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10th May 2023
10:10am BST

"For me, sometimes, it's about getting to a point of letting go," he admits.
"In the past, I would have been so consumed that I'd be trying to do more and more and more to the point where it just breaks you down. You physically can't do anymore.
"Learning to switch off is something I've got better at," he adds.
"You have to go down the mountain before you climb again. Peaking for the games is the priority, so learning to taper off and recover is key."
So how does he do it? For some players it's a few pints over the off-season, a foreign holiday - for Meyler it's a holiday, a walk with his girlfriend, a coffee with his mates.
"I keep moving.
"If I retire I'll be training anyway.
"But I try to get a few foreign holidays pencilled in (during the year.) Switching off for me would look like going to the sauna, going for a walk with my girlfriend, going to the coffee shop with good company. All those things work."
"Learning to let go and accepting the fact that it's a game and there's so much that can be left the chance.
"You factor in your skill-work and you just have to accept that the work's been done and on game day then to go out and play with freedom, abandonment and enjoyment - because that's what you fell in love with in the first place, as a cub - the game."
Meyler had a real ding-dong battle with Monaghan's Stephen O'Hanlon in Tyrone's Ulster quarter final loss recently. That's what he plays the game for.
"I did enjoy it. Stephen was someone we'd have targeted as Monaghan's main men.
"So I'd have done a lot of homework on him. I love those battles. It was ding-dust stuff.
"When you're marking top players, you just have to accept that they can get inside you like Stephen did for the goal.
"I know Stephen from being out in Chicago last summer, he pushed me the whole way, you shake hands after, you smile and have a laugh with each other."
You can listen to the full interview, at the end of the show here.
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