How Robin Uthappa struggled to find himself and succeeded

The India and Karnataka batter, who retired from international cricket recently, spoke about his long-running battles with mental-health issues off the field

Sidharth Monga03-Oct-2022Robin Uthappa has on his right forearm a tattoo that says “I am.”It is a commemoration, he says, of finding himself, of recovery. It is what he pointed to when I asked him to introduce himself on the podcast.I didn’t want to introduce him because over three days of extended conversations, I knew cricket was an important part of his life, part of his oldest memory even, but it is not what he should be defined by. He spoke a lot about the role of spirituality in recovery. He knew who he was. He was at peace with who he was. It was best he told people who he was.We recorded on the last day of Suicide Prevention Week, which was nothing but a coincidence. The only instrument we had was a phone. We were not in a studio but in my hotel room, a few doors down from his. At 9am sharp he knocked on my door in the oversized co-ords that he loves to wear and changes into the moment he goes off air. He carried two pouches of instant coffee in his hand.He was fascinated that I found peace in my belief that everything in life is random: good fortune and bad fortune exist but they are random. We debated that before we started recording. I told him I was not going to prod him; he could share however much he wanted to share. I told him about a Jeff Finlin book on recovery that I was reading.Finlin is possibly the greatest modern Western singer-songwriter without a Wikipedia page. He had a traumatic childhood, battled alcoholism and PTSD, and his work has never made it popularly. JR Moehringer, the Pulitzer-winning writer who, among other things, co-wrote Andre Agassi’s autobiography, called Finlin “an undiscovered Bob Dylan”. Listen to him. You will find it is no exaggeration.