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The Boxing System: I Became the King of the Ring-Chapter 30: New Year, Old Dreams
January 9th brought their return to Gleason’s Gym. The place was swarmed with New Year’s resolution people who would be gone by Valentine’s Day.
Javier and Tommy squeezed through the crowd of strangers. Middle-aged men in pristine workout gear boxed heavy bags like they might break. Women in makeup did cardio routines where boxing training should happen.
"This is painful to watch," Miguel muttered while stepping around a guy doing yoga poses near the speed bags. "Two weeks max, then we get our gym back."
Danny gathered the boxers in the far corner, away from the circus. His face looked more serious than Javier had ever seen it.
"Listen up. Golden Gloves isn’t some local tough-guy contest," Danny said. "Three levels: local, regional, national. USA Boxing sanctioned, which means every fight goes on your permanent record."
The coach’s words surprised Javier due to the consequences. Permanent record and real consequences. This wasn’t sparring with friends anymore.
"You’re both novices, so you’ll only fight other novices," Danny continued. "But don’t let that fool you. Novice just means USA Boxing has no official record of your bouts yet. Some of these kids have been training in other programs for years."
Tommy’s face went pale. "Years?"
"Kid from Queens I know has been grinding since he was ten. Fought in dozens of unsanctioned matches, but he’s still technically a novice because none of it’s on his USA Boxing record." Danny’s eyes found theirs. "Experience doesn’t disappear just because it’s not written down."
Miguel stepped forward with a grin that promised pain. "Speaking of experience, time for championship rounds."
Championship rounds meant an extra twenty minutes of pure hell after regular training. Mountain climbers until their shoulders screamed. Burpees that made Tommy’s legs shake. Sprint intervals that left both boys gasping on the gym floor.
[STRENGTH: 69.8/100 → 73.2/100]
[ENDURANCE: 72.1/100 → 76.5/100]
[SPEED: 73.4/100 → 77.8/100]
Every number climbed toward something bigger. Javier could feel changes happening deeper than muscle. Something was shifting in his bones, his reflexes, and the way his body moved through space.
Tommy struggled worse than Javier. His face turned brick red during conditioning. He needed twice as long to catch his breath between exercises.
"Can’t... breathe..." Tommy gasped after a set of bear crawls that lasted forever.
"Good," Miguel said without showing an ounce of sympathy. "Your lungs are learning to work under pressure. Champions get comfortable being uncomfortable."
Around them, the resolution crowd did their easy workouts and checked their phones. They had no idea what real training looked like.
But Javier was starting to understand the difference between people who did boxing as an exercise routine and people who lived it.
**************
Vicente appeared more solid now, watching the packed gym with disgust written across his ghostly features.
"Too many tourists," Vicente said quietly. "Not enough real fighters."
He studied the resolution crowd like they were insects crawling on something sacred.
"Look at them," Vicente continued, gesturing at a woman taking selfies near the heavy bags. "They think boxing is a game. Something to try for two weeks and quit."
Javier followed his gaze. A middle-aged man was tapping a speed bag so gently it barely moved. Another guy was doing jumping jacks in the corner where serious fighters usually stretched.
"It’s disrespectful," Vicente said, his voice getting harder. "Real fighters train here. Bleed here. Dream here. These people are just taking up space."
A woman in bright pink workout clothes walked between them, completely unaware she’d just passed through a ghost. Vicente’s form flickered with irritation.
"They’ll be gone soon," Javier said.
"Not soon enough," Vicente replied, then faded away like smoke.
**************
The week blurred together in waves of intensified training. Every session pushed harder than the last. Javier’s hands grew new calluses that bled, then hardened. His shoulders ached so much each day but the new day brought more endurance. His body was becoming something he’d never been before.
By Friday, the resolution crowd had already started thinning out. Half the yoga mats were gone. The guy doing meditation poses had disappeared entirely.
Danny gathered the serious fighters in the center of the gym. His expression was hard, that made everyone listen.
"Time to find out what you’re made of," Danny announced. "We’re starting sparring exchanges with other gyms."
Javier’s stomach dropped. "Sparring exchanges" sounded like a polite way of saying "wars."
"The first session is next week against Bronx Boxing Academy," Miguel added. "They’ve got kids who’ve been preparing for Golden Gloves since last summer."
Danny’s voice got harder. "This separates pretenders from fighters. Some of you will discover boxing isn’t your sport. Others will find out they’re tougher than they thought."
"Have their fighters competed before?" Tommy asked, his voice smaller than usual.
"Most of them. They know what tournament pressure feels like. They know how to handle judges watching their every move."
The gym went quiet except for the steady rhythm of heavy bags and speed bags. The resolution crowd kept doing their light workouts, completely unaware of the serious conversation happening a few feet away from them.
"Pressure changes everything," Miguel said finally. "We’ll see who rises up and who crumbles."
Tommy’s face had gone pale. Javier felt his own heart beating faster.
They were about to face fighters who’d already proven themselves in real competition. These were kids who understood the difference between gym sparring and tournament fighting.
The training wheels were coming off. It was time to find out if they belonged in a ring with real Golden Gloves contenders.