• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry ‘haven’t been axed by Netflix after brutal calculation’

27 July 2025

Harrowing final words of tortured prisoner executed in ‘human slaughter house’

27 July 2025

KEIR STARMER: The Lionesses have lived up to their name – let’s bring it home again

27 July 2025

Tarnish-free jewellery perfect for holidays and wearing in the sea all under £40

27 July 2025

Ruben Amorim reveals what has changed for Bruno Fernandes this summer after ‘frustrations’

27 July 2025

Expert names vital holiday items Brits always pack wrong when going abroad

27 July 2025

‘I dated Love Island’s Dejon Noel-Williams and these were my relationship red flags’

27 July 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Meghan Markle and Prince Harry ‘haven’t been axed by Netflix after brutal calculation’
  • Harrowing final words of tortured prisoner executed in ‘human slaughter house’
  • KEIR STARMER: The Lionesses have lived up to their name – let’s bring it home again
  • Tarnish-free jewellery perfect for holidays and wearing in the sea all under £40
  • Ruben Amorim reveals what has changed for Bruno Fernandes this summer after ‘frustrations’
  • Expert names vital holiday items Brits always pack wrong when going abroad
  • ‘I dated Love Island’s Dejon Noel-Williams and these were my relationship red flags’
  • ‘My friend is giving her baby an ugly name and I’m devastated for the poor kid’
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
England TimesEngland Times
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
England TimesEngland Times
Home » ‘I was on crack at 14 and feral like a street dog – I should be dead’
News

‘I was on crack at 14 and feral like a street dog – I should be dead’

By staff26 July 2025No Comments7 Mins Read

Inspiring story of how mixed martial arts is transforming the lives of forgotten young men in Sunderland has been turned into a film tipped for Oscar success

15:00, 26 Jul 2025Updated 15:07, 26 Jul 2025

Poised film
A gym in the north east has become a lifeline for struggling teens

Violent teenage drug-taker Aaron was on a path of self-destruction heading towards prison or death until he received a shock to his system. Police were locking him up virtually every week and his loving parents, Danny and Elaine, had almost given up on the lost soul.

But then he started going to fighter and community activist Steven France’s Made 4 The Cage gym in Sunderland. Aaron is just one of many forgotten lads from a city ravaged by cuts and austerity whose lives have been turned around at the mixed martial arts gym. Aaron and Steven’s stories of growth, discovery and redemption – along with those of Sam, Faiz and Lennon – feature in Poised, a powerful documentary being tipped for Oscar success.

READ MORE: He was a bin man for 23 years, then his son died and his pay was cut by £500 a month

Aaron with parents Elaine and Danny
Aaron with parents Elaine and Danny, who were pushed to the limit by their son’s bad behaviour

Aaron said: “I was a bit feral. Honestly, I was like a street dog. If you got too close to us, said the wrong thing, straight away I was going at you.” He said the gym is “the best therapy I’ve ever been to in my life”.

Steven, 46, is battling the poverty and hopelessness, helping the next generation avoid the same traps that almost consumed him. He reached a junction in his own life 20 years ago when his father killed himself. He said: “I had to say to myself, the writing’s on the wall. The odds are not good. There’s people around you who are going to prison for a long time. The way they were already coming to a dead end in their life at such a young age. We’re thrown on the scrapheap. Your options are very slim, work at Nissan or a call centre. I’m grateful for those places but if you do have ambition it’s hard.”

Steven found solace in MMA and went on to become a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and an England coach in the sport. He said: “It transformed my life and it’s doing the same with these young lads. It’s about me trying to get people from troubled, difficult backgrounds. Getting these kids, with some complex issues, to stick to what is the hardest sport. The main thing about MMA is discipline. You forget about everything because you haven’t got time to think about anything else. It’s that intense.” He added that the sport humbles people and is a powerful tool in the fight against violence.

Steven France
Steven France is helping turn the lives of young men around in Sunderland through mixed martial arts

Aaron, 20, said: “In 2020, I was at rock bottom. Drugs, fighting, getting locked up. I was taking MDMA [ecstasy]. At 14, I did crack cocaine. I lost loads of weight. It got to the point where my hair was falling out, I was that stressed. I was scratching at my face all the time. I thought I either make a change now or I’m going to live like this until I die. I thought the only way I’ll get out of this is if I rob a bank and get millions and move abroad. Or just kill myself. I was either gonna end up in prison or dead.”

When he was linked up with Steven through Sunderland’s Positive Steps programme in April 2022, Aaron was told to be at the gym each morning at 5am. It was the shock to the system he needed. “Every day I used to wake up and think, what on earth have I got myself into? I’m going there to get picked up, to get slammed back on the floor, to get picked back up, to get slammed back on the floor. It wasn’t even physically draining, it was mentally draining. But over time you build a strong wall.

Aaron takes to the MMA cage
Aaron says MMA has been better than therapy and saved him from prison or death

“It takes all your pain and all your past trauma away because all you’re thinking about is fighting. Once you’re at rock bottom there’s only one way to go and that’s up and this kind of sport will help you get there. Those who’ve got inner anger and just need a release, this is the best thing I’ve ever done that’s helped me.”

Aaron now works at events space The Point in Sunderland and wants to become cabin crew for Emirates. He is one of many lads who have been helped by Steven’s programme.

Sam, 25, spiralled into nefarious activities after losing his mum to kidney failure… until he found salvation in mixed martial arts. Steven said he was banished from Newcastle by his family and moved to Sunderland where his dad lived. “Sam spent three months in his bedroom. His mental health was not good. And then he came across me and the rest is history,” Steven added. Sam and his brother now own a demolition firm which works across the country.

Sam features in film Poised
Sam’s world fell apart when he lost his mum – but he found solace in Steven’s gym

Faiz, 20, left Iraq because of death threats and persecution. He walked from Minsk in Belarus to Calais and has had no contact with his family since. Steven said: “Faiz talks about how hard it is to get to Britain as an asylum seeker. He was 14 and licking leaves to get water. Now he’s got a full-time job, drives a BMW, got his own house. He doesn’t do any martial arts now but it’s fantastic he’s part of society. He’s a taxpayer.” Lennon was just 14 when he joined the gym to escape the streets.

The film also highlights a 78% cut to the area’s youth services in recent years, leaving people like Steven to plug the gaps. His project itself was nearly scrapped when funding was not available. He said: “The money I get literally just keeps the project running. I feel like the North – and especially the North East – gets left behind. We’re left up here to defend ourselves. We are the forgotten part of the world.” Steven hopes Poised will show the need for better investment in youth services. He said: “Prevention’s got to be better than cure.”

Poised was celebrated at last month’s Raindance Festival, where it was nominated for Best Documentary Feature and Best Cinematography. That means it now qualifies for British Independent Film Awards selection, which could take it all the way to the Oscars.

Fiaz
Asylum seeker Faiz has gone on to flourish in work and at home after the film wrapped

“I’m really trying to help other young people,” said Steven. “There’ll be other Stevens, other Sams, other Aarons. There’ll be hundreds, if not thousands, of them across the country. Through me doing this film, we can try to make a difference.”

He has certainly made a difference to Aaron’s life. He said: “I was watching the ­documentary and I seen my younger self and I just thought he didn’t deserve it. I just wanted to give him a big hug through the screen. When I look back, I really did not think I was gonna make it past 16. I thought I’d have been dead or in prison. I think I would have if it wasn’t for Steven. He showed me what I can do with my life.”

Follow Mirror Celebs on Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads .

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related News

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry ‘haven’t been axed by Netflix after brutal calculation’

27 July 2025

Soham killer Ian Huntley’s worst whinges in prison from food complaint to being ‘picked on’

27 July 2025

Victorian era baby names soaring in popularity in 2025 as parents ditch trendy monikers

27 July 2025

Sabrina Carpenter’s on-sale luxury sleep mask is hailed as the ‘best eye-mask on the market’

27 July 2025

Teenage girl left fighting for life after being pulled from sea at Whitley Bay

27 July 2025

Met Office’s brutal 40C heatwave verdict as UK climate ‘escalates’

27 July 2025
Latest News

Harrowing final words of tortured prisoner executed in ‘human slaughter house’

27 July 2025

KEIR STARMER: The Lionesses have lived up to their name – let’s bring it home again

27 July 2025

Tarnish-free jewellery perfect for holidays and wearing in the sea all under £40

27 July 2025

Ruben Amorim reveals what has changed for Bruno Fernandes this summer after ‘frustrations’

27 July 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Travel

Expert names vital holiday items Brits always pack wrong when going abroad

By staff27 July 20250

Markus Lindblad sheds light on common travel mistakes that cause delays and trouble from Brits…

‘I dated Love Island’s Dejon Noel-Williams and these were my relationship red flags’

27 July 2025

‘My friend is giving her baby an ugly name and I’m devastated for the poor kid’

27 July 2025

Soham killer Ian Huntley’s worst whinges in prison from food complaint to being ‘picked on’

27 July 2025
England Times
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 England Times. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version