Everyone Told You To Fix Your Weaknesses. They Were Wrong.
Here is what I see all the time. A wrestler is decent on the mic but incredible in the ring. So what does he do? He spends all his time trying to get better on the mic. Meanwhile his in-ring work β the thing that actually makes him money β gets no attention. Six months later he is average at everything and great at nothing. That is the weakness trap. And most wrestlers fall right into it. Here is the truth. Your strengths are your money spot. Your weaknesses are just things to manage. You do not need to be great at everything. You need to be undeniable at something. The wrestlers who get booked are not the most well-rounded. They are the ones who do one thing so well that promoters cannot ignore them. Figure out what that thing is. Then go all in on it. Now here is where it gets interesting. Sometimes a weakness is actually a strength in disguise. The guy who can't cut a smooth polished promo might be the most authentic guy in the locker room. That rawness is the gimmick. That realness gets heat. So before you try to fix something, ask yourself: is this actually a problem or is this part of what makes me different? I cover all of this in Chapter 2 of The Pro Wrestling Laws of Success. It is the self-awareness chapter. And it will change how you look at your own career. Grab it on Amazon right here: https://www.amazon.com/Pro-Wrestling-Laws-Success-Unbreakable/dp/0983067732/ Now I want to hear from you. Strengths or weaknesses. Which one should a wrestler focus on? Drop your answer below.