Get in, get the money, and get out. Jared Anderson believes he’s already writing the perfect script for his boxing career.

Collecting world titles is normally the first thing that comes to the mind of an up-and-coming fighter. They dream of shining their newly won belt with the cleanest rag they can find, throwing that glimmering belt over their shoulder, and boastfully sticking out their chest as if to say, job well done.

There’s an innate love for boxing that most fighters exhibit. That isn’t entirely surprising considering that most get their start at a young age. Anderson (14-0, 14 KOs) falls right in line with the norm. But while he essentially threw on boxing gloves the moment he could walk, Anderson admits that he isn’t entirely in love with the sport in the traditional sense.

“I find love in it,” said Anderson to Fight Hub TV. “I’ve found joys through it. I found a lot of brotherhood and love.”

The lack of love for the sport has only deepened. In his younger days, Anderson enjoyed learning and studying all that he could. But as he got older, boxing went from a joyous pastime to a monotonous and mundane 9-5.

“100 percent, 1,000 percent,” said Anderson when asked if boxing feels like a job. “Every day I wake up and somebody tell me like ‘aye, you gotta eat this.’ Like why do I have to eat that? ‘Because it’s gonna make you feel better, it’s gonna make you perform better.’ I’m gonna do it because, at the end of the day, this is gonna pay the bills. I’m willing to do what I have to do in order to provide but it’s a job.”

Whether he likes it or not, Anderson will remain in the spotlight. This upcoming weekend, July 1st, at the Huntington Center in his hometown of Toledo, Ohio, Anderson will main event for the first time in his career against former heavyweight champion, Charles Martin.

Although nothing is scripted in the sport, Anderson’s career is supposed to go as followed. Steamroll Martin, fight two or three more step fights, then eventually -  grab a world title. Those expectations, while nice, have little to no meaning for Anderson. He doesn’t envision a long life of brutalizing others to make a living, nor does he care to.

What matters most to the soft-spoken heavyweight are the zeros that are at the end of every paycheck he receives. And once he believes he’s collected enough of those, life outside of boxing will begin.

“26, 27,” said Anderson when asked the age he wants to retire. “I been doing this since I was eight years old. I’m burnt out. If financial stability comes long before world championships then I’ll be retired.”