Jake "The Snake" Roberts struggled with alcohol addiction, and he is someone who found strength to overcome his addiction in religion. Because his religion was very important to him, and because he was such a huge fan favorite, Vince agreed to let him do a bit of preaching during their shows. It lead to an incident that is another reason why I so strongly resent Jerry "The King" Lawler, because Jerry thought Jake's sobriety and conversion were fake, and during an angle Jerry had a cup full of whiskey and he slung the whiskey on Jake's face. Which leads back to my other point that it isn't always fake, and that sometimes it gets rather bitter and nasty. In an ECW match, it was Bam Bam Bigelow against someone, and the someone I don't remember accidentally really hit Bam Bam, and Bam Bam full-forced hit the guy in retaliation.
One of my favorite stories involved a local wrestler here who billed himself as King Kong Bundy Jr., and the real King Kong Bundy hated it, and Jr., so much that the guy running the promo here (this particular one folded years ago) wouldn't let Jr. use the same locker room.
I also met Glenn Gilbertti (better known as Disco Inferno) once (I was working security at this particular show), but it wasn't under very good circumstances as he was pissed that the ring was sitting, uncovered, under a baking hot sun and he wasn't happy about the way things were ran in that promotion. It pretty much went him: Is that the ring? Me: yup. Him: That's (a bunch of profanity)! Me: yup.
At times I miss doing it, but then I remind myself how hard is it to find people who actually want to take it seriously. I can find a ton of people who want to do it, but they tend to be a bunch of egotists who want to do it their way, not put in the effort it takes to get good at it (let alone doing the exercising and training it takes to stay in shape for doing it), or realize and accept that winning and loosing, holding belts and loosing them, are nothing about them or their fragile egos but part of a larger story that has to get the audience wanting to pay to see what happens next.