As the guest on the latest edition of Lillian Garcia’s Chasing Glory podcast, the Master of the 6-1-9 gave us the 4-1-1 on his future.

Rey Mysterio’s days in the ring may finally be winding down, but his legacy will live on. Rey hopes he’ll be able to pass the baton to his son Dominic (yes, that Dominic) in the ring before he hangs up his own boots, too.

Breaking down his 21 year old son’s training - which started with working with Jay Lethal before moving on to Lance Storm’s Wrestling Academy in Calgary, and is about to enter “phase three” at either Booker T’s Reality of Wrestling in Houston or in Mexico for lucha lesson - Mysterio said that working a match with Dominic is on the short list of things he still wants to do in his legendary career:

“My dream as a father and, you know when they ask you, ‘Rey, what do you have left to do in your career? What is it that you - you pretty much have done a little bit of everything, or you could say you’ve done it all,’ but for me, my final dream come true as a wrestler and as a father is to be able to perform in there with my son so I can say, ‘Ok. Now I’ve done it all. Now, this is it.’ ... And it’s gonna happen. It really is.”

Rey doesn’t say he thinks it will happen in WWE, but Garcia mentions that that is where she thinks it “needs” to happen, and he doesn’t refute that.

What’s the timeframe for it happening anywhere? Mysterio talks a lot about changes he has made and plans to make to his self-care routine to lengthen his career. But even with those:

“I’m definitely getting close to shutting down - sometime in the next couple of years. I definitely don’t see myself going past five years. That’s without a doubt.”

So we’ve got until about 2023 to get Dominic prepped and ready in order for a man who’s done it all to have his dream match:

“I don’t feel like I need to accomplish anything. I feel like I’ve had a very beautiful career, a very successful career. I’ve actually accomplished more than I thought I would ever accomplish... so I really don’t feel like I need to accomplish anything any more. I do what I do because I still love it. And the only thing that I would love to do as a father and a sports entertainer is being able to share the ring with my son, and having my wife and my daughter sit in the front row and their two loved ones share the ring together.”

Check out Lillian and Rey’s entire conversation wherever you get your podcasts, like here.