Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

The Brutal Truth

1 message

Andrew Tate <cobratate@tatesrealworld.co> Wed, 4 Jan 2023 at 18:33


Reply to: Andrew Tate <cobratate@tatesrealworld.co>
To: tobisyume@gmail.com

Can't see this message? View in a browser

The Brutal Truth

When I was 8, I lost a winning game at a chess tournament.


 
It was an 11 hours drive to get there, and I blundered and lost a
winning position.
 
I told my father it was because I was tired and couldn’t sleep in the
car.
 
I came third in the tournament but should have come first.
 
Dad was furious. 
 
I remember feeling like crying as he lectured me. 
 
“Who taught you to make excuses boy? It wasn’t me. Isn’t your last
name Tate?
 
What does the paper say?
 
Lost cause he was tired? Or LOST?”
Lost cause he was tired? Or LOST?
 
I didn’t reply. 
 
“Answer me, son!”
 
It says I lost dad.
 
“Excuses don’t affect the outcome. 
 
So excuses can’t affect your performance.”
 
I was too young to understand and upset.
 
When we got home, I complained to mom that dad was yelling at me
for losing. 
 
She said he was too hard on me.
 
They had a heated argument as he explained she’s a female and
doesn’t understand the burden of performance. 
 
“IF I WAS TOO TIRED TO PERFORM, THEY WOULD HAVE KILLED ME”
 
He was referencing a few months before where I watched him be
attacked.
 
My mother told me I didn’t have to play chess anymore if dad was
going to upset me. 
 
Dad took me out of the house for a week.
 
We stayed in a hotel away from my mother’s influence.
 
He kept me up playing chess till the early hours. 2/3 am. 
 
6 am school. Every night of the week.
 
“Your dad’s crazy” mother would say. 
 
In fact, everyone said that. 
 
At the time I didn’t know who to believe. 
 
But I was exhausted. I cried a few times. 
 
He made me play anyway.
 
And made me sleep very little before school. 
 
I remember on day 5 or 6 of this sitting across the board.
 
He has set up a position, white to win in 7 moves. 
 
After a few minutes, I found the winning combination. A knight
sacrifice.
 
Dad cheered. 
 
“DAMN SON! That’s a master puzzle!”
 
I was excited and happy. 
 
“You’re more tired now than you were in that tournament, ain’tcha?”
 
“Tired isn’t an excuse son. What’s your last name?”
 
Tate I replied. 
 
“Tired or not, you know how to win” 
 
My dad sacrificed his marriage to raise me exceptionally. My mother
simply didn’t get it. 
 
Men raise pussy sons because they cuck to wives.
 
My father lost his wife for ME.
 
I always used to remember this story when deep in the rounds of
championship fights. 
 
Am I gonna lose because I’m tired? Or just lose. 
 
Tates know how to win. 
 
I type life stories to educate and spread Tateism for the betterment
of man.

You've received this email because you are a subscriber of this site.
If you feel you received it by mistake or wish to unsubscribe, please click here.

You might also like