All I can say is that I have arrived with the desire to be a success at Barca, that I am hungry to win titles.
It is always a bit hypocritical when a defender who spends the whole game kicking you complains of being kicked.
'Negro' can refer to anyone with dark hair as well as dark skin, and I've been used to the word being used in Spanish in this way all my life.
If you don't speak Spanish, then don't accuse me of insulting you in that language, let alone insulting you ten times.
I am obviously a striker who likes to score a lot of goals and have done that in every team I have been with.
I have been hit from all sides, and I'm only human. They have ended up talking about the way I look, and it hurts. I have a family, and they suffer, too. It has gone over the limit, and I am tired of it. I have a wife and child, too, and I am not prepared to go on putting up with it English journalists.
My first season at Liverpool had good moments but also bad ones. We played three tournaments and we played two finals, and that was good.
I think all the bad things I have been through are in the past. I believe I am on the right path now, dealing with the people who can help me, the right kind of people.
There are only three million people in Uruguay, but there is such hunger for glory: you'll do anything to make it; you have that extra desire to run, to suffer. I can't explain our success, but I think that's a reason.
Injuries are not only a physical question, which is the most important thing, of course, but also a question of your mind. If you're thinking: 'I'm not going to make it', 'I can't cope', 'it hurts', 'it's never going to get better', then it won't.
I have always preferred to keep things to myself rather than sharing them with anyone, but I am learning that if you let it go, you feel better for it. Don't keep it all bottled up inside; don't take it all on alone.
Every soccer player can be on the edge, at the limit, be the bad guy. We have to get used to it. Sometimes I am one of those.
My wife says that if people reach conclusions as to what I am like based on what they see from me on the pitch they would say I am a guy who is always annoyed, always in a bad mood, they'd say what must it be like to live with me. There are two of me, two different people.
If you win while scoring goals, then you leave happy, but the most important thing is always the team. I do not think just of me.
Put 'Luis Suarez' into an Internet search engine, and up comes the word 'racist.' It's a stain that is there for ever. And it is one that I feel I do not deserve.
I want to change the bad boy image that has stuck for a bit because I don't think I am at all how I have been portrayed. I would like that to change because it's awful to hear and read what is said of you.
I've scored many goals that I've liked, but I think the best memory I have is the one against Korea in the 2010 World Cup.
Of course I don't like the fact that my wife goes to the supermarket and there are photographers. But I realise that the press attention is the same wherever you go.
I'm an emotional person, and I externalise my feelings a lot with some things, but I'm strong with others.
There are people who criticise me, and that's normal because of the way I am on the pitch. I get angry, I get tense.
Away from the pitch, I'm a very calm person. I maybe have the odd cross word with my wife, like any relationship, but that's it.
Obviously, being a forward, I would like to score more goals. But while the team does well, there is no problem.
I think the people who really know who Luis is are the people who are by my side, who have always been by my side.
I was asked a question: 'Would I want to play for Madrid?' It's like anyone asked if they want to change jobs and move to a bigger company.
My record shows that I'm not the kind of player who wants to change clubs every season, and I would have no problem playing in England for many more years.