If you're driving home and your kids are playing up in the back seat, I'm pretty sure that's taxing. You're trying to hold your composure, you're trying not to shout at them.
In 2017, I boxed in front of a home crowd in Sheffield and became the WBA super-middleweight world champion. After four attempts I had finally fulfilled my childhood dream, and the experience was as great as I had always imagined it would be. It was without doubt the best moment of my career.
Who wants to watch the WBSS final without me in it?
Badou Jack is a great fighter, but there is a lot that he does that I do better. I have enough power to take him out.
Chudinov is one of the toughest guys I fought. It was only the slump of his shoulders that made me think he's hurt because there's no grimace, or rolling eyes. He was never going down.
I've always been able to stay calm in high-pressure situations.
I want to be considered one of the greatest fighters ever.
I am not going to box unfit, obviously.
If I'm confident in my ability to do something, I never get nervous about it. If I was to get up and try to sing in front of 50,000 people, I'd fall to pieces. But boxing, I find it really comfortable.
The lighter I am going into a fight, the more likely I am to get ill.
Why do I manage myself? I don't trust anyone else to do it, to be honest.
I've never been the biggest boxing fan. If I know the guy I will watch him. But if it's two great fighters and I don't know either of them then I won't bother.
I like to keep my normal life under wraps but in front of 80,000 people, I'm going to perform.
I was never going to be one to just go away quietly and get on with things in the shadows.
I don't think anything affects my nerves.
The Eubanks are very different. If you look at the promotional videos they've done it's a bit 'Homes Under the Hammer.'
Ultimately, it's down to the individual. Some people are born to perform. Some people need to work hard to control themselves.
If I didn't want to fight Carl Froch then I wouldn't have invested so much time and money into appealing with the IBF over the dubious outcome of the first fight.
There are various psychological advantages you can take into boxing match. One is getting your opponent to fight with emotion and anger because he hates you.
I've won junior titles, ABA titles and boxed for England all over the world against future Olympic champions as an amateur - and then beat world-class fighters as a professional.
You decide whether you want to box on, or not. And for me of course, I wasn't going to be leaving the business until becoming a world champion, and defending it numerous times.
I've got a lovely family now, I've got two boys.
I've earned some decent money, and bragging rights, and boxed on a Floyd Mayweather undercard in Vegas... but it's a fraction of what I set out to do.
It's iconic, it's Wembley. When I go running up Primrose Hill you can see the arch. It's a great thing and it's a proud spot for London.
People have a right to express themselves.
You have to ride your luck a bit, you have to take opportunities when they come.
I'm an established fighter, not a fighter who needs steady progression.
I could walk away from boxing tomorrow, if I choose to.
I know what works for me.
Ego can be a dangerous thing. We all have one but it needs to be contained.
With Froch everyone was questioning me and I was trying to prove a point.
I don't want there to be a time where I'm 'too old' to box on, or where an injury retires me in or out of the ring.
Once I've got that world title I'll never want to lose it. I'll fight tooth and nail to keep it.
Rebrasse was a good opponent, a tough guy, he took an awful lot of punches. I knew it was going to be tough. I didn't want to run out of steam, I felt in great condition but you always have to be cautious against a guy who has never been stopped.
I will beat Carl Froch every night of the week and it doesn't matter if it is the best Carl Froch or the worst Carl Froch.
If you asked me to go on stage now, even to do karaoke, I'd fall apart. I'm far more comfortable getting stuck into a fight.
I've been pretty good at negotiating.
I know enough about the business to look after myself now. I don't trust anyone else to take care of business.
The more successful a promoter becomes, the more ruthless they've got to be.
In boxing you can be the most talented fighter out there but you need people to watch and I'm fortunate that I'm in that situation.
A rivalry is me and James DeGale. That is ingrained in people now.
Carl Froch is a strong, seasoned world champion and there's no quit in him.
I love comedy and I did a few gigs here and there but it never really took off. It was too scary.
Any fight, if you prepare correctly and you're ready for it, you should be just there to enjoy it.
Boxing has been good to me and I believe I have been good for boxing.
I've definitely changed as a person because of professional boxing.
I want to knock people out.
On fight night I feel alive and full of tingles. You feel your blood flow hot but that's how we like it. We're mammals, we're warm-blooded creatures.
My missus has had to put up with me boxing. I'll be able to spend some better time with them and not always have to put boxing first. So that's good for me. I'll enjoy that part of life.
I am an old man and sometimes I struggle to keep up with some of the youngsters on the circuits. But at the same time, it is keeping me young.
Comedy is a passion but I don't know if I a am funny enough to make a living out of.
I never get nervous and I'm always very confident to the point where some people think I'm cocky.
There's a lot I can offer boxing.
Wembley Arena has been a successful stomping ground in the past.
I never spoke out as a kid, I was never good at it as a kid, I was always too shy but I think I have a story and would like to be good at it and tell my story.
Motivational talks are something I have been asked to do and i fancy taking a crack at it.
I used to hear other boxers talk about levels and it used to frustrate me. But now I understand: sometimes it doesn't matter how much you prepare, there are just people you can't beat.
I've boxed on with cuts, broken jaws, everything.
They are a funny little team, the Eubanks.
When I become world champion, what do I need? I need opponents, I need someone to pick a venue, negotiate a date, and I need a promoter.