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Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Hi all--new to the forum and still a novice boxer. I have a question that hopefully someone here might be able to shed light on. I boxed in college a little bit in my senior year (about four years ago) and had two fights, ending with a 1-1 record. The first fight was a murderous ass-beating from a guy a foot taller than me that ended in the first round (I fought back, though--it wasn't a total slaughter. I refused the eight-count twice and got pulled out eventually because I was bleeding too much). I won the second fight. Whenever I've sparred since, I've taken hard shots and fought back. My old coach said I had "the chin from hell." Nobody ever accused me of having a glass jaw or no heart. The problem was the nerves.
The nerves got to be so much after awhile that I had to quit. I kept having this fear that I would give out. Even after winning my second fight, as the referee raised my hand, I was filled with anxiety. "You got through this time," the voice inside seemed to say. "But you haven't really proven your tough. You've got to have a lot more fights before that happens."
A year or two later, I got diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder and started taking medication for it, so my anxiety tends to be better. I recently started sparring with a friend of mine again (ex-Golden Gloves champ whose been boxing since I was about three), and I still take heavy shots and spar myself bloody. But I've also still got the nerves. I worry that deep down inside I'm a huge wuss and that it'll be obvious to any real boxer I cross paths with.
I'm not sure if this is even an appropriate question to ask on these forums. I've talked to counselors, but they're by and large not really familiar with boxing. I guess I want to ask a court of other boxers if I'm just a coward who should find another sport or if this is a more common problem than I've been led to believe. Thanks, all.
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Here is a thread with some thoughts on nerves, and 1 anonymous post from a person who overcame the worst case of ring nerves I have ever heard of.
http://www.saddoboxing.com/boxingfor...tml#post675781 < ---clickity click
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Thanks, Youngblood. I appreciate the answer.
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Emotional Field Therapy:
This is the same style of thing as TFT... thought field therapy; the original.
Works on 99% of people for many phobias like public speaking, flying any fears the list goes on..
If any of you can be bothered fixing something that worries you then here is the answer,it even removes post traumatic stress disorder if practiced continually.
It removes grief ,love sickness ,home sickness,any fear or anxiety...
but by practicing it not by just reading it/learning it and saying maybe ;-)
Learning EFT Tapping Technique
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Thanks a lot, Andre. Really appreciate this. I'll be giving it a try. . .
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Andre
Emotional Field Therapy:
This is the same style of thing as TFT... thought field therapy; the original.
Works on 99% of people for many phobias like public speaking, flying any fears the list goes on..
If any of you can be bothered fixing something that worries you then here is the answer,it even removes post traumatic stress disorder if practiced continually.
It removes grief ,love sickness ,home sickness,any fear or anxiety...
but by practicing it not by just reading it/learning it and saying maybe ;-)
Learning EFT Tapping Technique
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Thanks a lot, Andre--really appreciate the answer. I'll give EFT a try. . .
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Come to think of it, I think I had a counselor who recommended some kind of tapping procedure like that for OCD, but I don't think the literature they gave me really described it accurately. Thanks again!
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
No problems, works great on fear of flying, spiders,even death.Works for love trauma and some depression too.
If you have trouble give me a hoy and I'll give you the original TFT ones.
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Funny how D,matos Fighters, always had the Problem with Psychodynamics. ;D
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap
Funny how D,matos Fighters, always had the Problem with Psychodynamics. ;D
How many universally recognized champions?
Find me the problem
I mean other then Graziano,Patterson,Ali,Tyson,and Torres,he totally sucks right?
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Ali wasnt with Him, All the others had Psychological problems, its pretty well known.
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Scrap
Ali wasnt with Him, All the others had Psychological problems, its pretty well known.
Nope Cus worked Ali
Patterson was too small,so was Tyson,but they still ended up champions
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Nobody is saying anything to the contrary... but that doesn't change the fact that a lot of them had psychological problems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tilt A Whirl
he totally sucks right?
Scrap never said that... settle yourself down...
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Re: Boxing, Nerves, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Also Cus merely adviced Ali after his exile... Ali was already a schooled boxer with an obviously established pro career and style... completely different to literally raising some of his fighters such as Tyson or even being part of his camp.
he had patterson and Tyson from what? the age of 14 or something.
It's not to say that Cus messed their heads up but it is to say that he was attracted to working with troubled young delinquents etc.