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NewsKeith Lee Comments On Dealing With Post-COVID 19 Health Issues, More

Keith Lee Comments On Dealing With Post-COVID 19 Health Issues, More

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During a recent appearance on the “Out of Character” podcast, Keith Lee commented on dealing with post-COVID 19 health issues, not knowing if his pro wrestling career was over, and more. You can check out some highlights from the podcast below:

On his experience dealing with post-COVID health issues: “I wasn’t feeling bad, originally. There were things going on that I didn’t really understand but I just took them as potential…the problem is with COVID is, no one really knows what’s going on. It’s a trial and error situation and everyone is experiencing different things and sometimes the after-effects hit people differently, COVID hits people differently, and for some people, it doesn’t really hit at all. In my case, I assumed I would be fine. I tested positive, give me a couple of weeks, and we’ll get back to what we gotta do. I came back after three weeks and I had the match with Riddle, and the next day I got a call saying there was something odd in my blood, which gave the idea that there was inflammation and that led to multiple MRIs and really uncomfortable machines that jammed up this shoulder. At the time, yes, I felt things that were odd, but I didn’t understand them to be that. I just assumed, because other people were having different scenarios that were odd post-COVID, that maybe it was going to take me a little longer to get back to normal, right?

“I didn’t feel abnormal, but there were small things that felt odd. One MRI passed and it was, ‘Give it a week or two and we’ll do another.’ The second one was worse and that’s what led to, ‘We need you to not work out and not do anything until we figure this out.’ Then it became very uncomfortable because I knew what the potential endgame could be, I wasn’t telling my family, I wasn’t telling Mia [Yim] because it’s something that’s not in our control and something that I didn’t want them to stress about. It was kind of a personal battle that I just took on my own and for the most part, I stayed quiet regardless of the just absurd amount of messages. I’m not sure what it is about people thinking that their demands should be met and knowing what’s going on in my personal life. I’m generally a pretty private person. It took me a long time to be okay with sharing what was going on because it was my own personal fight and I wanted to fight it. There was nothing more important than fighting it. To this day, I still have some friends over a year later suffering from effects that are post-COVID.”

On being able to return to the ring and thinking his wrestling career was over: “At the end of the day, I’m just grateful that I was able to come back and be back in the ring because that fourth or fifth MRI, where I had to go to Pittsburgh, I was resigned to the fact that my career was done. I was just ready to be like, ‘Okay, I guess it’s time to pursue some other projects that I have an interest in.’ Then I got some good news. It took a lot of work to come back because when you’re a 330 or 340-pound athlete, the amount of training and power and explosiveness it takes to be a guy that’s 330 or 340 and does backflips. Five months of being out of the ring. Then, coming back out of nowhere and five weeks of just dying [laughs]. Trying to come back it was like, ‘Oh, God, how have I not trained a thing?’ And then I come back and trying to just cardio everything and get back to normal, and normal, I didn’t know what it was anymore, so it was very strange. But now, I can get back and have higher intensity workouts, so it was nice to feel like, ‘Okay, I’m about where I feel I should be.’ But I still feel like there’s work to be done. As we say, the grind continues and I will keep on grinding.”

(h/t – 411 Wrestling)

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