Home Australia A diagnosed psychopath reveals he feels no remorse after causing a man to bleed into a brain and put him in a coma

A diagnosed psychopath reveals he feels no remorse after causing a man to bleed into a brain and put him in a coma

0 comment
Lewis told MailOnline that his $25m business, The Coaching Masters, was not a cult, as some people have claimed.

A diagnosed psychopath confesses he doesn’t know what remorse feels like, in a revealing video detailing how he caused a man to suffer 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 that the victim suffered a mini-stroke and suffered a life-threatening brain bleed.

He was subsequently sent to prison for 18 months, his third prison stay since he was 18.

Today, he claims to have turned his life around and is the CEO of The Coaching Masters, a £20m life coaching business.

However, in a brutally honest interview about these past crimes shared on Tik TokMr Taylor has admitted he is not as remorseful as he would like.

Lewis told MailOnline that his $25m business, The Coaching Masters, was not a cult, as some people have claimed.

Psychopath and life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor, 33, lives with his partner and wife Dayana, 28, and their ten-week-old son Ocean (pictured together).

Psychopath and life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor, 33, lives with his partner and wife Dayana, 28, and their ten-week-old son Ocean (pictured together).

In the video, which has 645.6 thousand views, Raymond said: “I punched him (his 2015 victim) and he hit his head on the ground, face first. And I thought I had killed him.

“The next day I was told that I was in a coma and that I had also suffered a brain haemorrhage. So it’s my second GBH, my second brain haemorrhage on my record. So of course I was sent straight to prison.”

When the interviewer, from social media channel People Are Deep, asked her if she felt “guilty” or had feelings of “remorse,” she explained that her “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 answer is “no,” because I just think and I just tell my story and I don’t go there.

“But I’ve been working a lot on myself in Bali lately and I’m really trying.”

However, closing his eyes in front of the camera for a few seconds, he replies: “It’s not there yet, I don’t even know what that feels like.”

As a young man, Mr. Taylor would film himself drinking and bragging about his exploits to get people’s attention, people’s reaction.

He got into fights in his 20s, stomping on people’s heads, according to testimony he gave to a 2023 Netflix documentary about his life.

Taylor’s childhood was marked by mental illness, sexual and physical abuse, emotional neglect and a rebellious adolescence, the documentary revealed.

His father was an alcoholic who regularly belittled him.

By his own admission: “This created voices in my head: you’re not good enough and you don’t deserve to succeed. This internal dialogue completely paralyzed me, too afraid that people would think I was stupid, or that I would fail and prove my father right, or that I would succeed and prove my father wrong.”

When he was young, he often got into fights and admitted that he had a tendency to stomp on people's heads.

When he was young, he often got into fights and admitted that he had a tendency to stomp on people’s heads.

Lewis would get blackout drunk and seek attention by starting fights, even though he would probably lose them.

Lewis would get blackout drunk and seek attention by starting fights, even though he would probably lose them.

He was sexually abused at 11 and at 13 began getting into trouble with the law, being given an ASBO the following year.

Lewis’s 1920s were dominated by violence, prison sentences, and drug and alcohol abuse.

In 2015, at the age of 24, he committed the crime that would ultimately change his life.

The fight began outside a taxi rank and resulted in the victim suffering a brain hemorrhage.

This earned him a prison sentence during which he was diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, emotionally unstable personality disorder and bipolar disorder type 2.

It was then that he also decided to make a change in his life and created The Coaching Masters, a global community spanning 85 countries that some former members have compared to “a cult.”

He has already trained 10,000 life coaches, including glamour model Katie Price, 46, who is currently seeking Lewis’ help with training, and the pair will document their journey in a new TV show.

Katie Price has revealed she is training to become a life coach and has enlisted the help of psychopathic life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor.

Katie Price has revealed she is training to become a life coach and has enlisted the help of psychopathic life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor.

It is estimated that approximately 1 in 100 people meet the criteria for psychopathy.

Although many violent criminals fall into this category, not all psychopaths are 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 suffer from a severe form of antisocial personality disorder, however mental health professionals no longer use the terms “psychopathy” and “sociopathy.”

Although many people put their own needs and personal benefits before those of others, those with antisocial personality disorder may find that these actions occur frequently, explains mental health charity Mind.

Additionally, struggling to maintain stability in life and acting out of impulsiveness or anger with a lack of consideration for others are signs of the disorder.

You may also like