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Diagnosed psychopath reveals he feels no remorse after giving man a brain hemorrhage and putting him in a coma

A diagnosed psychopath confesses he doesn’t know what remorse feels like. In a revealing video, he shows how he gave a man a brain hemorrhage and put him in a coma.

Lewis Raymond Taylor, 34, was convicted for the 11th time in 2015 after beating a man so hard that the victim suffered a mini-stroke and life-threatening bleeding on his brain.

He was then sent to prison for 18 months, his third prison sentence since he was 18.

Today he claims to have turned his life around and is CEO of the £20 million (£20 million) life coaching company The Coaching Masters.

However, in a brutally honest interview about these past crimes, shared on TikTokMr Taylor has admitted he is not as remorseful as he would like.

Lewis told MailOnline that his $25 million company, The Coaching Masters, was not a cult, as some people claim

Lewis told MailOnline that his $25 million company, The Coaching Masters, was not a cult, as some people claim

Psychopathic life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor, 33, lives with his fellow life coach and wife Dayana, 28, and their 10-week-old son Ocean (pictured together)

Psychopathic life coach Lewis Raymond Taylor, 33, lives with his fellow life coach and wife Dayana, 28, and their 10-week-old son Ocean (pictured together)

In the video, which has been viewed 645.6k times, Mr. Raymond said: ‘I hit him [his 2015 victim] one time and he hit his head flat on the ground, face first. And I thought I killed him.

‘The next day they told me he was in a coma and he had also had a brain haemorrhage. So this is my second GBH, my second brain haemorrhage on my record. So of course I was sent straight to prison.’

When asked by the interviewer from social media channel People Are Deep if he felt “guilty” or “regret,” he explained that his “standard answer” is usually no.

He said, ‘I really want to get to the point in my life where I can say yes to that, but I also don’t want to lie.

‘I want to try, I’m going to try to really think about it, because usually when you ask me that question, when I get that question, my default answer is ‘no.’ I just think and I just tell my story, and I don’t go there.

‘But I’ve been working on myself a lot lately in Bali and I’m really doing that.’

But when he closes his eyes for a few seconds for the camera, he answers: ‘It’s still not there, I don’t even know what that feels like.’

As a young man, Taylor filmed himself drinking and bragging about his exploits to “get people’s attention, and get people’s reactions.”

According to testimony he gave in a 2023 Netflix documentary about his life, he got into fights in his 20s, during which he stomped on people’s heads.

The documentary reveals that Mr. Taylor’s childhood was marked by mental illness, sexual and physical abuse, emotional neglect and a rebellious adolescence.

His father was an alcoholic who regularly put him down.

He himself admitted: ‘This created voices in my head: you are not good enough and you do not deserve to be successful. This internal dialogue completely paralyzed me, too afraid that people would think I was stupid, or that I would fail and prove my father right, or that I would succeed and prove my father wrong.’

As a boy he often got into fights and admitted to having a tendency to stomp on people's heads

As a boy he often got into fights and admitted to having a tendency to stomp on people’s heads

Lewis would get drunk and seek attention by starting fights, even if he was likely to lose them

Lewis would get drunk and seek attention by starting fights, even if he was likely to lose them

He was sexually abused at age 11 and got into trouble with the law at age 13. The following year he received an ASBO (Assabotage).

Lewis’s twenties were marked by violence, prison sentences, and drug and alcohol abuse.

In 2015, at the age of 24, he committed the crime that would ultimately change his life.

The fight started outside a taxi rank and left the victim with a bleed on the brain.

It led to a prison sentence during which he was diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, emotionally unstable personality disorder and bipolar disorder type 2.

Then he decided to change his life too and founded The Coaching Masters, a global community in 85 countries that was described as ‘a cult’ by some former members.

He has now trained 10,000 life coaches, including glamour model Katie Price, 46, who is currently enlisting Lewis’ help in her training. The pair will document their journey in a new TV show.

Katie Price has revealed she is training to become a life coach and has enlisted the help of The Psychopath Life Coach, Lewis Raymond Taylor

Katie Price has revealed she is training to become a life coach and has enlisted the help of The Psychopath Life Coach, Lewis Raymond Taylor

It is estimated that approximately 1 in 100 people meet the criteria for psychopathy.

Although many violent offenders fall into this category, not every psychopath is violent and not all violent people are psychopaths.

Personality disorders are mental health conditions that affect the way a person thinks, perceives, feels, and interacts with others.

Psychopaths are considered to be a group of people with a severe form of antisocial personality disorder. However, the terms ‘psychopathy’ and ‘sociopathy’ are no longer used by mental health professionals.

While many people put their own needs and personal gain above those of others, people with antisocial personality disorder may be more likely to display such behaviour, mental health charity Mind explains.

Signs of the disorder also include difficulty maintaining stability in your life and acting impulsively or angrily, without consideration for others.

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