A diagnosed psychopath confesses he doesn’t know what remorse feels like, in a revealing video detailing how he gave a man a brain hemorrhage and put him in a coma.
Lewis Raymond Taylor, 34, was convicted in 2015 for the 11th time after punching a man so hard the victim had a mini-stroke and suffered a life-threatening bleed on his brain.
He was subsequently sent to prison for 18-months — his third stint in jail since the age of 18.
Today, he claims to have turned his life around, and is the CEO of £20million (£20m) life coaching business The Coaching Masters.
However, in a brutally honest interview about this past crimes shared on TikTok, Mr Taylor has admitted he isn’t as remorseful as he’d like to be.
Lewis told MailOnline his $25million business The Coaching Masters was not a cult, as some people have claimed
The Psychopath Life Coach Lewis Raymond Taylor, 33, lives with his fellow life coach and wife Dayana, 28, and their ten-week-old son Ocean (pictured together)
In the video, which has 645.6k views, Mr Raymond said: ‘I punched him [his 2015 victim] once and he hit his head flat on the ground, face first. And I thought I’d killed him.
‘The next day they told me he was in a coma and also he had a brain hemorrhage. So this is my second GBH, my second brain hemorrhage on my file. So of course, I was sent straight to prison.’
When asked by the interviewer, from social media channel People Are Deep, whether he felt ‘guilty’ or feelings of ‘remorse’, he explained that his ‘default answer’ is usually no.
He said: ‘I really want to get to the point in my life where I can say yes to that, but I also don’t want to lie.
‘I want to try, I’m going to try and really think about it, because usually when you ask me that, when I get asked that question, my default is “no” because I just think and I just tell my story and I’m not going there.
‘But I have done a lot of work on myself in Bali recently and I am really trying to.’
However, closing his eyes on camera for a few seconds he replies: ‘It’s still not there, I don’t even know what that feels like.’
As a young man, Mr Taylor would film himself drinking and boasting about his exploits to get ‘people’s attention, people’s reaction’.
He got into fights in his 20s, which saw him stamp on people’s heads, according to testimony he gave to a 2023 Netflix documentary about his life.
Mr Taylor’s childhood was tainted by mental illness, sexual and physical abuse, emotional neglect and a rebellious adolescence, the documentary revealed.
His father was an alcoholic who would regularly put him down.
By his own admission: ‘This created voices in my head: you’re not good enough and you don’t deserve to be successful. This inner dialogue completely paralysed me, too scared of people thinking I was stupid, or failing and proving my dad right, or succeeding and proving my dad wrong.’
As a youngster he would often get into fights and admitted he had a tendency to stamp on people’s heads
Lewis would get blackout drunk and seek attention by starting fights, even if he would likely lose them
He was sexually abused at the age of 11 and by 13 he began getting into trouble with the law, being slapped with an ASBO the following year.
Lewis’s 20s were dominated by violence, prison sentences and drug and alcohol abuse.
In 2015, aged 24, he committed the crime that would ultimately see him turn his life around.
The fight began outside a taxi rank and resulted in his victim suffering a bleed on the brain.
It led to a prison sentence during which he was diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, emotionally unstable personality disorder and bipolar type 2.
It was then that he also decided to make a change to his life and created The Coaching Masters — a global community spanning 85 countries that some previous members have compared to ‘a cult’.
He has now trained 10,000 life coaches including glamour model Katie Price, 46, who is currently seeking Lewis’ help in training, and the pair will document their journey in a new TV show.
Katie Price has revealed she’s training to become a life coach and has enlisted the help of The Psychopath Life Coach, Lewis Raymond Taylor
It is estimated that about 1 in 100 people meet the criteria for psychopathy.
Although many violent offenders fall into this category not every psychopath is violent and not all violent people are psychopaths.
Personality disorders are mental health conditions that affect how someone thinks, perceives, feels or relates to others.
Psychopaths are considered to have a severe form of anti-social personality disorder, however the terms ‘psychopathy’ and ‘sociopathy’ are no longer used by mental health professionals.
Although many people put their own needs and personal gain before others, those with an antisocial personality disorder may find these actions occur frequently, mental health charity Mind explains.
It adds struggling to keep stability in your life and acting out of impulsivity or anger with a lack of consideration for others are signs of the disorder.
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