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I want to be a UFC champion

Shadoweagle4039

New member
Joined
Nov 16, 2024
Messages
19
Hey guys. I've been training and studying martial arts for about 4 years, about the same time I found and joined the ToZ (JoS at that time). I've always felt that the two paths went hand in hand for me. At times when I've doubted my spirituality or power, I've found answers through martial arts. Training and fighting has pushed me to do certain workings and progress closer to the gods and in power.
My ultimate goal in this life is to go as far as I can in martial arts, and competing just seems to be along My path, because of my comps I come to rely and draw closer to the gods.
I still do have doubts and concerns however. I seem to doubt myself and not REALLY believe it. I am actively competing in amateur comps, training, and doing meditations as well as warfare for the gods, so I'm putting in the work physically not just spiritually. And I do feel empowered and like I'm on the right path.
However doubts and insecurities always creep into my mind, can I really do this?
Will all my meditations and workings to become a champion really come true?? Do I really feel the blessings of my gods with my activities?? It all feels so far off still. For some reason, I always have these doubts, but I can't stop pursuing this course, i feel like its for a purpose. But for what, i dont know. Am i delusional? I'm 25 yrs old and I really really hope being a ufc champion is possible.
 
Hey guys. I've been training and studying martial arts for about 4 years, about the same time I found and joined the ToZ (JoS at that time). I've always felt that the two paths went hand in hand for me. At times when I've doubted my spirituality or power, I've found answers through martial arts. Training and fighting has pushed me to do certain workings and progress closer to the gods and in power.
My ultimate goal in this life is to go as far as I can in martial arts, and competing just seems to be along My path, because of my comps I come to rely and draw closer to the gods.
I still do have doubts and concerns however. I seem to doubt myself and not REALLY believe it. I am actively competing in amateur comps, training, and doing meditations as well as warfare for the gods, so I'm putting in the work physically not just spiritually. And I do feel empowered and like I'm on the right path.
However doubts and insecurities always creep into my mind, can I really do this?
Will all my meditations and workings to become a champion really come true?? Do I really feel the blessings of my gods with my activities?? It all feels so far off still. For some reason, I always have these doubts, but I can't stop pursuing this course, i feel like its for a purpose. But for what, i dont know. Am i delusional? I'm 25 yrs old and I really really hope being a ufc champion is possible.
Go for it!

A quote that I’ve learned to be true recently is, “You want it so bad because you already have it in the future.”

Succeed and work on achieving your dreams full throttle.
 
Becoming a UFC Champion is probably the hardest achievement in combat sports right now.
Because there are so many aspects to MMA and some people are doing nothing else than train, eat, sleep and compete every day since their childhood.
Also you have to be a 100% mentally, because if you are not, your opponent probably will be.
 
Never doubt a working. Believe in yourself! You can do this! Go get your gold medals, Champion! :)
 
Mars Squares+Jupiter Squares, if you are advanced enough, will help a lot
 
I honestly look forward to a future when Zevists occupy the highest spots in society, and not the jews. Especially if you are going to beat the shit out of them 😂 go for it!As far as i know, everything is possible.
 
Hey guys. I've been training and studying martial arts for about 4 years, about the same time I found and joined the ToZ (JoS at that time). I've always felt that the two paths went hand in hand for me. At times when I've doubted my spirituality or power, I've found answers through martial arts. Training and fighting has pushed me to do certain workings and progress closer to the gods and in power.
My ultimate goal in this life is to go as far as I can in martial arts, and competing just seems to be along My path, because of my comps I come to rely and draw closer to the gods.
I still do have doubts and concerns however. I seem to doubt myself and not REALLY believe it. I am actively competing in amateur comps, training, and doing meditations as well as warfare for the gods, so I'm putting in the work physically not just spiritually. And I do feel empowered and like I'm on the right path.
However doubts and insecurities always creep into my mind, can I really do this?
Will all my meditations and workings to become a champion really come true?? Do I really feel the blessings of my gods with my activities?? It all feels so far off still. For some reason, I always have these doubts, but I can't stop pursuing this course, i feel like its for a purpose. But for what, i dont know. Am i delusional? I'm 25 yrs old and I really really hope being a ufc champion is possible.
More you do for Satan, more He will do for you. Look, i recommend you watch videos on youtube from this guy: https://www.youtube.com/@PrinceVegetaMotivation
do what this man tolds you to in videos.
Also look this: https://www.youtube.com/@FarFromWeakFFW
You are doing RIGHT when you also do this things for Satan and at the same time you train. And i believe you will go far in MMA :). I also wanted be MMA fighter years ago, just i didnt chosed this path. When you become a UFC champion... remember us! :) Train HARD brother!
 
I'm surprised by the amount of support everyone has shown, and it's very reassuring. Thank you so much for the kind words and motivation it really means a lot. It seems like I should have more faith! May everyone be blessed
 
I honestly look forward to a future when Zevists occupy the highest spots in society, and not the jews. Especially if you are going to beat the shit out of them 😂 go for it!As far as i know, everything is possible.
Haha very much agreed. I would absolutely love to be the tool that dishes out karma to my Jewish enemies.
Thanks!!
 
More you do for Satan, more He will do for you. Look, i recommend you watch videos on youtube from this guy: https://www.youtube.com/@PrinceVegetaMotivation
do what this man tolds you to in videos.
Also look this: https://www.youtube.com/@FarFromWeakFFW
You are doing RIGHT when you also do this things for Satan and at the same time you train. And i believe you will go far in MMA :). I also wanted be MMA fighter years ago, just i didnt chosed this path. When you become a UFC champion... remember us! :) Train HARD brother!
Thanks ill definitely check those vids out. All of us are connected in the ToZ so how could I ever forget???
 
You may benefit from self-hypnosis to increase your self-confidence, and from mental exercises to increase your awareness of the roots of your low confidence, so you can work on ironing them out one by one.

If you don't have one already, I would also recommend investing in one-on-one work with a strength & conditioning coach. Someone with a wealth of experience training professional fighters is the best choice, not just randos without experience and with only theoretical knowledge. Find one that you vibe with, and work with him. Working on your own, unless you're genius in these things won't help you become a champion. Working with someone for that side of training also takes a load of stress off your shoulders, as you won't have to plan your own training routines, but you can just follow what they ask you to do. Other than relieving stress, it also saves you time, which is a valuable resource.
 
Mars Squares+Jupiter Squares, if you are advanced enough, will help a lot
Jupiter seems more related to abbundance when you have a solid base, in regard of big ammount of money Saturn is one of the most important, since it's the whole where everything is based on.
 
Is it really normal for us to encourage a brother to pursue this career? It may seem like a good ambition to some, but he could sustain injuries that would impede his spiritual growth. I wanted to ask for more insights on this so I can expand my understanding. Maybe I am being too pretentious.

Here is my back-and-forth with Grok.

List the most common ufc/mma injuries, short and concise answer
Here are the most common UFC/MMA injuries, based on studies of professional fights and training:
• Facial lacerations/cuts (often the #1 injury, especially around eyes, brows, and mouth)
• Hand/wrist injuries (fractures, sprains, metacarpal breaks from striking)
• Nose injuries (fractures, breaks, bleeding)
Concussions / head trauma
• Eye injuries (orbital fractures, swelling, retinal damage)
• Sprains/strains (ankles, knees, shoulders — very frequent in training)
• Fractures (hands, feet, facial bones, ribs)
• Contusions/bruising (body and head)
• Cauliflower ear (chronic from grappling/ear trauma)
• Knee injuries (ligament tears — ACL, MCL — common in takedowns/defense)
Lacerations and hand injuries top most competition studies, while sprains/strains and joint issues dominate training.
What about internal changes that aren't visible? Is there documentation about possible brain damage or cognitive problems from being hit repeatedly? Short and concise answer.
Yes, repeated head impacts in UFC/MMA cause internal brain changes that are often invisible externally. Key documented risks include:

• Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) — a progressive degenerative brain disease linked to repetitive head trauma; confirmed in at least one MMA fighter postmortem (Jordan Parsons, 2016); suspected in many others based on symptoms.
• Brain volume loss — especially in thalamus, cortex, and other regions; associated with higher exposure to repetitive head impacts (Professional Fighters' Brain Health Study).
• Cognitive impairments — progressive decline in executive function, processing speed, memory, attention, and verbal learning; seen in longitudinal studies of active and retired fighters.
• Other effects — slower processing, behavioral/mood changes (irritability, depression), and potential stabilization or partial recovery after fighters stop competing.

Multiple peer-reviewed studies (e.g., from Cleveland Clinic, UNLV, Neurology journal, MDPI) on professional fighters confirm these risks from subconcussive and concussive blows, with sparring contributing significantly.
How common is it for UFC/MMA fighters to suffer any of these injuries? What's the overall percentage? What's the percentage of UFC/MMA fighters that undergo surgery?
Injuries are very common in UFC/MMA, especially among professionals.
• Competition injury rates: Studies show 23–29% of fights result in at least one documented injury (e.g., 28.6 per 100 fight participations in early UFC data; 40–57% of bouts involve injury in recent state commission reviews). Overall incidence is often ~23–51 injuries per 100 athlete exposures (one fighter per fight = 2 exposures).

• Overall percentage for fighters: Most professional fighters sustain multiple injuries over their careers. Training injuries far outnumber competition ones (often 3x+ more), with pros averaging ~11 injuries per fighter in surveys (vs. ~3 for amateurs). Virtually all long-career UFC fighters deal with nagging or serious injuries.

• Surgery percentage: No single overall figure exists for all UFC/MMA fighters, but orthopedic surgeries (e.g., ACL reconstruction, hand/wrist, shoulder, knee) are frequent. For specific injuries like ACL tears, return-to-sport studies show many fighters undergo surgery and compete again (e.g., ~81% return for at least 1 fight post-ACLR). Anecdotally and from fighter reports, a substantial portion (likely 30–50%+ of veterans) require major surgery at some point due to cumulative damage.

Head trauma remains a top concern, with high rates in fights (e.g., 28–46% end in KO/TKO in some.

So, I have a few questions.

1 - Are we assuming that he will receive protection from the Gods and he won't receive any of these injuries, at least to the degree that will impede his spiritual advancement?

2 - He will endure the injuries, but maybe him walking this path and overcoming trials will allow him to be more "disciplined," so after he retires, he will heal with the help of the Gods and can continue his spiritual advancement? Is this a viable scenario?

To be honest, when I opened this thread and read its replies, it was really thought provoking, because many well known members encouraged him to strive for his goal, which didn't sound rational to me at all, so I wanted to post this and get insights, so this way I can expand my worldview and understanding.

Spiritual advancement comes first, and our physical advancement should be in harmony with our spiritual advancement, no? I think getting brain damage is very counterproductive to our main goal here.

I am not saying by any means that we should over concern about any harm and be soycucks, training martial arts in safe grounds vs. actually fighting for no reason is very distinct things, and I argue that the latter one is very idiotic and doesn't align with our path.

These are my thoughts, and again, I am only looking for more insights, because my understanding might be lacking, and posting this is the only way to find out. Thank you in advance, and Hail Zeus!
 
If you truly deeply want this, then you should go for it and become a champion. Do not doubt yourself, as you can do self hypnosis, many different meditations and with the awareness meditations as well to gain a sharper focus and gain significant confidence as a being.

Nothing is out of reach for us Zevists, now go with all the methods in your hands and ascend into a champion as you apply yourself!

We believe in you, and you can do it! 🙏 ⚡
 
So, I have a few questions.

1 - Are we assuming that he will receive protection from the Gods and he won't receive any of these injuries, at least to the degree that will impede his spiritual advancement?

Divine protection for this is unnecessary. On the other hand, you have the tools to significantly decrease any risk and outperform most fighters. All one needs to do is study iron shirt / body qigong techniques in depths and master them.

Mastering energy healing techniques will also help when injuries do happen, considerably shortening recovery times and ensuring full healing up to a point.

Many injuries are also caused by people training improperly for their sport because they can't afford a Strength & Conditioning coach who is specialised in their sport and is experienced in training a range of fighters at varying levels of achievement. So they end up using incorrect or generic training programmes from bodybuilding, Olympic weightlifting, and powerlifting, instead of designing a training plan specifically for the demands of their combat sport and their current level of ability. This is often done out of incompetence, ignorance, poor assumptions, and improper advice from other people in the sport.

Inability to afford and unwillingness to fix unhealthy lifestyle habits are a fine line. Many people could afford proper coaching if they wanted by sacrificing unnecessary things like streaming services, excessive alcohol consumption, unnecessary car-pooling services (or fuel costs) and so on, but they don't want to because of their limiting beliefs on how life should be lived like, and toxic peer pressure / conditioning.

Non-Zevists go into combat sports blind, and reap the consequences of their limited minds.
 
Of course you will succeed, never doubt that. Because self doubt and worrying is what makes people not achieve their dreams despite them being fully capable of achieving them.

You have what it takes, and nothing can stop you now :)
 
Why do you want to put your life and body into this? Brother Emergent13 shared a list of injuries for UFC fighters and you should consider reading it.

I would advise to find something else to do with your life than doing this. You can train like an UFC fighter without the combat, that would be more beneficial to you than actually being an UFC fighter and risk injuries that could destroy your life.

There are many ways to make money other than this one (Im sure the majority of UFC fighter does not have a good salary).

For all, its good to encourage but you should also write about all the risks that being UFC fighter imply too. If someone wants to be a cop, will you go "Yes, you can do it. Just do this square and this square.'' or will you also list all the potential dangers that comes to be a police officer?

At the end, Shadoweagle4039, its your decision but take the time to meditate and reflect on all the outcomes.
 
In all honesty it's unlikely for anyone who hasn't wrestled since childhood and transitioned to mma immediately after their wrestling career to get anywhere in mma these days
 
I'd like to point out, unfortunately Shadoweagle4039 hasn't logged in to his account since 12 July 2025, and before he decided to abandon his account he had fallen into other difficulties that he explained on here.

It is likely all your advices are falling on deaf ears.


About becoming a UFC Champion, for anyone who reads here and has similar dreams, besides dangers and what not, from what I read many UFC champions had started training only in their early 20's, they then made a professional debut around 26-28 years old, and became champions around 29-31 years old, some even later.

The average age of a UFC Champion is 31 years old, with around 8-10 years total of training and amateur fighting and then professional career behind them.

Surprisingly small amount of time, so someone starting in their 20's can certainly make it, but you must be quite athletically gifted and extremely determined.

MMA doesn't pay well unless you gain a lot of public interest and make it big, and if you are stuck in an amateur league, never finding the connection to get scouted for professional leagues, you'll get grind down by the brutality of the sport, accumulating injuries over time as you are required to fight more for your living.

It is very difficult to balance out a career in MMA with a regular career due to the demands on your body for the MMA training, and fatigue after a fight, accumulated injuries, and so on.

If you end up in an amateur league and your record isn't looking good, you will not be scouted for professional leagues either, you really need to stand out, or you need to make connections with the right people who can give you opportunities to get in certain places or receive interest from pro leagues.

To enter UFC and becoming a champion requires more than just hard work and talent. All things to consider.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Shaitan

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