Sliding into the pew at the Nottingham church where he now returns every Sunday, that first time a little lost and looking for answers, the sermon that day was all about the Olympic Games.
âNo one knew I was coming,â he recalls of what has proved a seminal moment. âI was just at the back and I was like, âif this isnât meant for me, then what is?â I donât think society has the answers Iâm seeking, especially as a young man, and itâs nothing to do with being an athlete.â
For almost the entirety of his career, he had the answers when it came to being the quickest breaststroke swimmer of all time: of how to win on the big days; the Olympic golds; the world titles; and yet there was still a void in his life.
He has talked of the battle he has faced and come out the other side of as âthree years of hellâ, a time in which he sunk into depression and became reliant on alcohol. Steadily, he has begun to find himself, although he readily admits: âItâs still very hard and itâs still changing slowly.â
The origin of his turnaround began in Melbourne, where he was introduced to Pastor Ashley Null, a currently Berlin-based clergyman who works with a number of elite swimmers. When back in Europe, the pair met up in Nottingham. Peaty then witnessed his poignant first sermon and, as he puts it, âIâve been there ever sinceâ.
At the Paris Olympics, his faith will be abundantly clear, as people tune in to watch his attempt to seal a hat-trick of 100metre breaststroke titles. On his torso is a large cross with the words âInto the Lightâ inked beneath it.
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