The following is a true story that happened to a person I know very well. I remember when I was in the sixth grade and all my friends where playing sports. I was sitting on the sidewalk pissed because I wasn’t picked to play on either team. This was a pattern that repeated itself for years before I made a promise to myself that not only was I going to get picked to play the games, but I was going to do it on the biggest venue that sports had to offer—the NFL football field.

I grew up in a tough, blue collar town in southeastern Massachusetts. As a young person, I wasn’t very athletic. I was very out of shape and had the self-esteem of a wallflower at the high school dance. I wanted to be good at something, anything! For years, I was ridiculed and made fun of. I wanted to take it out on everyone. At this point, you’re probably thinking, did this kid go postal? Not really. I needed an outlet and weight training became my obsession. I had this activity that combined dedication, discipline, and intensity to let out all my excess energy.

I loved it. I trained as hard as I could, and when I was exhausted, I trained a little more. I loved pushing myself and gaining strength. I committed all my free time to getting my body in top shape. When all the other kids were pounding beers and smoking up, I chose training.

Finally, it came time for me to channel this training into actual performance. Growing up, I loved football. I watched as much as possible and pictured myself making the plays I saw on television and in videos. I thought about making plays all the time, 24/7. It consumed me. Football became my thing. I could run full speed and smack someone in the mouth. Not only did I not get in trouble, but I was rewarded with a high five. This was an amazing feeling, the kind of feeling that I couldn’t get enough of and it always left me wanting more.

When I wasn’t playing football, I occupied my fire with weight training. I had to do something to release my rage. I followed one rule—go as hard as humanly possible and hit everything that moves. I planned on joining the Marines out of high school, but that plan fell apart once I was offered a full scholarship to play ball at a great school. I ended up starting as a redshirt freshman and a 235-lb defensive tackle. If you don’t know anything about football, that’s really small. I had an amazing head coach who believed in me enough to stick with me as a starter.

Eventually, I learned some pass rush skills, and my strength went through the roof. I gained some weight and played at 255 lbs. I loved my athletic advantage over the opposing offense linemen. I racked up some great stats, and along with a great coaching staff and tough ass teammates, we went from 2-9 to 9-2 with a conference championship. NFL scouts came through the school and wanted a look at the undersized All-American. I ended up getting drafted by the New York Jets and bounced around the league for a few years. Crazy how lifting weights sparked this once in a lifetime opportunity.

Every now and then, I wonder what my life would’ve been like if I hadn’t picked up that first set of dumbbells. Maybe I would’ve remained shy, out of shape, and lazy. What if drinking became my vice instead of training? Who knows if I would even be alive? I’m so thankful that I stuck it out in that weight room and continue to train today. It absolutely made me who I am.

Marc Megna
Tagged: Motivation

EliteFTS Table Talk— Where strength meets truth. Hosted byDave Tate, Table Talk cuts through the noise to bring raw, unfiltered conversations about training, coaching, business, and life under the bar. No fluff. No hype. Just decades of experience — shared to make you stronger in and out of the gym.

Join the Crew!

Support us and access premium content monthly!