Kevin Love won an NBA championship, Olympic gold, and five All-Star selections—yet a panic attack at 32 revealed that external success cannot heal internal wounds. This conversation explores how unprocessed childhood rage fueled elite performance, why nine years of family estrangement preceded reconciliation before his father's death, and what becoming a father taught him about actually becoming a man. Love reveals the dangerous myth that achieving more will fix depression, the power of naming what we don't say, and how the Kevin Love Fund is teaching emotional language to kids so they don't wait until their 30s to heal. Achievement and accolades cannot change your baseline nervous system; returning to dopamine baseline after accomplishment leaves you with the same untreated brain, explaining why athletes often feel worse despite reaching goals.