yeah, this is a emotionalist, robot, whatever I fight, it took a long time to be able to get there and to stop, like, crying in the middle of the match.
[479] Wow.
[480] Dana says he's never going to allow women into the UFC to fight, but then Dana changes his mind, and he changes his mind because of you, effectively.
[481] So in September 2012, I remember it very fondly.
[482] I remember where I was when I watched the first woman fight in the UFC.
[483] Dana says that he's signing the first ever woman fighter in the UFC.
[484] a lady called Ronda Rousey, despite saying a year earlier that he wouldn't, but he called you a game changer.
[485] And so you didn't end up changing the game.
[486] And you became UFC champion between 202012 and 2015.
[487] You won 15 fights back to back.
[488] Most of them finished within seconds.
[489] And you stacked up a bunch of records, including the fastest ever win, faster submission, fastest title defence turnaround.
[490] And you were voted the best female athlete of all time in a 2015 ESPN fan poll, and Fox Sports called you one of the defining athletes of the 21st century.
[491] Part of that sort of 15 fights back to back was, you know, when I think about that period, is the amount of times you were fighting was really unusual.
[492] You're fighting, I think sometimes you're fighting three times in nine months, which is kind of unheard of for anyone in the UFC.
[493] I mean, there's fighters today that seem to just fight once a year.
[494] Why were you doing that?
[495] Why were you fighting so frequently?
[496] I was fighting that frequently because that's how often Dana called.
[497] And I told them that, no, if you sign me, I will be there to fight whenever you need me. And I never said no. And so any time that I got an offer, any time when the guys got hurt or fell out, I was always the one that would fill in.
[498] And, you know, if there was like a – I always fought on like February's and Augusts and November's, like the worst times of the years to fight because that's when they needed somebody to come in.
[499] and pick up the numbers, so I wasn't somebody like holding out to only fight on the Fourth of July card or New Year's card, which are the best, you know, newer, the highest feud of the year, I would do whatever it was best for the company because that's what I promised the role that I would fulfill.
[500] That was like the deal that I made when I came in and, you know, nobody else has to do that, but I felt like I owed it to Dana.
[501] I promised them I would be there any time that he needed me and it was.
[502] If you could go back and give yourself advice on that day when you signed your UFC contract now, you could time travel back to that Ronda and give her a little bit of advice, whisper an a year, what would you say?
[503] I wouldn't change anything.
[504] You wouldn't change anything?
[505] Time travel is not possible and I led myself to where I am now and I'm happy with where I'm at.
[506] So I wouldn't fuck with it.
[507] When you got the news that you're going to be signing for the UFC as the first ever woman to fight in the UFC, how did that feel?
[508] Validating.
[509] Yeah, and I was just really excited.
[510] I just felt like I was it on a secret that the whole world didn't know.
[511] And they were just starting to find out.
[512] And throughout that period, while you're the UFC champion, you take up acting and you feature in a couple of films like The Fast and Furious, expendables, et cetera.
[513] Was that something that you always had planned?
[514] Or is that something that just arose as an opportunity?
[515] The movie stuff just kind of arose as an opportunity.
[516] But, you know, once it became a possibility, I was like, of course I could be the next Bruce Lee, you know.
[517] Of course I could do great at this.
[518] And I felt like I was a good, like, performer and, you know, great physical performer as well.
[519] And I could combine the two in a way that nobody else could.
[520] So I went after it with the same kind of confidence I went after everything.
[521] On the 14th of November 2015, you had UFC 193, where you were lined up to fight Holly Holmes in Melbourne, Australia.
[522] I remember where I was when that fight happened.
[523] I didn't miss many UFC fights and I still don't miss many, but it was a really sort of a huge turning point for a number of reasons.
[524] You were indestructible, basically.
[525] That's how the whole UFC community and I think the fan base saw you.
[526] But in that moment, as you said earlier on, there was an initial contact.
[527] And I watched the clip again earlier on.
[528] There's an initial contact.
[529] I think it was with Holly Holmes elbow, if I can't remember, if I remember correctly.
[530] And then you talked about having this sort of issue with depth perception, depth perception because of that initial contact.
[531] And that's actually what I see in that clip.
[532] I see from that first sort of strike that there is an issue with kind of understanding where Holly is, and that fight ends in a head kick.
[533] From that moment when you leave the octagon, how does your life and perception of everything change?
[534] Because it's interesting, the way that you were built up to that, you were at the, I was going to say the top of the mountain, you're up in the clouds at that point.
[535] Like, it was framed to everyone that you were fundamentally indestructible, you know?
[536] And that's kind of what the marketing machine does.
[537] It does to everyone.
[538] They're fundamentally indestructible, but everyone, from Mohammed Ali to my friend Israel in the UFC, everyone has their day where we find out that everyone is a human being to some degree.
[539] From the moment you leave the UFC, what is life like from that point onwards when you get back into the medical room?
[540] Extremely depressing.
[541] You know, that was my whole identity.
[542] It was being champion and undefeated.
[543] And it was just like soul crushing.
[544] It really was.
[545] It was just kind of like forced to face music before I was ready to.
[546] And I knew that it was going to catch up to me at some point.
[547] But I was more, I think upset that there were so many people out there.
[548] that were, like, reveling in it.
[549] And, um, and I don't know, it just felt so, like, unjust in a way because I just felt like it was just, there's so much of it.
[550] It just wasn't my fault, you know?
[551] I just couldn't, like, my brain just couldn't take what I asked of it anymore.
[552] And my body took as much as it could until it literally broke.
[553] And I gave everybody everything that I had.
[554] and that wasn't enough for them.
[555] They hated me for not having more.
[556] So, I mean, it was tough.
[557] It was, I saw a whole bunch of people that I thought were friends, just, you know, turn on me. And it was really eye -opening in a way, though, you know, to who true friends are and what true happiness is, and that outward validation wasn't it?
[558] And so I think maybe you might have saved me in a way from going down the path of trying to like chase that high of everybody's, you know, approval forever.
[559] But so I guess it was liberating in a way in the long run.
[560] If I was a fly on the wall that night when you left that octagon, what would I have seen?
[561] A lot of crying.
[562] So I had to get my lip sewed up.
[563] the muscle underneath and then the skin.
[564] I remember I was so out of it that I like bit off a chunk of my lip and spit it out like it was like a piece of chapped like a chapped lip like that's how out of it I was.
[565] I was biting and chewing like spitting out chunks of like the flesh in my lip and people judging me for the decisions I was making all in that state I think is what bothered me the most it wasn't so much that I lost it was just that people thought that I didn't know how to fight and you know if I was at my full capacity I don't think anyone could ever beat me but I just you know I was spent I was running on fumes for so long I didn't have any fumes left and the moment that I ran out of fumes was you know broadcast live to billions of people everywhere who all had their own assumptions about it and none of them are right and I felt like I couldn't speak up or say anything and honestly like whoever I tried to talk to they didn't care about um helping me communicate what I was trying to communicate they just cared about getting as many clicks as possible so I couldn't trust anyone to speak through so I feel like this book was the only way that I could really communicate everything that I had been holding on to for years because I mean Yeah, it was really tough, but I literally fought until I couldn't fight anymore.
[566] And maybe that's not enough for a lot of people, but I feel like I created the most efficient fighting style that ever created.
[567] That was, that's ever existed.
[568] And I had to realize that only people that are truly great can recognize greatness.
[569] I wanted to be so great that even an idiot couldn't deny it.
[570] But then I realized after going into pro wrestling that retiring, undefeated, and taking the equity that I had with me wouldn't have been what was best for the sport, even though I know that I'm better than all these girls than by a fucking long shot.
[571] And I always will be taking my equity away from me so that everybody knows that wouldn't actually tarnish my legacy.
[572] It wouldn't make everybody take the women after me seriously.
[573] And so it had to happen for the, for, you know, the betterment of the sport.
[574] But, you know, sometimes it still stings a little bit that it's, you know, I'm not recognized as the greatest ever what I know I am.
[575] But my mom said all the time, really quite the other picture here, that she didn't care if everybody knew she was the best in the world.
[576] She only cared if she knew.
[577] She didn't care of that nobody knew who was the first American woman.
[578] world champion of judo back in 1984 it was important to her and um i think like somewhere along the way um i it started to matter more what other people thought than what i thought and so um i think being being forced back to to that was actually the best thing that could have happened to me i don't think people realize the extent of they see it as kind of just a game you know the fighting they see it's some kind of game that they're watching, like they're playing on the Xbox or PlayStation.
[579] But I don't think they understand the extent of the devastation on a human level that you kind of experience after that loss.
[580] And I think until you did that interview with Ellen, where you revealed that you'd gone back to your changing room and you had these sort of suicide ideation about the future, most people didn't realize the extent of it until then.
[581] Did you literally have suicidal ideation?
[582] in the days and hours following the fight?
[583] No, it was basically, like, instantly when I came backstage.
[584] But, you know, suicide is the kind of thing that becomes more prevalent if, you know, it's in your family.
[585] And I literally had two generations of suicide ahead of me. It's just something that it's always, like, an option in your mind once it's shown to you, you know.
[586] But I think that the fact that I was with Trav then, my husband now, that I just didn't want to like take the pain that I had in me and give it to him because that's what how I experienced suicide was like, okay, it's, you get to relieve yourself of that pain, but you have to, you pass it on to everybody else.
[587] And my, my, you know, but my dad was dying anyway.
[588] He wouldn't have been able to.
[589] to prevent his death and he was, you know, physically suffering every day.
[590] And so that, so I understand that.
[591] And I didn't feel like I had that same kind of justification that I wasn't going to die anyway.
[592] So I was going to live for him and for my family so that they wouldn't have to take the pain that I was feeling onto them.
[593] Was that the hardest moment in your professional career?
[594] Professionally, yeah.
[595] Was it the hardest moment in your personal life?
[596] No, losing my dad was worse.
[597] You went on to fight Amanda Nunes at UFC 207 in 2016, and the fight ends again.
[598] And after this, you come to the decision that your time at the UFC is over and you decide to move on to the WWE.
[599] There's a sort of a two -year gap, I believe, between about a one -year gap between the Nunez fight and the WVE announcement.
[600] What happens in your life in that gap?
[601] I was mostly just being sad.
[602] I was just like sad and high in playing video games and eating crapes.
[603] I mean, everybody wants to rush you through grieving things, but, you know, I think it's important.
[604] And so I took that time to myself.
[605] I was also just so worn out from, you know, like I said, running on fumes for years on end.
[606] And like literally dragging myself out of bed every morning and like, to dig deep every second of the day that I just, you know, wanted to dig deep and just disappear.
[607] I had, you know, paparazzi and all kinds of crazy shit happening at the time.
[608] And I just just like didn't want to be famous anymore.
[609] So it was always more of a tool than a goal.
[610] Now that I didn't have fights to promote, I didn't need it anymore.
[611] But I guess it wasn't done with me. So I kind of had to like, um, disappear for a while to be left alone.
[612] Were you doing anything professionally during that period?
[613] Were you just at home?
[614] Um, I mean, I, um, oh, I was just at home.
[615] I feel like I just needed to not give anymore.
[616] I don't think anyone can understand how exhausted I was and how much it had been asked of me for so long that I just needed to rest.
[617] I needed to mentally and physically rest.
[618] And, but people that have, you know, dug deep enough to make it to two Olympics and win 15 fights in a row, you know, not a lot of people understand how much effort that takes.
[619] And it just sounds like numbers when you say it, but when you live it, it's just like, I literally had nothing left in me. I could barely get out of bed.
[620] So, I mean, it's not the kind of, like, tired that you can take a long sleep from and wake up.
[621] refreshed, you know?
[622] Like, it's like the kind of tired that takes like a year to recover from.
[623] Is that, is that depression?
[624] In your mind?
[625] Yes, no. You could, you could call it depression.
[626] Um, but, you know, I didn't see anyone and get diagnosed.
[627] Your, your husband was there throughout that period with you.
[628] Yeah, he was there the whole time.
[629] He was the one supplying the crapes.
[630] Yeah.
[631] He was amazing.
[632] He really, he really.
[633] was, you know, help drag me out of my own hole.
[634] And I'm very much like, you know, like a gollum cave creature in general.
[635] Like, I just will, like, not leave my little den.
[636] But he's, like, very much a social butterfly.
[637] And he would make sure that, like, okay, you need to go out and interact with human beings.
[638] And I'm like, oh.
[639] Which, you know, it's always kind of been how I was.
[640] I always struggled socially and stuff like that.
[641] which is why I got into judo was to be able to socialize and just be able to talk and communicate and so I just kind of reverted back to my hermit tendencies and yeah Trev literally had to like drag me out of my hole and I'm glad you did but yeah I would easily slide back into the misty mountains anytime I was allowed did he understand what you were going through psychologically in that period were you able to communicate to him?
[642] I think he understood to an extent like he uh he had a different kind of incredible story where he started fighting at 26 and then was the number one contender in at the ufc in as much time it is it took me to be the number one contender in the u .c so he was like incredibly naturally talented but he hadn't been you know um pursuing a goal of athletic greatness since he was six the way that i had and so um just the disappointment of you know know, never winning an Olympic gold medal and never being able to retire and defeated and those kind of like lifelong goals.
[643] I don't think a lot of people understand that, but he also was still like so supportive in there for me, you know, and he never got fed up with me moping around and literally crying over like eggs if I like broke the yoga and be like, I can't even make you eggs, you know?
[644] And like just being like that for like, yeah, over.
[645] for a year and stuff, and his, like, he's just such incredible love and patience and was just, like, there for me all the time, and I'm just, like, like, made it hold me when I needed it, even if he didn't, like, understand why I was so sad.
[646] He was, like, there for it anyway.
[647] So, yeah, he's the best thing that ever happened to me. I love him so much.
[648] But, yeah, he might not have understood it so much, but he was still there for me. You knew you're going to get me at some point.
[649] I told you I'm emotional.
[650] No, I don't.
[651] No. It's often in those moments, our hardest moments that we realize, as you said earlier, who we've got around us, but also the value of certain people in our lives.
[652] I think in my hardest times in my life, that's following those times is when I realized who really, really mattered.
[653] And my partner in particular, through my hardest moments, you go through the dark canyon of these tough times in life and you emerge, that person walked through it with you.
[654] And you go, fucking hell, this person.
[655] and now I understand how much they mean to me. Sometimes it takes that to understand what someone means to you.
[656] And it certainly sounds like that moment crystallized what Travis means to you in your life as well.
[657] Yeah, I think when we first got together, we went through so much stuff that would have driven anybody else apart.
[658] But it really just brought us all, brought the two of us closer together.
[659] And I'm just so glad that we were with each other when we were going through the hardest times that we didn't have to go through it alone.
[660] Where does the W .W .E. come in?
[661] So that's ultimately what sort of, I guess, pulled you out of your little cave there, but.
[662] Yeah.
[663] I had to get out of the cave and in front of like a crowd of thousands of people live, of course.
[664] Which is really funny because I really don't like it.
[665] I don't like being in front of crowds and a bunch of people and I hate public speaking.
[666] But I just love the stuff that I get to do while doing it, you know?
[667] But, yeah, I just, like, kind of my friends, the four horse event, Shana, Jessman, and Marina, that were, like, a friend that I made, I mean, I knew Marina back from judo, and I met Shana and Jessman through MMA, and, like, we really became, like, really close -knit group.
[668] And, you know, for me and for how hard it was for me to, like, socialize and make friends, like, these were, like, my girls, you know?
[669] And they all started getting into pro wrestling.
[670] And I just started to do.
[671] it for fun and it was just so fun and like it wasn't a competition it was everyone working together to try and do something great together and so it reminded me more of like you know like filming action movies and doing fight choreography except for it was kind of like in its purest form where you have to tell the story like the movie you have like the movie part and then there's a fight and then the story and like usually the fight is like separate from that and I feel like pro wrestling is like the purest form of combat storytelling because you can only tell the story through the combat.
[672] I was just fascinated with that, especially, you know, want to be Bruce Lee.
[673] And they became that thing that, like, I started to fixate on and wanting to be better and better at it and just would go into training and lose track of time and realize that I'd been going for five hours, kind of a thing.
[674] And I love that feeling of being lost in something.
[675] To my friend, I was telling somebody all the way, like, passion is my passion.
[676] passion.
[677] I just love to be passionate about things.
[678] And, you know, I guess that flow state is fun.
[679] And I just love being in it.
[680] And so, yeah, then I started just training for fun.
[681] And then, and, you know, getting, I didn't really get an opportunity to go to WW.
[682] I was kind of like, hey, guys, I want to do this.
[683] And then they were like, okay.
[684] And, yeah, then it just.
[685] It just kind of snowballed into, because at first I was like, okay, I want to have a baby soon.
[686] And it would be kind of cool to go and do some pro wrestling for a couple months before I'd go and have my baby.
[687] And then it just kind of like snowballed into this whole beast and this whole like other life that I didn't know that I was going to have.
[688] But it was very much like a calling much more than a pursuit, if that made sense, you know.
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[702] One of the things that surprised me, and again, it's because if we only get to see this sort of two -de representation of someone on a screen, whether they're a, you know, through your wrestling career or your UFC career, which is kind of like, it's kind of like, all of it's kind of like acting, the press conferences, the bravado, is in your book, you talk about how comments online and newspaper comments and stuff would get to you.
[703] I mean, you know, it starts off like that.
[704] But, yeah, at first, you know, when everything is going great, It was like, I would look at my comments, like the morning newspaper.
[705] I'd wake up in the morning and look at my comments.
[706] I would look at my tag photos.
[707] And it's so unhealthy.
[708] But after my first loss, I quit cold turkey, which I feel like that was one thing that I needed to do was to like not constantly need that outside validation and stuff like that, especially from the internet and social media and stuff.
[709] and I was kind of like spiraling in a way and kind of like giving that way too much stock in my like emotional, you know, state and stuff like that.
[710] And then pro wrestling, you're literally in front of a crowd that is like the embodiment of a comment section in front of yourself.
[711] But, you know, that's also why I really enjoyed being a heel, which I, you know, wish they would have.
[712] let me be a heel more often because that's why I feel like I was happiest when I wasn't trying to placate to the crowd purposely try to, you know, piss them off and get a rise out of them and not trying to constantly, you know, pander.
[713] I was surprised to hear about the WWE that they kind of rewrite the script last minute and that it's not, I don't know, you think of such a big business, you imagine they got script writers and the scripts are written years ago.
[714] You would think it wouldn't be an absolute clutch of fuck shit show.
[715] and you would be wrong.
[716] Wow.
[717] Yeah, yeah.
[718] And it's so needously dangerous.
[719] Like no one can, like a lot of times people can't rehearse.
[720] Things have changed last minute.
[721] A lot of times you see them outside.
[722] They're performing.
[723] They've only talked about it.
[724] They're doing it for the first time.
[725] So a lot of these injuries happen because people just weren't able to rehearse.
[726] And the company doesn't give a shit because we're all expendable to them.
[727] Did you feel expendable to the UFC?
[728] To the WWE?
[729] Yes.
[730] Yeah.
[731] I think we all, we all, And they made sure to make us feel that way.
[732] They made sure to make you feel that way.
[733] Yeah.
[734] So that you wouldn't get above your station or something or so that you would just do whatever you're told?
[735] Yeah, just do whatever you're told.
[736] Just take it.
[737] And you're all contractors at the WWE as well.
[738] So you're not employees.
[739] You have to pay for your own health care and all these kinds of things from what I read in your book.
[740] Yep.
[741] Which is pretty crazy.
[742] I mean, they would never be allowed in where I'm from in the UK.
[743] and it's sort of Vince McMahon's kingdom.
[744] Yeah.
[745] Well, I mean, supposedly he's out now because they, you know, caught him paying company fund so you can sit on some girls' head in the office and, you know, do a threesome with her with Johnny Laurenitis.
[746] But his cronies are still there.
[747] And so when the stuff started coming out and Vince was gone before, he was still basically just calling it in and running the company.
[748] And, but yeah, like Bruce Pritchard, who's there now, who's still like the head of creative or whatever title they gave him, is basically just taking orders from Vince and still running the company through him.
[749] And so when Vince was resigned formally because of all these, like, sexual allegations and stuff that were coming out, he was still running the company informally, and I think he still is to this day.
[750] You don't have a whole lot of nice things to say about these people.
[751] I mean, it depends on who.
[752] The girls in the locker room, I absolutely love them.
[753] The people at the top running out.
[754] Yeah, I mean, Steph and Triple H, I think they're honestly doing their best.
[755] But, I mean, I think that Vince McMahon just created a fundamentally sick environment.
[756] And I think if Ari is going to be able, if Ari Emanuel, who bought it out from WME is going to be able to actually make this multi -billion dollar dysfunctional organization into one that function.
[757] he's got to clean out all of Vince's cronies.
[758] He's got a completely clean house and remove Vince's influence completely.
[759] But, you know, no one's asking me. But that's just what I experienced when Vince was gone, he was still running the show through, you know, people that he'd hired in the past, Bruce Pritchard being number one of them.
[760] Bruce Pritchin's still there, I believe.
[761] Yeah, John Laurenitis took like, he was cut.
[762] he was cut loose because he got named specifically in the scandal.
[763] But, yeah, Bruce Pritchard is literally, I'd never heard him say a single one of his own opinions.
[764] He'd only say that Vince says this, Vince says that, Vince says this, Vince is, this, Vince, Vince, Vince, Vince.
[765] And so he's literally just like, you know, I call him Vince's avatar.
[766] That's basically what he is.
[767] You returned to the UFC after.
[768] You left in 2019.
[769] you were there from 2017 to 2019 and in 2017 is when you got married with Travis I couldn't figure out from the dates I don't think the date was in your book but at some point during this journey you start trying to have children something I'm trying now with my partner on that process as well and you talk in the book about a really heartbreaking incident where you're filming a TV show with 911, the TV show 9 -1 -1 -1 on.
[770] And there was fight scenes and various stunts in that movie.
[771] And a day after that you suffered a miscarriage.
[772] Yeah, well, I found out I was pregnant right before the show started filming.
[773] And then I, my finger got chopped off from a boat door falling on it.
[774] And, but you know, we went and checked out and there's, you know, the baby seemed just fine.
[775] But then I miscarried a couple weeks later.
[776] So I just kind of always felt like that was my fault that I wanted to keep doing dangerous stuff while I was pregnant because I thought it made me cool.
[777] And then I was just like depressed and like drinking and smoking and not taking care of myself.
[778] And then I got pregnant right away again.
[779] And then we never even saw a heartbeat that time.
[780] But I was expecting anything more because I just wasn't taking care of myself.
[781] So you had two miscarriages.
[782] Two miscarriages.
[783] Yeah.
[784] And then I went through IVF, four cycles of IVF, to be able to get eight embryos because we wanted to have like three or four kids.
[785] And the first one that we used actually worked.
[786] That's, you know, La Kea, my daughter now.
[787] But yeah, we're in the process of doing it right now, and I just got news yesterday that our first cycle didn't work.
[788] So it's tough.
[789] Anyone going through is tough.
[790] And like, people just don't talk about it.
[791] But, you know, it's hard because you have, like, so much hope every time.
[792] And, yeah, I don't know.
[793] I'll just have to wait until the end of this book tour to try again.
[794] But I was really hoping to be pregnant today.
[795] But, you know, it's the kind of thing that, like, nobody talks about.
[796] So, and so many women think they're going through it alone.
[797] But it's really, really common.
[798] But it's just really hard when things don't.
[799] work out.
[800] So many women and couples are going through this.
[801] And as you as you say, it's not something we talk about because the mixture of feelings surrounding it are complex, to say the least.
[802] I think like, you know, no one wants to burden anybody else with what they're going through.
[803] But a lot of times it's not, you're not burdening other people.
[804] You're, you know, I don't know if it's like camaraderie, but you're offering something to the other people that are.
[805] going through the same thing.
[806] And a lot of times it's like a woman you can feel like it's, you know, your fault.
[807] But, you know, your peak productive years are your peak athletic years.
[808] So I decided to use those on my career.
[809] And, you know, thankfully I was able to get a bunch of embryos when I was young.
[810] And hopefully, you know, we'll be able to still have a couple more kids.
[811] But, you know, I got my poe and I got my boys.
[812] So, you know, I got a lot more.
[813] than a lot of people that have been through it.
[814] But, you know.
[815] So you've got three kids in total.
[816] Two of them are from Travis's previous relationship with his previous partner, where you're now the stepmother, and you've had a daughter of your own.
[817] Yeah.
[818] People don't understand the, because there are people that have gone through this and they understand, although because no one's talking about it, they've not had their feelings echoed by someone publicly before.
[819] And then there's this other group of people that haven't ever been through this sort of IVF journey of success, failure, failure success, failure, etc., for those people that have never experienced it, what is that like?
[820] What is the complexity of the emotions that you experience and thoughts?
[821] It's just a grind.
[822] It's a grind, and it's really hard on you mentally and physically your body.
[823] And like, this last cycle, I wasn't allowed to, like, you know, work out or anything for weeks on end.
[824] And so it's like my first time around when I had to do like four cycles in a row, and then the transfer cycle, I mean, like, I was, like, just not recognizable physically.
[825] And, um, and, uh, just mentally so worn out, you're on all these kind of hormones and you're going through this, like, emotional roller coaster and stuff.
[826] And you just, you can't really talk about it, you know?
[827] And, um, and, uh, yeah, sometimes, like, like, I would, you know, have just people that are like psychotic trolls that like try and follow me around online and like berate me about these kind of things about like at the time I like not not having a kid when I was trying and and stuff like that and that's I guess the way you have to live with being a public figure but and you're not supposed to say anything about it because how dare you not be grateful for your good fortune but man it um it sucks when you're going through it and you feel like Like, you know, the world is also still looking over your shoulder and you're not living up to, you know, your own expectations.
[828] I don't know.
[829] If there's a, I don't know if there's a feminine word for emasculating, but is, you know, effeminating.
[830] It feels like if you can't naturally have, like, a baby.
[831] Like, I mean, my doctor was like if you stop smoking and drinking, you can have a baby, like, you know, smoke a bunch of weed and drinking, you can naturally have a baby.
[832] But because we wanted to have so many, he was like, you should get all your embryos now.
[833] So when you're older, you can take your time and do it.
[834] And so it's just like, yeah, it's tough because as a woman you have to choose, am I going to go for a career during my peak years or am I going to like go for kids?
[835] And so, you know, luckily, you know, science makes it so you can have both, but it doesn't make it easy.
[836] This has been very front of mind for me because I'm trying now.
[837] And I've actually sat here yesterday with two fertility doctors, two different fertility doctors because I really wanted to understand the whole process and understand.
[838] Because, you know, I think people typically think that fertility is a female thing.
[839] But the fertility doctors told me quite clearly that when they go through the IVF rounds, it's 50 -50 typically as to why sort of a baby isn't conceived.
[840] It's 50 % of the time it's the man, 50 % of the time it's the woman.
[841] And so I'm really grateful that you share that because lots of people are struggling.
[842] And increasingly, the IVF clinics, I think, off the top of my head, have grown 90 % in popularity over the last couple of years.
[843] And because we're having our careers are being extended further and a variety of other things, sperm counts are dropping, testosterone levels are dropping, it's only going to get more common.
[844] Yeah.
[845] And one thing I will say that's great about it is because I did go through two pregnancies that, you know, My doctor told me it was probably because it wasn't because you chalked your finger off.
[846] It wasn't because if you were drinking or smoking, like, it was because they're genetically not conducive to life.
[847] And so the great thing with IVF is you get these embryos and you can have them tested first.
[848] And then you don't have to make a decision at 20 weeks long of like, oh, your baby has this kind of, you know, disorder, malformality and you have to make that decision.
[849] and so you know that they're healthy going into it.
[850] But then when you put all that effort into it and you finally do it and then it doesn't work out, I mean, that's crushing in itself too, you know?
[851] So it's tough.
[852] I mean, science is amazing, but it is a really difficult process to go through.
[853] Where does your happiness come from these days?
[854] You've had a real sort of a pivot in terms of where you look for happiness over the last couple of years.
[855] Yeah, I mean, my happiness is every day with my family.
[856] That's what it is.
[857] And I'm so lucky that I get to be, like, you know, retired in my mid -30s and be able to spend, like, all my time with my husband and my kids and, like, to be there for them and to be able to not have to, like, worry about so much, you know, and get to just focus on them.
[858] And, yeah, I don't know, just day to day.
[859] I just, I mean, I say, like, I'm retired, but, like, I say, like, I'm retired, still do stuff.
[860] But I don't do stuff with the intention of, like, I have to pay the bills with this.
[861] And so, yeah, I mean, I'm not, like, only, like, only my husband, only a wife and mom.
[862] Like, I started writing as just a way to, like, kind of help me from, you know, not fixating on, like, myself or picking at myself and got into, like, screenwriting.
[863] And, which is just, like, a really great way for if I am having like just, you know, like a destructive thought process or something like that that I can like turn my mind into towards something creative and actually like make something out of all of that, you know, mental energy that I'm just turning inward and like hurting myself with.
[864] And so I then came out of this book.
[865] And I've actually, I'm working on my fourth script right now and my first one's being made into a comic book.
[866] which I touch on it on the book too, but it's also like doing these kind of things not with the intention of like making millions and dollars or you know, impressing a bunch of people, but just that the act of it is so fun.
[867] Like I'm a I'm interning right now at the story department at WME that's all I was working on in the car.
[868] Yeah, I'm learning how to be a reader and write coverages and just, you know, read lots of scripts and make me a better writer and like learn like the dark art of like writing coverages which people don't see, they're not at public, but to be able to just still a script down to as few words as possible and know what you're looking for and all these things and just kind of like learning these skills that I'm really fascinated in.
[869] And that's just like validating in themselves, you know?
[870] And like, with our ranch and everything like that and raising our cows and like my favorite part is we took this land in Oregon that was like completely degraded.
[871] You know, it had been mismanaged for years.
[872] There was more dirt than there was grass.
[873] able to be able to, we're using regenerative practices with our Wagyu and our poultry to be able, like, bring this land back to life, you know?
[874] So that was like, then more rewarding to me than reading a whole morning of positive comments on the freaking picture is actually, like, going out and, like, seeing this land become better.
[875] And, like, that kind of stuff is, like, really rewarding.
[876] And I don't have to worry about, you know, promoting it or what people will think of it or how much money I'm making from it.
[877] So yeah, like, I'm retired, but I'm busy.
[878] It must be difficult to go from those arenas that I watched you in all around the world with all those people screaming and cheering to this farm in Oregon because I don't know, I don't know one assumes that we always talk about this adrenaline rush that you get from fighting and competing.
[879] The opposite of that is a farm in Oregon.
[880] I guess so, but I mean, I love my favorite crowds to like wrestle in front of are like small crowds.
[881] I love being like in a small non -televised crowd.
[882] That's my favorite.
[883] And like fight, I could fight in a closet.
[884] I could fight an arena.
[885] It's not making it better to me. You know, I just want to win the fight.
[886] Like the fight itself is what I care about that.
[887] So it gave me the joy.
[888] I was completely blocking them out.
[889] I mean, they're, they're welcome to be there, but they're, but they're not that they're not part of my actual experience of the fight itself.
[890] I mean, winning and everyone being like, well, I mean, that's an incredible feeling.
[891] That's great.
[892] But that's not why I got into it.
[893] I didn't get into like, you know, judo isn't like a big sport that there's going to be crowds of people cheering for you for.
[894] Anyone that's crazy enough to want to win Olympic gold medal in anything, it's not because they want to be famous or they want a whole bunch people to know or cheer for them.
[895] It's because they want to be the best at something.
[896] And I just love that process of going from knowing nothing about something to mastering.
[897] I love the process.
[898] of mastery.
[899] You used a word earlier on at the self -destructive thoughts.
[900] Am I right in thinking that your self -destructive thoughts, which appear to still be with you today, are the reason in part why you were so great when it came to the UFC in fighting?
[901] Yeah, I guess like, you know, I would enter that flow state, I guess, of being, like, so lost in doing something that you can't think of anything else, everything else just appears.
[902] Like, that was always my favorite place to be, you know, in swimming, I didn't have that.
[903] Your mind is left to wander while you're swimming or in Judo, you know, there's nothing happening except for what's happening in front of you and fighting.
[904] There's nothing going on except for what's going on in front you and in pro wrestling.
[905] There's nothing going on except for the reality you created in this match that you're in.
[906] And yeah, I love being completely lost in the task of doing something the best that you can.
[907] Like, that's something that's addicting and I guess something that I still do now, you know, trying to do, like, through writing and everything like that.
[908] But I don't know.
[909] I just, I guess it's just, where my happy place is.
[910] But, you know.
[911] Do you still have those self -destructive thoughts today?
[912] Oh, yeah.
[913] I mean, all the time.
[914] But, I mean, it's just kind of like something you'll, like, oh, my God, I remember that thing that you said several years ago?
[915] That was so stupid.
[916] I remember that thing you tweeted, you stupid bitch?
[917] You know, like, just things that, like, come up that you can't do anything about it.
[918] But just, you know, ruminate.
[919] And sometimes it's like, you know, try not to think of a blue duck kind of a thing.
[920] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
[921] And a lot of times it's like that.
[922] Sometimes I'll be in the middle of something great and I'll just be like, don't think of something bad.
[923] And then because of that, it'll, like, pop up in my head.
[924] And, yeah, I don't know.
[925] Did you go to therapy at any point in your career?
[926] I mean, I've tried, but I'm, you know, my mom's a psychologist.
[927] So, you know, anyone that I went to talk to, I was just kind of like, you're not as smart as my mom.
[928] Yeah, but I've attempted, but I've never found anyone that I really, like, clicked with.
[929] But I've given it a couple of shots, but I mean, maybe it's not for everybody.
[930] I don't think it's for me. The other picture that I found when I was doing my research is this beautiful picture here.
[931] And the question I have for you is about the lessons you learned from this man. Oh, I'm going to keep this.
[932] You can get both of them.
[933] Lessons I learned, you know, I wish I remembered more.
[934] We don't even have video or anything, you know, very few pictures.
[935] But I don't know, like, it's just more of, like, examples that he gave me of how to actually, like, be a man and how to be a great husband.
[936] Like, my mom and dad were so in love with each other.
[937] I remember they would, like, make out over our breakfast, and we'd be like, oh!
[938] Yeah, I know.
[939] But he was like so in love with my mom and she was so in love with him.
[940] And I think that's why I was smart enough to wait until Traff to get married because I knew what I was looking for.
[941] And so he showed me what a loving husband and father is.
[942] And, you know, he's the one that when my mom was so worried about, you know, me being late developmentally and all these things, said he was the one that was always like, you know, Ronnie is a sleeper.
[943] She's going to show everybody.
[944] And so he was always the one that, like, believe that I was going to be, like, exceptional and put that belief in my mind that I am exceptional.
[945] And I'm going to do incredible things.
[946] And so, yeah, never forgot it, I guess.
[947] I think he was right.
[948] You named off to him, right?
[949] He's called Ron.
[950] Yeah, I was supposed to be Ronald John Rousey Jr., but I'm a girl, so I'm Ronda Gene Rousey.
[951] The first.
[952] Not the last.
[953] And you did show everyone.
[954] That's exactly what you did in your career.
[955] You showed everyone.
[956] And, you know, it's funny because I'm a big UFC fan, so I watched your career, enjoyed it so much.
[957] You gave me some incredible moments throughout all of the sort of those major fights that you had.
[958] And it's interesting because from reading your book and speaking to you today, I realize that the very human cost of the entertainment that I enjoyed as a fan.
[959] Behind that sat someone who is quite clearly pretty obsessed with winning, being mastery in your own words, and being the very best at everything you apply yourself to.
[960] And with that comes a cost, you know, we don't have to pay the cost as fans.
[961] We just get to enjoy the entertainment.
[962] And so it's very easy, I think, without the full picture being illuminated to not pay tribute to someone who gave us so much as fans, but behind the scenes had to struggle in, really profound ways from the age of six years old for that joy that you brought to all of our lives.
[963] So on behalf of fans that do understand the full picture, I personally want to say thank you so much for that because, yeah, you know, I used to stay up to 3, 4am in the morning in the UK to watch you fight because you were like nothing I'd ever seen.
[964] You know, you define the division.
[965] You basically created the concept of women fighting in the UFC and you did it in a way with a style that I'd never seen before and frankly haven't really seen since.
[966] So thank you for that.
[967] I know it's difficult.
[968] I can tell from when you talk about those moments how difficult it still is, but that's what I would expect from someone who is one of the real goats of the sport.
[969] Thank you for writing this book as well.
[970] It's incredibly honest.
[971] And I think it's perfectly written in many respects, but the timing of it is perfect because you're on a certain chapter of your life where you're able to look back on all of these experiences with a certain retrospective clarity and wisdom that is incredibly helpful.
[972] And you found yourself on the other side of all of this stuff now as a mother and as a as a normal human away from the WWE and the UFC.
[973] And from that perspective, I think everyone can learn a tremendous amount about life, about happiness, about family, about committing yourselves to something in the way, with the form of mastery that you had.
[974] But also more than anything, what I take from it is what really matters in life.
[975] And I think that's, if I've interpreted it correctly, is the real objective of the book.
[976] We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're leaving it for.
[977] Uh -oh.
[978] Why does everyone get scared when I go to this diary?
[979] I don't know.
[980] Oh, okay, interesting.
[981] Fear the unknown.
[982] It's not, it's not terrifying.
[983] Sometimes they're horrific.
[984] What was the most fun moment of your entire life?
[985] Of my entire life.
[986] Yeah.
[987] Most fun?
[988] God.
[989] I mean, I've had a lot of fun.
[990] They're probably intimate moments with my husband that I can't share.
[991] But we have a good time.
[992] You'll be happy for the shout -out.
[993] He's like, that's what matters.
[994] Ronda Rousey Rfeit, out available everywhere right now.
[995] An incredible book, and I recommend everyone to go and get it.
[996] Thank you so much, Rhonda.
[997] Thank you for having me.