Summary

Chelsea Green said the praise she received from other wrestlers for helping them is her greatest accomplishment in wrestling.

She said that trending for kind actions toward peers meant more to her than typical career milestones.

Green added that she wants women in wrestling to feel supported and comfortable coming to her with questions, including questions they might find embarrassing.

She also said she hopes that kind of support becomes part of her legacy when her career is over.

Chelsea Green says mentoring impact matters more than standard accolades

Chelsea Green framing peer trust as her biggest accomplishment creates a concrete consequence, her WWE run is being defined as much by locker-room influence as by on-screen character work.

With Green also discussing future faction ideas in her Secret Hervice additions comments, her current positioning blends performance visibility with a stated leadership role for other women.

Quotes

Quote from Chelsea Green

"I think, although the internet is a really horrible and nasty place, I think what I realized is that when I trended last year for the kind things that I had done for other wrestlers — I think that was my greatest accomplishment in wrestling. I think for people to stand up for me and say nice words about the impact that I had on them, I think that right there is how I want to leave it. Whatever happens is a little cherry on top of that, but I just want the women in this industry to feel loved and motivated by me. I want them to feel like they can come to me for whatever, whether it was a really silly question or they were embarrassed to ask. Anything because there were so many stupid questions that I asked. I can’t even begin to describe to you the questions that I had for indie wrestlers in 2014. I just had no idea what I was doing and you don’t know what you don’t know. I hope that’s the legacy that I leave, but it’s hard because you don’t know. I don’t think you ever know what legacy you leave until you’re done and gone."

Sources

As reported by Fightful.