Part of his growth came from realizing he had to start with him. “At the end of the day, I stopped looking at other people, I stopped blaming other people, justifying and minimizing and I just started doing the hard work,’ says Fortune. Which included “going to therapy, going to counseling, learning how to process things, learning how to build my communication skills and learning the key components of healthy relationships.”
Fortune also explained that he had to identify his controlling behavior which is something he had to deal with personally in his private time. “Once I was aware of where the struggle was coming from, then I was able to be accountable and from that I started to see immediate change, short term and long term change.”