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Former UFC champ Georges St-Pierre: How OCD helped and hurt me

Mixed martial arts star Georges St-Pierre, who took a highly publicized break from the sport last December, is opening up about his mental health issues, suggesting that obsessive compulsive disorder was a key to his success but also took a drastic toll on his personal life.

St-Pierre promoting new documentary: Takedown: The DNA of GSP

Georges St-Pierre discusses his OCD

11 years ago
Duration 5:47
Former UFC champion Georges St-Pierre discusses his obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and his call for a crackdown in performance-enhancing drugs.

Mixed martial arts star Georges St-Pierre, who took a highly publicized break from the sport last December, is opening up about his mental health issues, suggesting that obsessive compulsive disorder was a key to his success but also took a drastic toll on his personal life.

"As a fighter it's a good thing to have it, because it makes you better because you completely obsess about being a better martial artist," St-Pierre told CBC's Wendy Mesley for The National. "Everything you do is oriented around that goal. But the same thing could be bad for a normal person in normal life."

In promoting Takedown: The DNA of GSP, a documentary about his life and career, the former UFC world welterweight says he could make a return to the sport.

"I will be happy doing it again until the obsessiveness takes over and makes me unhappy again," he said. 

St-Pierre said the disorder was ultimately bad for him. He said he slept poorly for a decade — no more than five hours a night — and also saw his personal life and mental health suffer.

"It was going to drive me crazy. That's why I took that break," he said. "I had my first New Year's and Christmas with my family, a real one. I don't have to go away because I have a fight coming up."

St. Pierre is also pushing for better policing of performance enhancing drugs among UFC fighters.

He argues that the stakes are simply too high.

"If you lose a race or game in hockey, you lose a game. That's it." he said. "If you lose a fight you might lose part of your brain because of the damage."

He argues that better controls and penalties would help the sport gain legitimacy. St- Pierre said it would also make the sport more fair.

"If I'm fighting you and I give you a knife and I have no weapon, you have an advantage." he said. "It's a biological weapon."

You can watch the entire interview tonight on CBC Television's The National.