I never get nervous before a show, but I get nervous when we come to Scotland.

For me, the big target is to get into the Hall of Fame, but I'd like to win the heavyweight title first.

Wrestling is my life, and if I'm not training or in the gym, then I'm watching videos to learn more about it.

The fans in Scotland are great, but in New York, the fans are also great: they are mental.

Aleister Black - we've battled in the past, across the world. I've enjoyed his build, to watch his evolution as well.

I moved from home in Scotland to home in WWE, and that was the first time being out on my own in my life.

There's so much more to being a 'top guy' than what you see on screen that I really learned.

Wrestling equals ratings. It seems sometimes that TV stations don't like to make money.

I've wrestled since I was 15 years old, and it's the one thing that I know I do very well.

I went through ups and downs in this business and in life, and when I was released by WWE in 2014, I knew I had a wealth of knowledge and an opportunity.

Promoters believed in me and gave me a platform, and then the fans started believing in me. It went from me trying to show the fans what I was all about to growing companies around the world. I got to be the face of so many companies, like EVOLVE and Insane Championship Wrestling in Scotland.

I think that a lot of people forget they're in WWE and get complacent.

I built my business, and WWE brought my business in. I want to be successful in my business and, in turn, make WWE successful.

I want to take that top spot in WWE, and I'm gunning for number one.

I became one of the top wrestlers outside of WWE in the world, and it all happened because I started giving it my everything.

I tell people that the best thing that can ever happen to you is getting fired, and you can either sink or swim, and I swam like hell. The reason why I swam the way I swam was because there was nothing else for me.

All I know is professional wrestling and sports entertainment. This is all I know, and I wanted to give it everything that I had.

I was a big fan of Bret Hart growing up, and Shawn Michaels, the Undertaker, Triple H. I've probably drawn from them when I was younger.

The big thing for me is no longer is trying to impress people around me.

I wanted to look in the mirror and be accountable to only one person. The only person is me, and that's the only thing that drives me. The only person I'm in competition with is myself.

When it comes to the southern states, I used to actually live in Louisiana for a year.

The first ever VHS I ever owned, my brother and I, was WrestleMania VII. We watched that thing to bits - I think the tape chewed itself up.

You can't just be the same character forever. You've got to add some layers, show some personality.

Being a Paul Heyman Guy wouldn't be such a bad thing!

I was a big Hart Foundation guy as a kid. Bret was my favorite wrestler. I loved their dynamic.

The goal is become the top person on 'Raw,' the example on 'Raw,' the John Cena, the ultimate workhorse of 'Raw.'

I feel like an eagle eye when I watch my fellow talent because I believe in grass roots, putting 100 percent in when the camera is on or not on.

The live events are more interactive for the fans. With TV, you have the cameras there, commercial breaks where the fans can tell there's a down moment. At the live events, it's non-stop. We get to play with the audience; the crowd gets to get involved a little more. It's a very intimate feel.

I treat everyone how I would like to be treated, and I try to treat this industry and this job with the respect it deserves.

To win the Royal Rumble, you don't want to go over the top rope, obviously. But game-play-wise, hopefully you draw a later number.

Undertaker, right up until his last day, was working full time constantly, even when he was beat up, had fire in his eyes. If he couldn't walk, he was flying around, and he was The Undertaker in every way. That was such an inspiration.

We have a pandemic of childhood trauma.

The road to sobriety is not easy and rehabilitation and the recovery process are not to be taken lightly.

Narcissism is not about self love. It's a clinical trait that belies a deep sense of emptiness, low self-esteem, emotional detachment, self-loathing, extreme problems with intimacy.

Patrick Melrose' is a frantically accurate exploration of the addict mind tormented by trauma, magnificently brought to life by Benedict Cumberbatch. At its core, it is a story that has a timeless quality with echoes of Cervantes.

Childhood trauma is really what puts the rocket fuel behind addiction.

I don't want people to think I'm exploiting my followers.

Narcissism is the result of longstanding behavioral patterns that reflect fixed brain functioning. It requires a lot of motivation to change these patterns.

An intervention is much more than telling someone they have a problem in a unified fashion; treatment options should be in place.

All medicine is gradations and differences and nuances. And there's such a thing as natural recovery: people spontaneously get better. It happens.

I'm deeply involved in big problems.

I'm too busy to block everyone on Twitter.

Secrets keep addicts ill and cost lives.

I have a pretty keen ethical compass.

I, myself, have not infrequently come across recovering addicts years later that I had given up on. It is like seeing a ghost come to life. The transformations can be astonishing.

Addiction has a worse prognosis than most cancers. I tell someone they have cancer and they want to be airlifted to a cancer treatment center; I tell someone they have an addiction and they're going to die and they want to argue with me about the treatment.

The way people get hooked on fame... it can behave very much like an addiction.

Treatment of alcohol addiction can take many forms.

In terms of establishing a connection between a therapist and a patient, that work needs to be done in person.

What motivates most people to change their behavior is consequences. No consequences? No behavior modification.