addicted to violence...

addicted to violence...

A Story by Brad
"

for writing prompt...

"

The first time I stepped into the boxing ring I had my a*s handed to me. After that experience I had decided that I didn’t ever want to step back into the ring or wear another pair of boxing gloves again. But my father was a persistent man, and he wasn’t going to have “no f****t artist son”. So I was stuck.

My father was physically abusive. He had a very long fuse, but once it reached the end, there was no stopping the violence that he would fork out to either me or my mother. All of this pent up anger, hurt, resentment turned into the fuel that I brought into the ring.

I am a physical being. I cannot feel emotion without physically feeling it. So my trainer used this pile of junk from my personal life and fed it into my head when I trained and when I went into the ring.

The problem with fighting in the ring is that an average man will tire within 3 minutes of heavy fighting. As a boxer, it is your job to pace yourself while tiring out your opponent. My first few fights I lost because I would go in there in a wanton rage and tire out by the middle of the first round.

The first knockout I dished out was one of the most euphoric experiences of my life. The combination of blows done in an almost choreographed fashion and then dealing that final punch to the side of their head and watching them go down on the mat releases so much adrenaline you don’t even feel the punches you took. I became addicted to it.

The whole trick was to balance that rage I had been holding onto against my father and let it out in little increments until the final barrage of punches and I could release it all. Sometimes I let it all out too early, and I paid for it, but I was mastering it and would have made it further had I stayed in it.

With each fight, I had put my father’s face on my opponent. This was just a mind thing I did. It ended up ending my “career” in youth boxing. At first, it aided me in focusing my anger. But on my last match, I had broken my opponents nose and he laid there on the mat trying to shake it off. I was thinking of my dad, and that was the problem. Because I began to feel guilty for wanting to hurt my dad this much. I thought about how I would really feel if that was my own father lying there on the ground, bleeding from a cut on the lip and nose that I had dealt him.  In the future, there would come a time when I would deliver those punches to my own father. It wouldn’t be in a ring, it would be in his front yard. I went to my corner and I never returned.

Thus ended my stint in boxing at the age of 19. I had no other way of venting those feelings anymore, and this is when they became self-inflicting. Punching walls, hardwood floors, mirrors, windows, punching bags. But I never laid another hand on another person until I was 21, and that was in bars fueled by the drink. And that…is another story…for another day.

© 2011 Brad


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Author's Note

Brad
the writing prompt was about addiction...and that was so hard because i was addicted to many things...so i didn't want to go cliche on youse all...so i did this one...i never really thought about it as an addiction...but after contemplating things i was involved in, it seemed to fit...

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Coming from a place of addiction its good.
Its got that "I look at writing like I look at pacing myself in the ring" kinda kick in the head.
I would have liked to, instead of you saying you put his face on opponents as we've seen in everything from Rocky to..f*****g Bullwinkle and water boy. Maybe hear more. Auditory hallucinations. The face stays the same, its the sound that change and twist.
good s**t.

Posted 13 Years Ago


3 of 3 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

Hiya Bradley,
I can see how you would look at the adrenaline high you get from getting your butt handed to you by an opponent or by serving up a good knock out. As you said, boxing is hard work all in itself, and you can wear yourself down pretty fast without some kind of game plan or gimmick. I used to pretend the guy I was boxing was one of my superiors in the navy, a skinny little backstabber whose image in my mind helped me to win a couple of bouts. Of course that trick didn't work too well when I boxed a black guy, who completely beat the crap outa' me.
Good write! One gripe, you use the pronoun 'it' a little extensively, but it worked out okay. Hope to see some more material from you, sir. BZ

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

You tell it good

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

I liked this. Another glimpse into your past, and what makes you so remarkable. I like how you share a bit of vulnerability, how you share your pain, and how you overcome, but keep the lesson. I like it, and the more I get to know you through your work.. the more I admire you.

Posted 13 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.

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OT
this is great!! and a rather unique take on an addiction! I don't think I've actually seen anything like this on here before, perhaps an 'underrated addiction', but an addiction nonetheless!! great story, great response to a prompt!!!

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Wow B, great job with this. What I like most about this is the revelation of "how I would really feel if that was my father lying there on the ground..." That in itself shows the complexity of human nature. One who has never been touched by violence might not understand the need to act out...then the guilt that comes along like a whip shortly after.

It's true...once violence touches your life it's really hard to shake and expressing those feelings physically is truly an addictive release. Drumming was the thing I found that touches that...keeping me from acting out on others.

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

this is some knock out writing , because each punch was anchored from the heart . good writing my friend

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

I do like this and violence is easy to be hooked on.I like the way you tell the story of your dad through the sport.Your love of th violence being feb by th anger you carried around.Very well done thank you for shareing

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

With the angle of addiction - it works well love, anger can be released in myriad ways and this is a good portrayal of that! Well written, as always and leaves on a note of intrigue! I think you did great at this :) xx

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Coming from a place of addiction its good.
Its got that "I look at writing like I look at pacing myself in the ring" kinda kick in the head.
I would have liked to, instead of you saying you put his face on opponents as we've seen in everything from Rocky to..f*****g Bullwinkle and water boy. Maybe hear more. Auditory hallucinations. The face stays the same, its the sound that change and twist.
good s**t.

Posted 13 Years Ago


3 of 3 people found this review constructive.

The orgasm for your arm...

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.


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Added on January 5, 2011
Last Updated on January 5, 2011

Author

Brad
Brad

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