{"id":97438,"date":"2023-12-15T21:55:42","date_gmt":"2023-12-15T21:55:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stopsmokingway.com\/?p=97438"},"modified":"2023-12-15T21:55:42","modified_gmt":"2023-12-15T21:55:42","slug":"i-was-done-with-boxing-when-hypochondria-set-in-now-im-deadlier-than-ever","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stopsmokingway.com\/fighting\/i-was-done-with-boxing-when-hypochondria-set-in-now-im-deadlier-than-ever\/","title":{"rendered":"\u2018I was done with boxing when hypochondria set in \u2013 now I\u2019m deadlier than ever\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"
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    Josh Kelly referred to his armpits when talking about the time it has taken for maturity to set in.<\/p>\n

    Despite overcoming plenty of setbacks such as his loss to Kazakhstan\u2019s Daniyar Yeleussinov in the 2016 Olympic Games, Kelly, 29, admits he has always felt much younger than he was. Which, if anything, is fitting. His babyface characteristics, youthful charm and chiselled facial features earned him the \u2018Pretty Boy\u2019 nickname he is now accustomed to.<\/p>\n

    He returns home to Sunderland on Saturday, to face Placido Ramirez at the Beacon of Light, the arena next to the Stadium of Light, home of the former Premier League giants and the team he has supported all his life. It will be a special night for the WBO No.1 ranked super-welterweight in the world. Yet, Kelly admits he was close to turning his back on the squared circle and evenings like this. <\/p>\n

    READ MORE: Ricky Hatton admits 'my head had gone' ahead of Floyd Mayweather fight after antics <\/b><\/p>\n

    READ MORE: \u2018Boxing saved me from the gangs of Texas \u2013 now I want to finish Jake Paul\u2019 <\/b><\/p>\n

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    In 2021, he was emphatically stopped by David Avanesyan at Wembley Arena when the EBU European welterweight title was on the line.<\/p>\n

    Kelly was the main event on the Matchroom undercard. It was a chastening defeat. Yet, his biggest battle was soon to follow. Over the course of around 14 months, Kelly often found himself feeling unwell.<\/p>\n

    A dry throat, a blocked nose, a general feeling something was not quite right, or would not be right in the future kept on overcoming him. He would tell his baffled coaches, who would look him up and down and not see anything close to what he was talking about.<\/p>\n

    What is your reaction to Josh Kelly's story? Let us know in the comment section below<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n

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    The Problem Child is back for this third fight of 2023. Jake Paul returns to the ring, live in Orlando on December 16. The YouTuber turned boxer will engage in a professional contest against Texas cruiserweight Andre August and you can watch it live on DAZN.<\/p>\n

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    It would disrupt training sessions, fighting preparations and, eventually, his whole entire life. Yet, there was no cold, no virus, no sickness bug or anything along those lines. Still, he could not evade those feelings of uneasiness or queasiness. Eventually, Kelly and his team would realise he was suffering from hypochondria, a health anxiety disorder characterised by constant feelings of illness or a persistent worry they were about to become seriously ill. <\/p>\n

    \u201cWhen something, not even necessarily boxing, or an event that was happening somewhere else, I took the pressure on my shoulders,\u201d Kelly said, in an exclusive interview with Daily Star Sport<\/span>.<\/p>\n

    \u201cThen I would be like, \u2018ah I feel like I am getting ill, I am getting sick\u2019 then I would be like, \u2018ahh my throat is hurting, I\u2019ve got to go to the doctors, I\u2019ve got to get some antibiotics\u2019. I\u2019d be putting myself on courses of antibiotics with a private doctor and everybody would be like, \u2018Josh, what\u2019s this for\u2019 and I\u2019d be like, \u2018I really, really need them, I can feel it\u2019. <\/p>\n

    <\/p>\n

    \u201cThen, when the event was over, I\u2019d totally forget about everything and I\u2019d be back to normal, I would be fine. It had been happening for years beforehand. I remember going away to fight in America, I was just drinking Lemsips all week. I was just thinking, \u2018what am I doing here? What am I doing?\u2019 It was a joke.<\/p>\n

    \u201cWhen you have an overthinking mind, it takes over your mind and it controls your every little move in life. It was horrible. It got to the point where my coach was like: \u2018listen, I don\u2019t even want you boxing until you sort yourself out and you sort your mind out. Unpick everything that\u2019s gone on\u2019. Then I talked to a few people, did a few sessions here and there with a few different people.\u201d <\/p>\n

    He added: \u201cI have a new mindset. The hypochondria was something else. I\u2019ve spoken to people who have also had it and they were like: \u2018I thought I was having a heart attack\u2019. I thought I was having a heart attack as well. I thought I was having everything. It\u2019s horrible. You\u2019re living in a trap, constantly washing your hands with no skin on your f***ing hands left. It was a joke.\u201d<\/p>\n

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    Those with little to no understanding of the condition may believe sufferers are simply afraid of the world around them. Kelly is a brave fighter. He turned everybody\u2019s heads in the boxing world when he drew with Ray Robinson at Madison Square Garden in 2019. <\/p>\n

    In isolation, it was an impressive performance against a fighter who boasted a strong 25-3 record with 13 knockouts. Yet, Kelly entered the lions\u2019 den with a broken hand and still managed to secure a draw. <\/p>\n

    \u201cI had an injection in my right hand when I boxed him,\u201d Kelly said. "Before I went out to fight, he just came off a draw against Egidijus Kavaliauskas.<\/p>\n

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    \u201cAll these fights. I was looking at myself, and I was saying: \u2018you're just a kid and you were suffering all of that whilst you were doing it\u2019?\u201d When Kelly reflects on his previous difficulties, an almost disbelieving smile comes across his face. Even now, he shares a laugh when discussing his next opponent. Ramirez is a late replacement for the dangerous South African Roarke Knapp, who was his initial opponent, but had to pull out with an injury.<\/p>\n

    Last minute injuries followed by even later new opponents are a common factor in boxing. Yet, Kelly admits if this was to happen two years ago, he may not have been able to stomach it. \u201cI would have overthought the full thing. I would have been like: \u2018Why has he pulled up? Why is that? Who is this opponent? No, no, no\u2019. I would have been ill. When the first opponent pulled out I probably would have been like, \u2018Listen, you there\u2019s no point in me boxing. I was focused on him\u2019.<\/p>\n

    \u201cBut, this is boxing, this is life. You get tossed curveballs like this and you've just got to deal with them.\u201d As well as a Kelly buoyed by the atmosphere of his hometown fans, Ramirez will be facing Kelly at his most mature. <\/p>\n

    \u201cI matured very late in life as well. Like, physically, I didn't get hair under my arms till I was, like, 16 or 17,\u201d he laughs. \u201cI was honestly such a baby. I've matured. I'm not killing myself in any way. I'm feeling like I'm growing into a solid 154 I need to take over. I need to do what I believe I can do and enjoy it."<\/p>\n

    Watch Josh Kelly vs Placido Ramirez, live on DAZN from 7pm on Saturday night<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n