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Description

Carl issues a challenge to all those who aren’t really putting in the grind – to change and start putting in the work if they want to achieve in life.
It’s always about what you are prepared to do because doing the work is what brings the results so those who do the most work consistently are those who are ultimately the most successful.
Whatever you want to achieve you have to be prepared to do the work and if you look at those who are the most successful in life they are the ones who have been consistently putting in the grind on the journey to success.
 
KEY TAKEAWAYS
You have to work hard in life if you want to achieve anything
As you become an adult life gets harder and you have to become resilient and work harder if you want to get on.
When you work for someone else you have structure
When you work for yourself it’s all about the grind and you have to be prepared to do what it takes.
To be at the top of your game, whatever it is you’ve got to be prepared to put the grind in every day.
Fighters have the same approach they are prepared to work and those who are the most successful are those who work the hardest.
 
BEST MOMENTS
‘What nobody sees is the work that goes on behind the scenes, the 7 day weeks and evenings it takes to build a business’
‘I’m prepared to work when others aren’t’
‘I was prepared to put the work in to build the business’
 
VALUABLE RESOURCES
HKA Main landing page www.hastingskickboxing.co.uk/kickstartnow
YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/user/Hastingskickboxing
HKA Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Hastingskickboxing
Adult community link  https://m.facebook.com/groups/274624209886110?ref=share 
carldenne@hotmail.com  - Join Leigha every weekday for a workout for a fiver per month
 
ABOUT THE HOST
Hi, my name is Carl Denne.  
I was born in Hastings in 1980. Married, father of two beautiful daughters, Bethany and Leigha. 
My daughters, the wife, and gym ARE MY LIFE.
IF I’M HONEST, I pretty much failed at school. Heavily dyslexic, I was dismissed for being a “naughty kid” that didn’t want to learn. I was heavily bullied for having shit clothes and ginger afro hair. I didn’t have many friends. 
When I say bullied I don’t mean called a “balding ginger” and being looked at in a nasty way. I mean thrown downstairs, and hit with chairs and tables. Clothes were stolen whilst in the shower. That kind of bullying…
Oh, how things have changed… 
Martial arts, and specifically Kickboxing, have changed my life, and now I am much happier and change other people’s lives for the better on a daily basis. 
I am a complete adrenaline freak, so In my spare time, track days, jumping out of planes, sitting on top of them, rage buggies in the desert… The higher, the faster the better for me. I’m always looking for the next thing to get my blood pumping, so if anyone has a challenge I’ve not found yet, please feel free to share. 
I do like a Saturday night movie night, Chinese, Netflix, lots of chocolate with my three little ladies. I love being around my friends and family. This is why I love the crazy HKA family so much, as this is my extended family.   
I left school with pretty much nothing! A few sad GCSE’s C - D grade, BUT I did have a shit-ton of energy and passion to achieve, and to prove all the teachers and people that looked down on me for all those years, wrong. So, after a few jobs here and there, I settled on working for Openreach (BT) as a cabler/jointer copper and fibre optic multi-skilled engineer with HGV.
I left this in 2015 to chase my dream of running my own Kickboxing Academy and working with the future of today, rather than a job that just paid the bills. 
I’ve trained pretty much my whole life: Karate, boxing, Judo, from the age of 9, and of course, I’ve now done over 29 years of Kickboxing. I’ve passed many Instructors and coaches courses, attended many training courses and seminars, grading up through the syllabus. I passed my 4-hour hell-on-earth 3rd Dan black belt in July 2018 with the ICO.
If I’m honest my real passion and skills have come from learning the hard way; through being in the trenches. I know how it feels to be on your arse. I know how it feels to have to pull yourself out of the pit. I’ve been through a divorce. I’ve lived through the pain and have worked with thousands of members, students, children, teachers and adults over the years, and the one thing I get told every time is how well I/we keep it very real, and that I have a complete understanding on most eventualities. 
Thank you for reading and listening. I hope you connect with myself and the team, take away some ideas, understand you’re not alone, and that it’s good to talk, listen and help others as and when you can.