I believe I have a lot to offer when I finish football as well. I always said I didn't want to become a manager, but I changed that view.
Craig Bellamy
It's up to people to judge whether I'm a good fella.
Life isn't just about football. The adventure starts when you finish, and I'm looking forward to that.
The lads I played football with on the street when I was a kid in Cardiff were as good as me, and in many ways, my career is due to them.
I want to become one of the greatest managers that has ever lived. Why not? If it doesn't happen, then I've given everything, and I'd be proud of whatever I'm able to achieve.
I want to make sure that I am always ready: that if I step off the bench, I will make a contribution, then be given my chance.
I'm aware of my value as a player, of course. But do I need to buy a holiday home that I'm only going to use two weeks every year? Course not. It's a waste. Why not give the money to people who could do with it.
I've grown up with Kenny Dalglish; now, to be signed by him is a massive honour.
I've always had this crazy thought that I have to win something; otherwise, my career's a complete failure. It's ridiculous. Will a trophy change me as a person? No. Will it make me a better player? No. So what the hell am I worried about?
My discipline in myself has got me where I am. I try to emphasise that to young players.
In the past, before games, I would near enough make myself ill. Nerves and stuff.
I have had my eyes opened to a different side to me. I'm a much happier person. There was always this Jekyll and Hyde thing with me.
I don't like the Italian approach. I don't want to be involved in that kind of football.
I surround myself with family. I have got the most incredible wife in the world and unbelievable kids.
I can understand a bad pass or something like that; I don't get irate. But the one thing I can never accept is a lack of work rate. You have to be able to give everything you have.
I was just unhappy - and lonely at times. There was always that other side of me nagging away, bringing me down. The anger. Even after good games, I just went home and looked at the bad points. It was just nuts.
When I left Liverpool, my aim was to get into the top six, and I was looking for a team that could get involved at that level. West Ham were brilliant at the time. They'd signed a lot of players, had a lot of money. But they've had problems since then.
Before, I would spend all my hours at training, come home, sleep, eat, watch football, sleep, and go back to training the next day. Now I do the school run, train, pick up my daughter. I am living in the real world. I am a father now. That has given me more satisfaction than football.
First and foremost, I am concentrating on staying fit. If I'm fit, I can challenge. If I ain't fit, I can't challenge.
I do have to pinch myself at times when I look back at some of the things I have achieved. I really do.
My brother is gay - he's a couple of years older than me, and I could not be more proud of him. It was right for him. If a player was going through something similar at a younger age, I feel I would be understanding because I was there to watch it with my brother.
Glasgow was a tough city. You were adored, and you were hated.
If I ever wrote an autobiography - and I won't - it would be called 'Don't Google Me.'
I've always enjoyed the coaching side, working with young players, trying to improve them and to make them not only see football different but to see life differently.
I can understand failure: I've failed loads of times in my life; it's not a problem. I've never feared it, because it's a part of life.
David Brooks - every time I see him, I like him. He breaks lines, runs beyond, and I like him a lot.
Football - a simple game really, yet generally, in the game, we make the simple things seem harder. But it's those simple things that get you to the top.
Teams do not make their debut in the first XI - individuals do - but it is the team that enables the individual to get the best out of himself. Football IQ, I call it, understanding roles and the team structure.
Football is about so much more than talent.
Being Welsh means you sometimes get exposed to international football earlier. Again, that helps player development, speeds up their thought process in a different kind of environment.
Look, we all make mistakes. That is no problem. But you have to be willing to make up for your mistakes and to help yourself.
Certain players need twice the recovery time of others because they run much more - not because they put in more effort but because they're playing different positions.
I see myself as a different sort of Welsh. Because we are from Cardiff, we see Wales as Cardiff. This is Wales; outside Cardiff is beyond. It's a strange one. You are really Welsh, but you're not, if you know what I mean.
John Hartson, he speaks fluent Welsh and has the tattoos all over him to prove his Welshness. But in my own world, no one is more Welsh than myself.
I started to realise I am not as strong as others, and I can't muscle someone off the ball who is twice the size of me. So I have altered my game, playing on the half-turn, for example, and it's made me a much better player.
My image is not the greatest, I imagine. You need to know me and understand me, see some of the things I do away from football. Maybe you have to be a fan of me to like me.
I felt bad for Newcastle when they lost their 2005 FA Cup semi-final to Manchester United. They had loaned me out to Celtic, but I still had a lot of affection for them.
If you are going to say something, then be as honest as you can.
I let football drive me crazy. If we lost, I would shut myself away for two or three days, not sleeping, torturing myself about what I did.
I played on anger for the first 15 years of my career.
I joined Norwich when I was 15 and moved away from a life living on an estate in Cardiff and everything I knew. I moved away from my girlfriend, who is my wife now, and my nan, who has now passed away. I missed a lot.
I knew I needed to move away when I was 15, but when I got to Norwich, I spent nights crying myself to sleep with homesickness. For any young kid moving away from home, that is the biggest thing you have to deal with.
I was a troubled young kid, and I would try to break every rule.
So much of my career was affected by injuries. Not just the well documented surgery, but the hamstring pulls and other things. Injuries hit me hard, and they always seemed to come at key times.
Of course I want to keep playing; that's the best thing for any footballer. But I'm looking forward to not having to put my body through the pain, I have to say.
As a professional, you're taught from a young age to despise losing. But I began to accept that, in football, you will win some games, and you will lose some games, with draws here and there, too. That's just the nature of the game.
That's what makes the Premier League the best in the world: the competitiveness and the ability each team possesses can hurt you on their day.
I am reading the biography of Pep Guardiola. I find it really interesting.
There is no one better than Jose Mourinho for how he cherishes his players, and their affection for him is unique.
I had a very good upbringing, which I'm eternally grateful for.