The Long Goodbye

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Brett

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The Long Goodbye
Long Goodbye (2).png

The Long Goodbye will be a Comedy/Drama story written in chapters. The story will be written in first-person and document the final year for fictional wrestler, Danny Robinson. Danny is a thirty year veteran of the sport and has experienced every success and low that comes with it. No exceptions with his final year of wrestling, which will provide bizarre encounters and a struggle between heart, mind, and body ever present in the inevitable retirement of a professional wrestler. Will Danny be able to give his career a proper goodbye? Or will the current of age and time drown his desires?
 

Stojy

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Well, I'll basically follow anything you write at this point. Consider me interested, and good luck with this.
 

Brett

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The Long Goodbye
Prologue: One Good Year



I am… My name is…. Who am I?

Oh that’s right, Danny Robinson. Jesus Christ, the chairshots to the head are seriously taking their toll on me.

Well this is new for me. I’m fifty-two years old and for around fifty-two of those years; I have bottled up all of my feelings, thoughts, emotions -what have you- to have an iron sight on my ultimate goal.

Becoming the best professional wrestler I could be.

My therapist, who I have been seeing for about a month now, strongly suggested that I begin self-reflecting, journaling even. Essentially being present and processing who I am, what my legacy will be, and so on and so forth.

That’s why I’ve created you. I don’t know who you are or what you are, but I prefer self-reflecting in a way where I am having a conversation, I guess. I’m too old school to do a video log or whatever the hell these new kids are up to; but I guess this is my fake one and you are my viewer.
I guess you are me. Or I am you.

One of those.

Woah……

Sorry, weird fourth wall shit, let’s bury that for now.

The decision has been made; I can’t really remember when. But I CAN remember staring up at the bright lights in “The Pavillion”, and just sensing it’s time.

My body is not what it once was; hell not even my mind is. As much as I am able to be quick and witty with you right now. Getting my words out has always been a struggle for me. And you can imagine….. pro wrestler who stumbles over his words? I’ve had a real treat navigating this business with that as one of my glowing strengths. Age and maturity has not assisted in that effort. If anything, I struggle with word-finding more than ever.

And that night in the Pavillion is where the decision was made. It’s a vibe you get. A feeling. When you know not only are your better days behind you, but there’s only a select amount of good days left. Most wrestlers when they hit this phase, they bury it deep down. Whether that be coating it with shots of Jameson or finding some young chick to make them feel younger.

I’ve seen it all.

I don’t want to go out like that.

I won’t be retiring on top per se. I essentially make my work at this stage in my career at a local independent promotion. But hey…. It’s an honest living and my body can no longer take the long nights on the road going town to town, so truthfully I prefer this.

And there’s something personal and familial with a local indie.

The same families tend to show. The talent tends to stay the same. It really is like one big family.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I guess this is the part where I should introduce you to the circus.

And we will be keeping Kayfabe…

Yeah, let’s keep a little bit of dignity here. I’m not about to sit here and start rattling off government names. These people have ring names for a reason. You’ll get those, and that’s more than enough.

Besides… I don’t know if I even remember half their real ones.

So.

First up… we’ve got “The Booker.”

Real creative, I know.

Guy runs the whole operation. Owns it, books it, shapes it, whatever term you want to use to make it sound more legitimate than it is. You don’t see him much. Not at shows, not backstage, not anywhere you’d expect the guy in charge to actually be.

But then… out of nowhere… he’s there.

Leaning against a wall. Sitting in the back row. Standing in the ring after everyone’s cleared out. Doesn’t announce himself. Doesn’t need to.

And when he talks, people listen. Not because he’s loud. Not because he’s intimidating.

Just because… that’s just the way it is.

I’ve known a lot of “Bookers” in my life. Guys who needed you to know they were in charge.

This one doesn’t.

Don’t know if that makes him better… or worse. Who’s to say.

Then there’s “Bozo the Jester.”

…Jesus Christ.

I don’t like this guy.

Let’s just get that out of the way now.

He’s one of those clowns, literally and figuratively, who thinks the louder he is, the more he matters. Face paint, bells, the whole deal. But there’s something off about him that doesn’t feel like an act.

And I’ve been around long enough to tell the difference.

Crowd hates him. He leans into it. Good for business, I guess. That’s what everyone says. “He gets heat.”

Yeah… sure.

Some guys get heat because they’re good at what they do.

Some guys get heat because people genuinely want them to go away.

I’ll let you figure out which one he is.

“Sherry Cherry.”

Now there’s someone who doesn’t need smoke and mirrors.

Tough as nails. I mean that in the most literal sense. I’ve seen her take shots that would fold half the locker room and just… keep moving. No theatrics, no looking around for sympathy. Just gets back up and keeps going.

And yeah… she’s easy on the eyes.

Not gonna sit here and pretend otherwise. I’m fifty-two, not dead.

But that’s the thing, people see that first. They always do. And then about five minutes into a match, they stop seeing it entirely.

Because she’ll make you forget.

Real quick.

And then there’s Dalton “The Cowboy” Smith.

Yeah. He’s the guy.

Top of the card. Champion. The one they build the posters around, the one the kids line up to see, the one the parents actually trust to take a picture with their kid.

Good wrestler, too. Not just for this level. I mean… good.

But more than that… he’s a good man.

Which is rare.

We came up around the same time. Same roads. Same shitty drives, same locker rooms that smelled like sweat and regret. I’ve seen him when there were fifteen people in the crowd and half of them didn’t pay. And I’ve seen him close to the top.

He hasn’t changed much. And doesn’t aspire to be more than what he is.

That’s probably why he’s where he is.



We’re close.

Closer than I probably let on.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I could sit here all day and run through the cast of characters, but that would just waste the hell out of both of our times.

So…. yea, this will be my last full year in the sport.

I know what you are going to say… A wrestler and retirement is as sacred as a “final” tour from your dad’s favorite rock band.

So I’ve decided to do exactly that and make a tour out of it. There are still some boxes left to be crossed off from my career and truly; I would not keep that retirement sacred if I didn’t cross them off.

One last time as a champion…

One last time on TV…

An Iron-Man Match…

A Deathmatch…

Lastly, finding a protege to mentor and put over on my way out.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

So yeah… that’s the plan.

Or at least… that’s what I’m telling myself right now.

Plans have a funny way of changing in this business. Bodies give out. Opportunities don’t come.

But I’ve got one good year left in me. Maybe not good in the way it used to be. Not main eventing buildings or stealing shows. Just… good enough.

Good enough to mean something.

Good enough to walk away on my own terms… or at least close to it.

And if I forget why I’m doing all of this somewhere along the way… if I wake up one morning and can’t quite piece it together…

Well.

That’s why you’re here.

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The Long Goodbye
Chapter One: Finding the Words
My phone alarm goes off at 7:00. Not because I even need it to.

Just… habit.

I’m usually up before it. Eyes open, staring at the ceiling like I’m waiting for something to start. Like there’s supposed to be a moment where everything kicks into gear and I feel… I don’t know, purpose, urgency, something. But it never really comes.

So I let it ring for a second. Long enough to acknowledge it.

Then I turn it off and get up.

My place is small. It’s a Studio. One of those setups where you can stand in the middle of it and see your whole life without moving your head, which sounds depressing when you say it like that, but I’ve never really needed much space to begin with. Never had the time to enjoy it anyway.

But it’s clean.

Everything’s got a spot. Everything goes back to where it needs to be. Shoes lined up, gear bag tucked into the corner, kitchen counter wiped down like I’m expecting company at any moment.

I’m not expecting anyone.

Haven’t in a while.

Still… I keep it like that.

Control, I guess.

Or at the very least, the illusion of it. There’s something about the little wins of a clean room and a made bed that help you push through the day.

You make sure the mug is in the same place. The keys are always by the door. The bag is packed the same way every time.

Because if those things start moving…

Then what?


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Coffee. Always black.

Same mug. Don’t even remember where I got it from. Probably a show. Probably handed to me by someone I shook hands with, thanked, and forgot about ten minutes later.

I stand there while it brews like there’s something important about the process. Like I’m supervising it. Like if I turn my back for even a second, it’ll come out wrong and that’ll somehow set the tone for the rest of the day.

It never does.

It’s always the same.

I just… stand there anyway.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

There’s a mirror by the door.

Full body. Cheap thing. Slightly warped if you look at it too long, like it’s trying to tell you something you don’t really want to hear.

I don’t.

Quick glance. That’s it.

I don’t linger. Don’t check angles. Don’t turn sideways to see what’s changed, what’s gone, what’s hanging on by a thread.

Still standing.

Still upright.

That’s usually enough for me.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I’m at the door.

Keys in hand.

Don’t remember picking them up. Don’t remember walking over there. Don’t remember if I locked the window, turned the stove off, any of that stuff you’re supposed to double-check when you leave.

Happens more than I’d like.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I’m outside the Pavillion.

Don’t ask me about the drive. Couldn’t tell you. Same roads, same turns, same lights that I’m pretty sure I stopped at, but I wouldn’t swear to it if you put me under a bright light and told me to bet my life on it.

Muscle memory. You know that sensation where you could be on a long drive and all of a sudden you return to being sentient and you think, “How in the fuck have I been driving?? I’ve not been paying attention”. With my mundane lifestyle; that sensation is ever present.

Body knows what it’s doing even when the mind decides to take a little walk somewhere else.

And just like that… things start to come back into focus, like someone adjusted the lens without telling me.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

There’s already a line.

Families. Kids. A couple regulars I recognize right away, the kind that show up early to everything like they’re afraid the building’s gonna pack up and leave if they’re not there to witness it.

One of the kids spots me.

“Danny!”

That does it.

That’s the switch.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I straighten up a bit. Roll my shoulders, feel something crack that probably shouldn’t crack, and put something resembling a smile on my face.

“Hey, bud.”

Autographs. Handshakes. Pictures.

Same questions, same cadence, same rhythm like we’re all following a script that nobody ever wrote down but everyone somehow memorized anyway.

“You wrestling tonight?”

“No, just here to clean the bathrooms.”

That one usually gets a laugh.

Don’t know why.

I’ve been saying it for years.

Still works.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

A dad thanks me. Says his kid watches my matches on YouTube, says it like it means something bigger than it probably does, like I should feel proud or accomplished or… immortal, I guess. And hey, it is pretty neat that other people are profiting off my work.

I nod like that’s normal.

Like I didn’t come up in an era where if you weren’t there live, you didn’t see it. Period. No replays, no clips, no comments section telling you what you did right or wrong.

Different world. Not sure if it’s better. Not sure it matters.

Another kid asks if I’m gonna win tonight.

I tell him I’m gonna try.

That’s the honest answer.

He seems okay with it.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I slip inside. Door shuts behind me.

And just like that… the noise changes.

Outside, it’s excitement. Energy. Kids running around, parents yelling, tickets getting scanned, people trying to convince themselves they’re about to see something special.

Inside…

It’s quieter.

More honest.

The smell hits first.

Sweat. Tape. That faint metallic scent from the ring that never really goes away no matter how many times they wipe it down, like it’s soaked into the wood, into the canvas, into everything that’s ever happened in there.

Locker room’s already half full.

Guys stretching. Wrapping wrists. Sitting there staring off into nothing like they’re either about to go to war or fall asleep sitting up.

Someone nods at me.

I nod back.

No big greetings. No long conversations. You don’t need them at this stage. You see a guy enough times, you know where he’s at without asking. You can read it in how he’s taping his hands, how tight he’s lacing his boots, how long he sits there before moving. Check in about the finish and call the rest while we’re out there. It’s my favorite part of the gig.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I set my bag down in my usual spot.

Same chair.

Same corner.

Same routine.

If someone ever moved it, I don’t know what I’d do.

Probably freak the fuck out.

For a second… I just stand there.

Looking around.

Taking it in.

Trying to place myself in it, like I’m checking to make sure I still belong here, that I didn’t miss the moment where this all passed me by and nobody bothered to say anything.

Then I sit.

Start taping my hands.

Left first.

Always left first.

Don’t remember why.

Don’t question it either.

Some things you just let be.

And for the first time all day…

I feel like I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be.

However, tonight is different. Tonight is where I will announce to the faithful of “Elm Street Pro Wrestling” that I will be retiring in a year's time.

As you can tell I am a very regimented person; I love a routine.

Well… tonight is where that routine stops.

Not only will I be announcing to the crowd that I will be retiring in a year, but I will be making an effort to achieve both firsts and incredibly difficult goals along this final voyage in the pro wrestling waters.

Being comfortable with uncomfortability is something I have always struggled with. Yea sure, I wrestle in my underwear in front of hundreds of people, but that is something that has practically been ingrained into me at this point.

I don’t think about the words right away.

That’s usually a mistake.

Most guys… they pace. They rehearse. They run lines under their breath, tweak a sentence here, sharpen a line there so it hits just right when the crowd’s looking at them. They treat it like a performance.

And it is.

It’s just… not the part I ever cared about.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I’m sitting there with the tape half-wrapped around my wrist, just kind of holding it in place without pulling it tight, staring at nothing in particular and everything at the same time, trying to decide if this is something you prepare for… or something you just let happen when you get out there.

Because once you say it… that’s it.

There’s no walking it back. No “that came out wrong.” No pretending it was part of the show.

You tell people you’re done…

They hear you.

Even if you don’t fully believe it yet.

I run through it in my head anyway. Not word for word. Just… pieces. Fragments.

“I think it’s time.”

No. Too soft.

“I’ve decided…”

Too formal. Sounds like I’m reading off a piece of paper. I’ve never been that guy.

I press the tape down. Start over.

Left hand again.

Did I already start this one?



Yeah.

I did.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The thing nobody really tells you, at least not in a way that sticks, is that retirement in this business isn’t some clean, definitive line you cross. It’s not a finish. It’s not even really a decision most of the time.

It’s erosion.

Slow.

Quiet.

A match where you’re a step late. A bump that lingers a little longer than it should.

And then one day… you’re sitting in a folding chair, staring at your hands, trying to remember why you walked into the room in the first place, and you realize.

You’ve already started leaving.

You’re just the last one to see it.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I lean forward. Elbows on my knees.

Hands together.

Tape hanging loose.

If I say a year… that gives it shape.

Structure. You know I like that.

Something I can point to and say, “That’s the end.”

Even if it stretches. Even if it bends. Even if somewhere down the line I add another date, another match, another “one more time” because the crowd’s loud enough or the check clears or I just… don’t know what else to do with myself.

A year sounds honest. Sounds respectable. Sounds like something people can understand.

I try to picture the crowd when I say it. The regulars. The kids. The ones who’ve been here long enough to remember when I could actually go.

Do they get quiet?

Do they clap?

Do they look at each other like they’re not sure if it’s real?


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

And then there’s Dalton.

I don’t need to look to know where he is. I can feel it. Same room, couple chairs over, probably lacing his boots the same way he always does, tight, methodical, no wasted movement.

That part doesn’t sit right with me.

But if I tell him beforehand… it becomes real in a different way. Becomes a conversation. Becomes something that can be talked about, questioned, maybe even talked out of.

And I don’t know if I can afford that.

Not right now.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

“I’ve got one year left.”

That’s closer.

That sounds like something I’d actually say.

No fluff. No buildup.

Just… the truth.

Or at least the version of it I can live with.


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I pull the tape tight this time. Finish the wrap.

Finally.

Right hand next.

Always right after.

That part, at least, I still remember.

I sit there a little longer than I need to. Longer than I should. Letting it settle.

Because once I stand up…

Once the music hits…

Once I step through that curtain and feel that shift again, that familiar pull where everything tightens up and sharpens and suddenly I remember exactly who I am supposed to be.

There’s no more thinking.

No more rehearsing.

No more second-guessing whether I picked the right words.

I’ll just say it.

However it comes out.

And that’ll be the version that sticks.
 
Last edited:

Stojy

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Really enjoyable first entry. Love the voice you've captured for Danny here, was a good read. Especially the parts where there's insight given to the thought process of retirement and how it comes about for a pro wrestler. That was really great. This has set the scene nicely, looking forward to what comes next.
 
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The Long Goodbye
Chapter Two: Freebird

My music hits. Freebird by Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Yea I know what you’re going to say. Taking it from those other guys. Well I fucking love the song and it’s why I walk out to it.

I never knew why I did though because the best part never plays by the time I’m in the ring and the song shifts to my opponents.

Whatever.

That sound of those opening chords draw me to the ring like a moth to a flame. Familiar enough that my body recognizes it before my mind does, and before I know it, I'm already standing, walking a straight line to the ring.

The tape on my hands feels tighter now, like it’s constricting instead of supporting, like I wrapped it too hard. I’m not even wrestling tonight, so why’d I even do it. Force of habit, I guess.

I don’t look at anyone backstage as I walk. Sure as shit not gonna look Bozo's way.

I know the path. I’ve walked it enough times that I don’t need to see it anymore. Left turn, short hallway, curtain. There’s a flicker in the overhead light that I don’t remember being there before, a soft, stuttering buzz that feels just a little too loud, like it’s inside my head instead of above me.

I stop just short of the curtain.

Not because I’m nervous.

Just… because. Eh fuck it, I’m nervous.

There’s a voice behind me. Or maybe beside me.

“Don’t miss your cue.”

The fuck is this TV ?

I turn. Nobody there.

That’s fine. That happens.


______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The curtain feels heavier than it should when I push through it. Thicker. Like I’m walking through something that’s resisting me, something that doesn’t want to let go.

And then I’m out. Lights. Bright as hell.

They’ve always been bright, but the heat emanating from them tonight is certainly not making this any easier for me.

The crowd is there. I know they are. I can hear them.

They’re moving, shifting, but not in a way that lines up. Faces blur into each other, then snap back into place, then blur again. I see the same kid twice in two different spots. Or maybe it’s two different kids. Doesn’t matter. They’re watching. That part’s real.


______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

I step into the ring. There’s a moment, just a second, where I don’t feel the mat under my feet, like I’ve misjudged the step or the rope or something simple that I’ve done ten thousand times without thinking. My foot comes down and there’s nothing there, just air, just that split second of nothing.

Am I gonna pass out?

No, I'm fine. Just, relax.

Fucking anxiety man.

I’m so thankful to have you.

Not anxiety.

You.

To actualize my inner thoughts and feelings. Do you see what I am seeing? Do you feel the anxiety that I feel?

Because I can hardly fucking breathe right now and looking out into a sea of judgmental faces is the last thing I need.


______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The microphone is now in my hand. I don’t remember picking it up or was it handed to me?

That’s fine too. That happens.

I look out.

There’s a man in the front row clapping at a steady rhythm and chanting my name. It doesn’t match anything else, not the crowd, not the music that I think has stopped, not my heartbeat.

"Danny..... Danny..... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob"

Alright, we get it man.

Same guy does it every show.

He doesn’t stop.

Some noise is better than no noise in this business though.

I bring the mic up. It feels heavier than it should. Same as the curtain. Everything feels heavier than it should.

“I....”

My voice cuts through. I swallow. Try again Danny, you tongue twisted fuck.

“I’ve been doing this a long time.”

That sounds right. That sounds like something I’d say.

There’s a laugh somewhere in the crowd.

I stop.

Because I don’t.

Not right now.

Not in this moment.

I thought I did.

Backstage, sitting in that chair, wrapping my hands, it all made sense. It had weight to it. Structure. Beginning, middle, end.

Now it feels like I walked into the middle of something I wasn’t prepared for.

The man in the front row is still chanting, maybe even louder now.

Same rhythm. Hasn’t missed a beat.

Danny... Danny... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob

I shift my weight. The ring creaks. The ropes move without me touching them, just slightly, like someone brushed against them on the other side. I glance over. Nobody’s there. That’s fine. That happens.

“I’ve got… one year left.”

There it is. It comes out flat. Not dramatic. Not powerful.

Just… placed there. The crowd reacts. I think they do. It sounds like they do.

But it’s distant. Muffled. Like I’m hearing it from backstage instead of standing in the middle of it. The sound rises, but it doesn’t reach me. It just kind of hangs there, above everything, out of reach. It's a bittersweet reaction, as I should have expected. Do you cheer or do you boo?

One year.

That means something. Means something to me. It’s supposed to.

I try to feel it. I try to connect to it the way I did before, when it felt like a decision, like a line in the sand instead of… whatever this is.

“I’m gonna… make the most of it.”

That’s not what I planned to say. But it fits.

The lights flicker.

For a second, everything drops out.

The crowd, the ring, the sound, everything just kind of… blinks. And in that blink, I’m somewhere else.

A hallway. White walls. A chair. Someone talking to me.

I can’t hear the words.

Then I’m back.

That's fine. That happens.

Same spot. Same ring. Same man chanting. Still hasn’t stopped.

“I’m not gonna drag it out.”

That’s close enough. That sounds right. I look down at my hands. The tape is tighter now. Or maybe my hands are bigger. That doesn’t make sense.

You know what, fuck this.

I take one deep breath and......


“I’ve been doing this a long time. Long enough to know the difference between a truth and a lie…

long enough to know when you’re lying to yourself.

And I’ve done that. More than I’d like to admit. Told myself I had another run in me, another level, another gear I could reach if I just pushed a little harder, trained a little harder, studied more, ate correctly, you name it.

I told myself that because that’s what you do in this business. You convince yourself the end is never today. Somewhere further down the road. Something you’ll deal with later.

But later… has a way of showing up early.

And when it does, it doesn’t knock. It doesn’t offer you a speech to tell. It doesn’t wait for you to be ready. It just stands there, right in front of you, and asks you a very simple question that nobody ever wants to answer honestly.

‘How much do you really have left?’

Not how much you used to have. Not what you can still fake on a good night. Not what the crowd remembers you being.

What you have. Right now.

And for the first time in my life… I answered that question without dressing it up, without protecting my ego, without pretending I’m something I’m not anymore.

And the answer was… enough.

Just enough. A years' worth of enough.

Enough to finish this the right way. Enough to stand here, look all of you in the eye, and tell you the truth without hiding behind the character, without hiding behind the noise, without hiding behind anything that made this harder than it needed to be.

That is why I don't stand before you today putting in my retirement papers.

I've got one year left.

One year to do this the way it deserves to be done.

One year to chase the things I didn’t get to.

One year to stand across from whoever wants to test me and find out, in real time, exactly what’s still there and what isn’t.

One year to hurt, to heal, to wake up the next morning and question why I’m still doing it… and then do it anyway.

Because that’s what this is.

It’s not wins and losses.

It’s not titles and posters and who gets their name at the top of the card.

That stuff fades. It always does.

What doesn’t fade is the feeling. The moment. The connection between you and the people watching you give everything you have left.

Knowing damn well it might not be enough, and choosing to do it anyway.

And it's you the people who give me that energy.

That’s what I’m holding onto. That’s what I refuse to let slip away quietly into the night.

So no… this isn’t a goodbye. Not yet.

I’m not asking for your sympathy. I’m not asking for your applause. I’m not asking you to treat me any differently than you did last weekend.

I’m asking you to watch.

Watch what happens when a man stops lying to himself.

Watch what happens when there’s nowhere left to hide, when every match matters because you know there aren’t many of them left.

Watch what happens when the only thing keeping you going isn’t what you were… it’s what you still might be, even for just one night.

You’re gonna see me at my best.

You’re gonna see me at my worst.

And by the time the year is over… you’re gonna know exactly which one showed up more.

Because I promise you this, I’m not walking out of here wondering.

I’m not leaving anything behind because I was too scared to reach for it.

And when it’s all said and done… when that last night comes and I’m standing in this ring for the final time…

I’ll know.

Whether I really had enough.

Or if I was just pretending the whole time.”

Woah.

And as I finish, the crowd in unison chants.


Danny... Danny... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob

Danny... Danny... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob

Danny... Danny... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob

Danny... Danny... Danny 'Fuckin' Rob
 
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Stojy

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Another good entry here, setting the scene. Makes sense for Danny to be anxious about the retirement promo. I think you capture the anxiety really well within your writing, but all the questions, concerns to himself, that anxiety could get grading to read if it's the same in every entry.

Still, a solid chapter two, and now that the retirement announce has been made looking forward to following the final twelve months of Danny's career.