Originally Written in Feb 2016 – In the beginning
From the age of 13 onward I played LMA manager on the PlayStation 1 as I never did buy a PlayStation 2. However, my involvement with games became a lot less frequent, falling below 4 hours a week. Before the days of Facebook and Smartphones this actually existed. But gaming had captivated me once before and I had a sense that I was just waiting for the right game to come along before being re-submerged.
The struggle
My older brother at this point lived in a house a few streets away and would often go away at weekends. So we would go round his house to chill out and even though my brother tried his best to keep us out at times, we found a way in. Although we were up to no good, my brother felt that we were safer in his house than on the streets. Sometimes there would have been up to 20 people crowded into his small terrace house. I have so many fun memories of this time, but also a few serious ones. One particular instance was when a group of youths kicked down my brother’s door wanting to have a fight with me. #nothanks
Unreal Tournament 99 GOTY
It was around this time that I decided that I wanted to stop hanging around with the group I was involved with and made the choice to make friends with another group, it’s kind of like that at school isn’t it? That’s when I began to hang around with some of the best friends I’ve ever made; ‘Chris B, Matt C, Arron W’ and so on. I also met my girlfriend Char H and although he have had a couple of break ups we’re still together today.
{AS}Napapijri
Together Napa, myself and the {AS} Clan took on the world and we didn’t do too badly! Check out our stats: I believe that if eSports were alive during this time, we may have had some superstars.



How Unreal Tournament saved my life
A massive part of my character, moral foundations and ability to find solutions in difficult situations is down to the {AS} clan leader Napa. Being online still exposes people to social interactions, just in different ways, either forums, team speak (microphone) and MSN instant messenger. At the time, Napa was interacting with me for hours per day – he reminds me of Jose Mourinho the football manager in the sense that he was a great friend and coach. We would train on regular days, we would have tactics that he had devised, attacking routes, communication hotkeys to speak quickly, positions to stick to and Napa’s attention to detail was amazing. He was able to do all of this as though I were the only one that mattered, that I was the reason the team was winning. I wonder how many other people he was able to make feel that way.
My home life between my parents was not good; they were on, off, on, off and eventually they split up. I was able to deal with this I believe, because I had a mechanism to escape to a world where I was famous, needed and wanted. That ability to regulate my emotions in a safe way helped me deal with my real life struggles. I was able to talk to people online about personal issues that I would find difficult in real life.
Online I was a winner and this had a transferable impact on my real life – I gained confidence from this, I was interacting with older mature lads every day and this experience allowed me to transfer this maturity into real life. Out of 5 close friends who signed up for sixth form I was the only one to finish, I was becoming a winner in whatever I put my mind to.
What the future holds
Now my passion is to study the benefits of gaming further, to see whether it does have a deep rooted ability to help people’s well-being when utilized in the correct way. I want to help vulnerable young people who spend a lot of their time online to understand the online risks and to educate them into becoming a positive citizen when they’re online so they too, may benefit like I did.
I hope to mentor young people so that they too will be able to see the light and be able to make more logical life choices by withdrawing from risky behaviour and becoming part of something better and more positive.
Further learning opportunities from my blog
(https://www.youngandwellcrc.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Videogames_and_Wellbeing.pdf).
The importance of a role model, coach, parent, and mentor in my opinion is huge. They can influence us massively, and develop core beliefs that we continue to feed and pass onto our own children and the people who look up to us. I am just thankful I found my brother and the {AS} clan when I did. (Here’s a good piece on coaches that I’ve read recently: https://medium.com/@james_hamlin/why-we-all-need-a-great-coach-d9973e83f662#.qz9j774iz)
More research is needed on the effects of gaming on vulnerable young people and those with mental health issues.
Thank you for reading.
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