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USA Today via Reuters

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USA Today via Reuters

It started with him experiencing discomfort in his right arm for some time before he decided to visit a doctor. Five minutes. That’s all it took for his neurologist to diagnose him back in January 2024. And yet, the story didn’t surface until months later in September, when Favre revealed the condition during a congressional hearing tied to allegations of taxpayer money misuse. 

While the three-time Super Bowl champion has long discussed the challenges of living with Parkinson’s, a sit-down interview with The Sage Steele Show was the first time he peeled back the curtain on how he actually got the news. 

Favre recalled that Monday morning vividly. After his neurologist diagnosed him, he sat stunned in his truck. “What? What in the hell just happened?” he remembered thinking. “Yesterday, the last thing I thought was neurological. I’m thinking life’s over.” Though his doctor reassured him the condition could be managed, Favre admitted to having never seen it coming. And then, he was home. 

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He walked straight into the bedroom where his wife, Deanna, and their youngest daughter were talking in the bathroom. “I said, ‘I got Parkinson’s.’ I don’t even know if she heard the Parkinson’s part. She was like, ‘What are you doing in here?’ And I was like, ‘I came to tell you I got Parkinson’s.’” The words didn’t register right away. 

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“What are you talking about?” Deanna asked, confused. Favre explained he had just left the doctor’s office, but she pressed him further: “Wait, what made you go get checked? Who was the—” trying to sort out how this had even come about.

Favre told Steele he had been dealing with nagging symptoms for a while. At that moment, he turned to his wife with a single question: “You didn’t notice them?” Her answer was blunt: “No.” “That’s the problem,” Favre admitted. 

“You see someone every day, they’re normal to you. But I’d occasionally run into someone at a restaurant who hadn’t seen me in a while, and they’d say, ‘Hey Brett, you look stiff.’” Looking back now, he realizes the signs were there all along: “When I look back at some of the videos, my right side… how could anyone not see the rigidity?” Even then, Deanna struggled to accept it. 

“I don’t believe it,” she told him. But today, Favre says, she knows what to look for. “Now, after the fact, she’ll see it and say, ‘Maybe it’s time for your medicine.’”

That medicine has become a daily reality for him. In his view, it all traces back to football. Favre believes the disorder stems from the repeated head trauma (more than 1,000 concussions, he says) of his 20-year career, including the 2010 hit from Bears lineman Cory Wootton that left him unconscious for nearly 15 seconds. And as Favre revealed on the show, those signs are no longer subtle. 

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Brett Favre reveals worsening Parkinson’s symptoms

Brett Favre admitted that living with Parkinson’s brought challenges he never imagined. “What symptoms sort of arised here lately is I’m having a hard time swallowing,” he told Sage Steele. “There’s times where I think I’m choking. It’s sort of scary because they can’t fix that. I try not to think about it. I try to just focus on getting after the day.” And still, the thoughts catch up with him when the day winds down. 

“There are often times during the day, maybe at night, when I decompress and I think I’m progressing a little bit,” he explained. But his doctor had offered a sobering perspective: progression of the disease doesn’t follow a straight line. “There’s no way to predict who is going to progress faster than others,” Favre recalled him saying. “We all age differently.” That should bring in some relief from the uncertainty, but “I constantly think about it even though I know I shouldn’t,” Favre admitted.

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“Am I gonna be the one that ages quicker? Is the disease going to eventually dominate me where I think right now I’m dominating the disease? I wake up every day and think, ‘Did I progress 2% or am I staying the same? Am I looking into this progression more than I should?’ All those thoughts go through my mind.” Still, he’s leaned on competition to push back.

“Run. Prior to the hip replacement, I was running in half marathons,” Favre said. The hip issues that dated back to his NFL days eventually forced surgery, but not before he found something unexpected for him in distance running. “If you’d have told me when I retired that I would run period, especially if no one was chasing me, I would have said, ‘You’re out of your mind,’” he laughed. He started just to keep himself fit, but soon, he began enjoying it. 

He also roped in his wife as the couple participated in a short sprint course at the Brett Robinson Alabama Coastal Triathlon in 2014. It took him an hour and three additional minutes (including a two-minute penalty) to complete a 300-yard swim, 10-mile bike ride, and two-mile run. In 2017, he participated in the Big Beach Half Marathon, a 13.1-mile race. Soon, he had to give up that, too. But that doesn’t mean he gave up on racing altogether. 

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“Other than running, I can pretty much do what I want,” he added. His new passion was cycling, and now you can’t spot him without his cycling cap. He even flaunted it during his vacation trip to Rome, Italy, posing before the Colosseum in April 2024.

The same year as his first marathon in 2017, he also participated in the annual Trek 100 alongside 2,200 cyclists to help the Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer Fund generate funds. The event generated around $1 million. Cycling is something that has kept Favre’s competitive spirit alive, which refuses to die even after nearly 15 years of his retirement. The mountains still get a little tough for him to trek, but he feels he’s still not restrained. So, he “can’t complain.”

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Does Brett Favre's story highlight the need for more awareness and research on sports-related head injuries?

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