I’ve been going to this boxing gym and training every week. And everyone there is fighting something You can see in their Eyes They’re punching their dad Or they’re punching Whoever their wife is sleeping with Or they're punching Their kids who ignore them Or they’re punching Themselves. Their boss Their job Their alcohol problem Their poverty And every week we get to fight our problems together And we’re exploding inside. What? You can’t fight your problems? It’s not only that I can. I will. And do. Because crying alone isn’t good enough Because all that fire you build up inside you has to go somewhere Or it’ll burn you alive. So you throw it into the heavy bag Or into the guy you’re sparring Or into the ground you run on.
We’re all fighting something So what about you? What are you fighting that’s so ******* important? No, don’t tell me. Tell that heavy bag. He listens. He listens when your wife doesn’t give a **** He listens when it doesn’t even matter Tell these padded mitts. That one-two punch says more than a twenty-four volume encyclopedia And speaks more concisely than Churchill or Hemmingway or Ghandi ever did. Don’t tell me how it feels. Don’t even try. Let that punching bag know. Because you know he’s listening. And he doesn’t have anything else more important to do.