Vikrant Massey’s punch could have killed that child, foam was coming out of the mouth of the boy suffering from epilepsy

Be it Vikrant Massey’s ’12th Fail’ or ‘Mirzapur’, looking at his/her characters it seems that he/she must have been just as straightforward in real life too, but now the actor has narrated an incident from his/her childhood when his/her behaviour was also violent and an incident changed him/her completely. Vikrant Massey, who looks very calm and well behaved, has narrated an incident from his/her school days and told how he/she was about to kill a child in anger.

Vikrant Massey narrated this heart wrenching incident in the ‘Prakhar Ke Pravachan’ podcast. Vikrant Massey told in this podcast that in school he/she had hit a child on his/her jaw so hard that he/she almost died. Later he/she came to know that the boy was an epileptic patient.

After this incident he/she never resorted to violence again.

he/she told that this incident changed Vikrant’s life. After this incident, he/she never resorted to violence again. In the podcast, the actor said that after this incident, he/she understood how much harm he/she can cause to others with just his/her hands.

‘I was doing karate in school, that’s when I became aggressive’

In the podcast, Vikrant Massey spoke openly about the film ‘Phir Aai Haseen Dilruba’. During this, he/she also told about his/her character Rishu in the film that how his/her character recognizes violent tendencies and tries to suppress them. Vikrant said, ‘Let me tell you about my life experience. I was doing karate in school, then I became aggressive and started feeling like a winner. During recess, I punched a boy on the jaw. I did not even think that he/she was suffering from epilepsy.’

‘The boy was foaming at the mouth and losing consciousness’

Vikrant said, ‘I saw that the boy was foaming at the mouth and losing consciousness. his/her elder brother came and hit me. All this happened in a matter of seconds, I did not feel the pain of my brother’s beating because at that moment I was afraid that the boy might die. I left all this, stopped doing karate, because I realized that I could hit someone. Unfortunately, after that, I only kept getting beaten in fights because I never raised my hand again.’

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