The 54-year-old father-of-four said that he was so busy raising children that he missed his opportunity to have a meltdown.
He told The Sun, 'I kept having these repeat ages.
'I had my first kids in my early twenties and my second kids in my mid-thirties, so I always seemed to be in my child rearing years. The biggest thing that happened was my 15-year-old deciding to go to boarding school.
'Then all of a sudden [my wife] Rita and I were empty nesters.
'That's not a crisis, that's a celebration!
'The standard version of the mid-life crisis is people waking up one morning and realizing they are unhappy even though they have everything.
'I don't know what that is. I may wake up tired in the morning, but not unhappy.'