Once you look back on your career when it's over, you can say, 'This is what I achieved,' or, 'This is what I'm driving.'
There are a lot of players competing for that wide attacking role, and if I'm brutally honest, if you aren't playing regularly, you can't get picked. I found that out, missing out on the World Cup.
I'm still operating as a wide player, and I'm still free to express myself, try to get one-v-one and get past someone, and there's no better feeling than getting over a great cross and someone scoring.
Players have to adapt nowadays, and if you have a good football brain, if you can read the game, you can manage it.
I follow tennis, and I actually went to Wimbledon during the summer, and it was nice to get a day off during pre-season to watch it. Basketball as well - I don't have a team; it's just a casual interest - especially when the play-offs come around and the intensity rises.
My dad worked in the IT industry, although I haven't got a clue what he did. He always tells me but it just goes over my head.
There's a lot said now about younger players: that it's just about the cars and houses. I'm from the old school - it's about what you've achieved in the game.
We've got to rediscover the Manchester United way of playing, and I don't think many teams enjoy their nights at Old Trafford when we're on song.
I had to go to see the careers woman at school, and when she asked me what I wanted to do after school, I told her flat: 'I want to be a professional footballer.' I can remember her being silent for a few seconds, just looking at me.
I was 11 years old and was racially abused on the pitch. It was obviously disappointing to hear it at such a young age.
I wouldn't say I've changed at all. A lot of people will keep saying I'm a different person, especially when I go across those white lines. I think it's just the hunger and desire and passion I've got for the game.
I've had the same hunger, the same desire to win, since I started kicking a football when I was five years old.
I'm not one of those players who talks about things off the field. It's about what trophies and titles and cups you've won.
I'm enjoying playing football, and as a footballer, that's what you want to do, and that is exactly what I've been doing.
As you get older, you start to read the game more, and as your brain starts working more, and as you get a good footballing brain, your legs start slowing down!
I've always said that when you pull on an England shirt, it's a proud moment, and it's an honour to play for and represent your country.
I've played at a European Championship; to represent your country at a World Cup is every boy's dream, and for me, it would definitely be a dream come true.
As I've got older, the nerves aren't there anymore; they just left one day when I was at Watford. I only feel excitement now, whatever the game.
Kids ask me about what they should do to make it, and I tell them, 'Just get your head down and work, work, work.'
I had the brain for football, but I didn't have the height. So I started using my brain to overcome those weaknesses and discovered football isn't just about size or power: it's about what's up there. That was the making of me.
I'm a versatile player, can play in numerous positions, and I have a good football brain, even if it is getting older.
It's just determination, working hard, and keeping my feet on the ground in training and keep on proving people wrong.
If you are in the team, there is always going to be someone biting away at your heels trying to get in.
I'm confident in my own ability, and if I'm called upon to play on the right, the left, or as the main striker, then I can play there.
If I've gone to get a takeaway, and I get chips... I like to match up the chips in length. That is actually quite weird. Obviously, if I've got chips, I pick them out in twos. That's a weird thing as well. You know, if they're not the same length, well, I go hunting for the same length in chips.
I'll relish playing at Wembley in a major cup final. It's a great achievement for me, and it's why I became a footballer, because I want to win medals.
A lot of youngsters in the game think they've made it before they've done anything. But at United, they're given that winning mentality and an ethos of always trying to improve.