The Beginning
Mitchell Moses
When I first met Bri Gardoni, Iāll be honestāI didnāt think too much of it. She wasnāt what I expected, not at all. At that point in my life, everything revolved around football. NRL was my worldāthe training, the pressure, the competition, the endless grind toward being better, faster, stronger. My mind was fixed on the Game, on the next match, on proving myself. Romance? It wasnāt on my radar. Iād been around enough noise, enough flash, enough distraction to know that love wasnāt something I had room for. But Briāshe walked into my life like a different kind of melody. Not loud, not flamboyant, just real.

I remember the first time we spoke. It wasnāt one of those movie moments where time slows down or the world fades to black and white. It was simple. Ordinary. She asked me a questionāsomething about the team, I thinkāand there was something in the way she looked at me that threw me off balance. Not because she was trying to impress me, but because she wasnāt. She didnāt care about the spotlight or the jersey or the noise that came with my name. She cared about the person behind it, even when I wasnāt sure who that was anymore.
Back then, I was used to chaos. The schedule, the scrutiny, the nights out that blurred together. There was always someone talking, someone watching, someone wanting something. The world of sport doesnāt slow down for anyoneāit chews you up if you donāt keep pace. And in the middle of all that movement, Bri was still. She had this calmness, a kind of quiet confidence that unsettled me in the best way. She didnāt need attention to be noticed; she just was.
I didnāt know what to make of her at first. She wasnāt the type I thought Iād fall for. I used to think I needed someone who understood the madness of my worldāsomeone who could match the energy, keep up with the pace, ride the highs and lows of the game without missing a beat. But Bri wasnāt trying to run beside me; she made me slow down. When we talked, the noise around me dimmed. The game, the pressure, the expectationsāthey all faded just enough for me to breathe.
She asked real questions. Not āHow was training?ā or āWho are you playing next week?ā but things that dug a little deeper. āWhat do you love about it?ā āWhat scares you about it?ā No one had ever asked me those things before. Most people just wanted the highlight reelāthe wins, the scores, the moments on the field. But Bri wanted to know the person who walked off the field at night.
I think thatās when I realised she saw me differently.
At first, I fought it. I didnāt want to get distracted. My mates used to tell me to stay focusedādonāt get caught up, donāt lose your edge. And they werenāt wrong. But what they didnāt understand was that Bri didnāt take anything from me. She gave something back. She reminded me that thereās more to life than the scoreboard, that sometimes, strength looks like stillness.
There were moments, early on, when I almost pulled away. Iād tell myself, āShe deserves better than the half-version of me that football leaves behind.ā The long nights, the early mornings, the travelāitās not an easy life to share with someone. But she never asked me to change it. She just showed up. She was there when I was at my best, and she didnāt flinch when I was at my worst.
One night, after a rough game, I remember sitting in the car park long after everyone had gone home. The loss stungāit always does. I was frustrated, angry at myself, running through every mistake in my head. I didnāt want to talk to anyone. Then my phone buzzed. It was Bri. Just a short message: āDonāt carry it alone. Come talk when youāre ready.ā No lecture, no pity, just understanding. That message stayed with me. It was simple, but it meant everything.
She taught me that vulnerability isnāt weakness. For a long time, I believed that showing emotion meant losing control. But Bri saw strength in honesty. She made me realise that itās okay to admit when things hurt, that itās okay to be humanāeven in a game built on toughness.
Looking back now, I can see how much she changed me. She didnāt try to fix me; she just helped me see myself more clearly. She grounded me. When the noise of the crowd fades and the stadium empties, when the adrenaline wears off and the lights go out, itās her voice that stays.
I think thatās what love really isānot fireworks or grand gestures, but the quiet presence that steadies you when everything else spins. Bri became that for me. The calm in the middle of the storm.
When I met her, I didnāt think much of it. But now, I know that moment changed everything.
Sometimes, the most important beginnings donāt look like beginnings at all. They start quietlyāwith a conversation, a smile, a moment you almost overlook. Thatās how it was with Bri. She didnāt crash into my life; she walked in softly, and somehow, she never left.
And maybe thatās what I needed all alongānot another victory, not another headline, but someone who reminded me that even when the game ends, thereās still more to life waiting just beyond the field.
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