Professional wrestling legend and former four times TNA X-Division Champion Christopher Daniels who is also a former Ring Of Honor World Champion recently talked about how professional wrestling is 100% selfish and how he utilized it.
Christopher Daniels started his professional wrestling career back in 1993 and spend nearly a decade at the independent circuit. In 1998 he signed a developmental contract with WWE and state in the promotion for three years but he has never been given a main roster role in WWE. He tried his luck at the WCW as well where he did not succeed either.

Christopher Daniels Thinks Wrestling Is 100% Selfish
In 2002 he signed a professional contract with Ring of Honor and spent two years in the promotion. He started working at the TNA Wrestling at the same time and he became quite successful in both promotions. He spent a long time in TNA Wrestling, of course he had some breaks in between but he kept going back to the promotion.
He also kept going back to Ring of Honor and he had been quite successful in the promotion as well as he had won the ROH World Championship one time. He is a legend of professional wrestling who was mainly built by the Ring Of Honor and TNA Wrestling.

Currently Christopher Daniels is active in the AEW and we hope to see him keep working for a long time. He also was seen working in Japan last year, mostly in the New Japan Pro Wrestling where he had been pretty impressive. He is doing pretty good even at the age of 53.
Christopher Daniels who is also a former Ring Of Honor World Champion recently spoke to WrestleZone where he talked about how professional wrestling is 100% selfish and how he utilized it. Here is what he had to say;
“It’s 100% selfish. I want to try and continue to perform as much as I can, and understanding that we’ve got such a full roster and television time being limited, my opportunities won’t always happen on AEW television, and I recognize that. I understand it, and I’m not sad about that.

“I mean, I wish I could be on television more often, but I understand why I’m not. So I want to continue to perform as much as I can. So I was doing a lot of stuff with DEFY, doing stuff with Warrior. I just last night had a match in North Dakota. I wrestled a man by the name of Kevin Ku, who’s a very good young talent.
“These are things that I want to continue to do so I could still sort of scratch that performance itch. I’m not 100% ready to hang it up, and there will come a time when I am. I know, and like you said, I’m at the tail end of it, so it’s close. I know it’s coming soon. It’s a knock on the door that I can expect any time.”