Breaking Free From Dissociative Identity Disorder With A Superstar Athlete!

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He"s a vegetarian who eats one meal per day with no snaking. He sleeps only 4 hours per night. He admits to never having had a sip of alcohol. His daily workout consists of no weights at all. This is what he has done nearly every day or 30 years:

Push Ups: 2,000 reps
Sit Ups: 3,000 reps
Pull Up: 1,500 reps
Dips: 1,000 reps
Squats: 1,000 reps
Plus various sprinting and running programs.

As you can see this is not your average guy.

He is widely considered the second greatest college football player ever. He also had an historic professional football career and he even competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics in the two-man bobsled, finishing seventh. Now, at the age of 48 he is completing against fighters half his age in the octagon of professional Mixed Marshall Arts. Yet, to all but devout football or fitness fanatics he is largely unknown.

He is Herschel Walker. He played running back for the University of Georgia from 1980-1982. He won the Heisman Trophy in his junior year of 1982. In 1983 he found himself on the bizarre side of professional football history which is something he would repeat a few times throughout his career. Walker saw an opportunity to do something that was forbidden by the NFL at the time. This was to turn professional after the end of his junior college season and not wait the full four years for his collegiate class to graduate which was the NFL"s rule. However, Herschel was not planning to play in the NFL.

In 1983 a new renegade professional football league called the USFL (United Stated Football League) was taking shape and aiming to eventually compete with the NFL. However, the USFL did not have the same rules for players coming out of college earlier to play professionally and they were in need of an instant superstar. So, who better than the current Heisman Trophy winner and one of the greatest college players of all time?

Herschel quickly signed on to be the running back for the USFL"s New Jersey Generals as well as the leagues golden child. He did not disappoint. From 1983-1985 he was the USFL"s standout player. However, the league folded and closed its doors after just three seasons of play. So what happens to the star of the league when there is no league?

Do not forget that Herschel was an incredible talent. Yet, the only other game in town was the NFL and he had just snubbed them a few years earlier. But, he was still a stud running back known for his near freakish speed, strength, and durability. It was to much for the NFL to ignore. Herschel was signed and played with the Dallas Cowboys and again he did not disappoint by becoming one of the premier running backs in the league. However, as Herschel staked his claim as one of the best running backs in the NFL, the Cowboys started a decent into substandard overall play. They finished the 1988 season with a meager 3-13 record.

What followed in the 1988 season was another extremely odd sequence of events that has come to shape Herschel"s professional career. In 1989 the Dallas Cowboys and the Minnesota Vikings engaged in an epic trade that would ultimately shape the next decade of the NFL. The Cowboys traded Herschel to the Vikings for 5 current players and 6 future draft picks. That is a total of 11 players for 1! The trade rocked the sports world and transformed the NFL. The Dallas Cowboys proceeded to use those 11 new players to build what would become a football dynasty that would rule the NFL for most of the 1990"s.

During the Cowboys success Herschel languished as a dreadfully underused talent in Minnesota. He was nearly a perfect physical specimen in the fact that he was too fast to be as strong as he was and although he played the most punishing position in Football he was almost never injured. Some experts say that he was just so different that it made fitting him into a pre-established football system very difficult.

To further express just how special Herschel"s abilities are in 1992 he randomly
made the U.S. Olympic two-man bobsled team even though he never practiced it before going to the tryouts and finished in seventh place. Then, he simply returned to professional football like it was his day job to play out four undervalued seasons in the NFL with three different teams. It seemed no one (including Herschel) could figure out how to optimize his unique skillset.

Finally, after his playing career was over Herschel left football behind. He rarely did interviews and he almost never appeared on television like many other ex-athletes do. I was always intrigued by this and could never fully wrap my mind around Herschel and his football career. He had it all, but there always seemed to be something that didn"t add up. He was as fast as lightening, stronger than an ox, and he never seemed to be injured. Plus he was always very soft spoke, deeply religious, and never got into any trouble. You would figure that would be a coach"s dream player, right?

Well after all these years Herschel has recently written a book titled, "Breaking Free." In the book he chronicles his lifelong struggle with "Dissociative Identity Disorder" which is better known as Multiple Personality Disorder. In his darkest hours he talks about how he played Russian Roulette pulling the trigger not once, but twice! He also admitted to causing the end of his marriage due in part to holding a gun to his wife"s head. These near tragedies along with not remembering a lot of his athletic accomplishments has helped inspired him to seek treatment and to now release his deeply interpersonal book.

Herschel also mentions that he believes many individuals are misdiagnosed with Bipolar or Schizophrenia when they actually have Dissociative Identity Disorder. He states that he has overcome his disorder with the help of therapy and faith and that he does not take any medication.

Some people may consider Herschel"s professional football career a mild disappointment considering his potential. However, if you were to add together his stats from both the USFL and the NFL he stands right up there with the all time greats. And he complied all of those numbers while battling a terrifying mental disorder. I think that ranks Herschel Walker in a category beyond football statistics.

I think before all is said and done Herschel will eclipse his on field victories with the invisible trophies he is going to receive for helping all of the people out there who are also suffering from Dissociative Identity Disorder. There was a reason that the gun did not go off when he was playing Russian Roulette. I think his book "Break Free" and the help it will bring just might be that reason.

As is true with all of us we never truly know what we will be known for because we are always evolving. The dye is never cast on our lives even after we are gone. For example take all of the famous artists or poets throughout history who were largely misunderstood in their own time; only to be fully appreciated by future generations. Herschel probably thought that he was put on this earth to inspire people through his athletic feats. Yet, those feats may only be the starting point for a much larger and profound influence that he will leave behind.

Take heart and remember that we are all leaving a much deeper impact on this world than we are aware of at this time. Be focused, stay the course, and keep your mind sharp as your invisible trophies sparkle all around you.


About the Author:
Positive Thinking For Mental Health - Author Joe DePalma is a positive thought writer, musician, and speaker who is collecting the very best positive thinking tools for RISING to the top at ReadySetRise.com!

Positive Success For Healing - Joe is also the President of the #1 Positive Success Website called ReadySetRise.com!



Article Originally Published On: http://www.articlesnatch.com


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