In between Ayahuasca and Achilles tendon injury rehabilitation, aaron rodgers His new Netflix docuseries spilled some important insight into his family drama. Aaron Rodgers: Enigma.
All three episodes of the show, which arrived on the streaming service on Tuesday, Dec. 17, explore Rodgers’ attempts to return during the 2023 NFL season after suffering a torn Achilles tendon in his first game as quarterback for the New York Jets. . However, it also provides some background on Rodgers’ childhood, college, and time with the Green Bay Packers.
One of the themes throughout the series is Rogers’ rebellion against his Christian upbringing and how this upsets his parents. ed and Darlaand distance themselves from their brothers. luke rogers and Jordan Rodgers.
“I grew up in a church that was very white and dogmatic, and that didn’t do much for me,” Aaron told Netflix’s cameras. “Structurally it was very rigid, but I’m not a rigid person. Shame, guilt, judgment. It’s like, ‘We have the truth, our path, or the highway.’ It was something. Our way is heaven, but your way is hell. ” Even when I talked to my parents, it was very clear. someone must be wrong [and] Someone has to be right. I slowly got out of that situation in high school. ”
According to Aaron, his rise to fame also played a big role in family drama, and Jordan’s duties bachelorette It certainly didn’t help.
Keep reading for the biggest takeaways about the Rogers family from Enigma.
Aaron’s parents thought he was “too soft”
“As a child, I was very lucky to have parents who believed that I had a very low pain tolerance,” Aaron explained. “I felt that there were many times when my parents found me a little too soft, so I made sure that I was the toughest mother I knew. When I was injured in some way, I was always going to try to keep it going as long as I could. I could come back sooner than anyone said. So dealing with the pain was always kind of a way of life.”
During physical therapy for his Achilles injury in 2023, Rodgers said he started feeling “good” but not good enough. “My own childhood conditioning came through,” he told his therapist with a laugh.
He later added that he was “grateful” that his parents thought he had a “gentle upbringing.”
Ed Rogers didn’t cry
On one of the ayahuasca trips documented on the show, Rogers said she only saw her father cry once when she was a child.
“I feel like I saw my dad crying when my grandfather died, and that could have been it. There was no room for emotions to come in. So I definitely have the ability to channel those emotions. “Their emotional intelligence was underdeveloped,” he said. “People who aren’t really close to me have an idea of who I am or who I am. You start peeling away parts of yourself and you start getting deeper and more emotional.” And I think being a balanced man means tapping into that divine feminine and being vulnerable. ”
fame effect
“When I became really famous, a lot of people, including my family, would often tell me, ‘Your life is too big.’ I wish you were smaller. Please be smaller. About my life. Don’t talk,” Rogers insisted. “It always hurts me because I feel like you’re not looking at me. This is not what I want or want other than to play on Sunday. It’s definitely your It can change the people around you, because it can be intoxicating and bring fame and notoriety. Therefore, relationships, friendships and family will definitely change after that.
“Bachelorette” bargains
Jordan was a contestant Jojo Fletcherseason of bachelorette In 2016, Aaron was so visible during his hometown visit that producers left an empty seat for him and his then-girlfriend. olivia munn At the dinner table.
“I wasn’t very close with all my family. I was close with my younger brother. [Jordan]” Aaron said as a childhood photo of himself and Jordan flashed on the screen. “But really, it goes back to something in high school that made me feel so far away. In college, after college. I kept quiet about it. And what would they do? They would ride the bull and leave showing two empty chairs. We all agreed that it was a good thing to empty two chairs on the stupid dating show my brother just became famous for – his words, not mine. I ended up winning. But I was never invited to dinner during the season. It’s not like I didn’t go.”
role of religion
While attending the University of California, Berkeley, Rogers stopped going to church and loved living in a city that “challenged” her beliefs and what she had learned as a child. Shortly after arriving in Green Bay, he began following the author’s teachings. rob bell In 2011.
“He was a huge help in completely unraveling the religion of my youth. I started researching other religions and spirituality. I read many different types of books, including philosophy books, self-help books, etc. I started reading “How I feel better.” I found the courage to speak up. So I began to confront the institutions of my youth, from organized religion to my parents to my doctrines and ideologies, which forever changed the dynamics of my family. Because I had doubts about it all.”
Aaron said he encountered “a lot of pushback” from his family when he started considering “other religions and plant medicine” and “alternative lifestyles.”
“They’re still living their lives as best they can, swallowed up by organized religion, and it’s good for them, which is great,” he said. “So even though they may not like what they see, have love and respect and gratitude for the way I was raised, because it never made me the person I am today. Because I’m deaf.”
vaccine
Aaron revealed that his father “just didn’t believe in the flu shot” and “I never got a flu shot since I was a kid.” This contributed to Aaron’s skepticism about vaccines and the infamous 500-page letter he sent to the NFL during the COVID-19 crisis in which he did not want to be vaccinated.
Possibility of reconciliation
Aaron held the door open for the family to be reunited. “People ask me, ‘Is there any hope for reconciliation?’ I say, ‘Yes, of course.’ Of course. ‘I don’t want them to fail, struggle, fight or have problems,’ he said. “I don’t wish them any ill will at all. It’s more just a different step on the timeline of our own journey.”