Personally, I had no confines: there were no bounds, no boundaries that I felt when I got in the ring.
I was kind of sheltered. I grew up in Silsbee, Texas, a town of 3,000 people.
I never in my career did appearances, like where you go and sign autographs, and you do the comic-cons and all of that stuff, because I wanted, when I stopped wrestling, to go and do that stuff and have it really mean something to somebody, that it hadn't been watered down.
Wrestling went from being sometimes comical to very serious, and there was a lot of depth regarding the vastness in which people performed.
I was an unusually big kid for my age and did not know how to express myself after being targeted as the odd one out. I thus landed myself in trouble for reacting aggressively. But with time, I succeeded as an athlete and people started respecting me.
The Undertaker's theme isn't really a single, but in terms of eerie music, you can't beat it.