LytesOut Deep Dive: Dean " The Boogeyman " Lister

LOL Dragged , Tried to get you on months ago but your gym staff is Hetarted.

With greatest respect to Richie Martinez, there is only one Boogeyman.

Up vote this episode on R/MMA if you have an account to get some more viewers/subscribers
Search by New

3 Likes

Dude
You have no idea how much I appreciate that

Thank You

2 Likes

yeah saw that , i dont have an account there but good call @Six_Demon_Bag

1 Like

Studies surrounding the long term effects of high-impact contact sports have been happening for years. But for some athletes, they are turning to an alternative form of medicine in order to help themselves.

On Tuesday night, HBO’s Real Sports devoted a segment to the growing list of athletes experimenting with psychedelic drugs after suffering from issues such as depression, anxiety and possible brain damage as the result of so much damage done.

Two former UFC fighters — Ian McCall and Dean Lister — were among those athletes profiled with both revealing the serious issues they’ve dealt with following retirement from active competition.

According to McCall, he was snorting painkillers like oxycontin and fentanyl just to get through his day-to-day life while often contemplating suicide as the only way to escape the pain.

“I was medicated and so numbed out from such a young age,” McCall said when appearing on the Emmy award-winning series. “I turned into a monster.

“I wanted to kill myself. I was so depressed. I had no idea who I was. I laugh it off because it was just crazy.”

McCall last fought in 2018, when he suffered a knockout in RIZIN in a clash with former bantamweight champion Kyoji Horiguchi. Over the course of his 18-year career, McCall only suffered that lone knockout in his final appearance but that doesn’t speak to the cumulative damage done through 21 professional fights.

The same could be said for Lister, who competed in PRIDE and the UFC between 2004 and 2009.

While he was best known as a championship jiu-jitsu specialist, Lister competed in MMA like so many grapplers while amassing a career record of 13-7. Almost identical to McCall’s career, Lister never actually suffered a knockout during any of his seven losses. But he still felt the after effects of so much head trauma once his fighting days were behind him.

“You’re stuck in a prison cell in your own mind,” Lister described on the show. “You don’t feel like doing anything. I was never like that before.

“I have no doubt about [having brain injuries or CTE symptoms]. Because even right now I have to focus so I can make words. I’ll forget random things. I’ll forget a friend’s name sometimes. Like a friend, like what’s his name again? Someone I know.”
According to the segment, studies on the effects of psychedelic drugs such as LSD were actually conducted many years ago but it all stopped in 1970 with the U.S. declaration of a “war on drugs” launched by former president Richard Nixon. At that point, psychedelic drugs were banned and outlawed alongside other substances like heroin or cocaine.

There are still some studies happening today including one reference in the story from Imperial College in London, where neuroscientists have discovered radical improvement in the conditions of some patients after being treated with psilocybin (mushrooms).
That was the same substance that McCall used in the segment alongside Lister, who had never used drugs previously but confessed he had been drinking approximately 20 beers per day while taking Xanax at night to feed his growing addiction.

McCall felt like he needed to pass along what he took away from the use of psychedelic drugs when speaking to other fighters.

“These fighters are good people but they’re tormented,” McCall said. “I have to fix these people. I’m one of them.”

Following the conclusion of the experience where Lister was seen describing his own death and reawakening, the 44-year-old ex-fighter revealed that he hadn’t had a drop of alcohol or taken a single pill in the four weeks following his treatment with the magic mushrooms.

“As far as me not wanting to continue on the previous way of existence, it’s absolutely set in stone right now,” Lister said.

2 Likes
1 Like

I’d like to see Rico Chiaperelli or Fernando Vaconcelos in the show. Back in the day the hype was huge for Vasconcelos . Yea I was a big rAw fan

2 Likes

I agree

I will send Rico another message

1 Like

“Alan Belcher trained with him for the Paul Harris fight.”

Comment from someone on Reddit

That fight was wild, Dean deserves a lot of credit for that training
Alan had all the answers

2 Likes

Chiaperelli lurks on here maybe he will see it

Best episode yet and that’s saying something. I really enjoyed it. Awesome job guys, thanks. I told everyone at my gym that they absolutely have to listen to this.

2 Likes

YES Good Episode

1 Like

Gotcha. :slight_smile:

1 Like

Brian IMO

You are one of those guys that could fight just about anyone in the world and not sustain a SERIOUS injury

You were incredibly savvy and had a bit of a “junk yard dog” in the way that you fought

What are you saying? I’m the result of Sakuraba and Shannon Ritch’s love affair?

Bro
You got some dog in you

You also had issues with saying no to a fight

  • not sure that you ever turned one down

We had fun. Didn’t know any other way to play the game… Didn’t have a Mayweather Mentor. :slight_smile:

I met Dean once at a UFC event,seemed like a good guy. In talking to guys with other camps at the hotel , many said he was the best grappler they ever went with.

1 Like