Ring of Honor has become a place I call a second home. The locker room is really my second family, they support me and I couldn't do it without them.
I was never a sit-in-the-audience-type person. Even as a little kid, when I saw a band performing at a restaurant, I would ask them if I could sing a song.
I accidentally met Don Callis in Japan. I was at New Japan and I was with mutual friends, and I met Don on accident and started telling him some of my ideas. We started talking and he basically at dinner was saying, 'Hey, we should give you a job.'
I think it's amazing that I finally have this platform with Impact Wrestling to showcase what I feel like I've been doing, what I've been capable of for so many years.
My very first show that I went to was 2009, so that was the end of my senior year of high school, that was my first introduction to professional wrestling at all.
I wasn't allowed to watch it as a little kid but I went with some friends who were some big independent wrestling fans and I saw it, I fell in love with it. Very quickly, I asked if I could help set up the ring, set up chairs, just be around it.
I'm going for the Knockouts Championship.
I trained at a conservatory as a mezzo-soprano and was a musical theater major in college so I had a theater background.
Appearing at TNA for the first time was extremely important to me due to the high visibility.