Meet the Chennai mentor who helped Def Leppard’s Rick Allen heal

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Meet the Chennai mentor who helped Def Leppard’s Rick Allen heal

Drummer Rick Allen was just 21 when the accident in 1984 changed his life. While the world watched him relearn drumming with a custom electronic kit, the deeper battle was internal.

As Def Leppard arrives in India for its first-ever headline tour, the spotlight is firmly on the iconic international rock band’s music and legacy. But behind drummer Rick Allen’s remarkable return to the stage after losing his left arm in a near-fatal car accident lies a lesser-known story — one that traces an unexpected connection to Chennai.Allen was just 21 when the accident in 1984 changed his life. While the world watched him relearn drumming with a custom electronic kit, the deeper battle was internal. “The physical recovery was intense, no doubt, but what really stayed with me was the inner shift,” he recalls. “It wasn’t just about learning to play again, it was about understanding who I was without something I had always relied on.”‘THERE WAS NO DENIAL AND NO RESISTANCE TO LOOKING WITHIN’Allen returned to music with a custom electronic drum kit, but the internal process was far less visible.

“There was a quiet grief, not always loud or obvious, but it was there. It showed up in moments of frustration, in memories, in comparison,” he says.During this search for clarity, he encountered Chennai-born Ashwin Srisailam, a former monk whose work centres on awareness. What began as conversations deepened over time. “What stood out wasn’t just his pain but also the sincerity of his seeking. There was no denial, no resistance to looking within,” Ashwin says.

‘YOU REALISE FEAR DOES NOT REALLY GO AWAY, BUT YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH IT CAN’For Allen, change came gradually. “I think it wasn’t one single moment, but a series of small realisations,” he shares. “When you face something that completely changes your life, you realise fear doesn’t really go away, but your relationship with it can,” he adds.Reflecting on his roots, Ashwin says, “Chennai gave me simplicity. It showed me that life does not need to be complicated to be deep… everything we are seeking outward is already within.”

Naturally, his approach focused on understanding the mind rather than fixing circumstances. “It is not the situation, it is the relationship with the mind. If there is awareness — even a little — there is space. And in that space, rebuilding becomes possible,” he says.

This reframing reshaped Allen’s idea of resilience. “In my 20s, resilience probably meant pushing through, staying strong, not stopping. Today, it feels very different. It’s quieter. It’s about allowing, adapting, listening… and continuing forward without forcing life to look the way it used to,” he explains.Written By: Aashna Reddy

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