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Jackson Garden-Bachop on Death of Brother Connor, Dealing with Grief & Overcoming Addiction

February 19, 202501:35:44
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Jackson Garden bash welcome to my
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podcast thank you thanks for having me
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mat it's great to have you here um first
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of all for anyone that's not um that
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familiar with rugby uh your position as
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number 10 what does what does number 10
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mean number 10 what literally means
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first five that's where uh I don't know
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we do lots of passing lots of kicking um
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lots of organizing lots of talking um
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and not and a lot of tackling so yeah
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it's a good spot to be in it's a good
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spot to be in yeah and some other number
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10 that people might be familiar with
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would be like Dan Carter um going way
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back Grant Fox Bowden Barrett yeah oh
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you took bod's you took bod's job at the
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Hurricanes oh tried to was wasn't overly
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successful there but yeah I he was sort
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of who I was under for the first couple
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years that I was at the Hurricanes um
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and learned a lot I learn a lot off and
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then he made the move up here so yeah
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there was a spot there that I held down
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for a couple of years is um yeah no that
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was
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cool big boots to full yes yeah how was
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how was that how was that on X or
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Twitter oh not great to be honest I mean
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especially the stage of his career that
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he was in he was back toback player of
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the year I think World Player of the
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Year um at that stage so um I was never
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trying to be bow and Barrett but yeah
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obviously there's a lot of people out
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there especially the hurricane
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supporters that were used to the best
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player in the world being in that
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position and that wasn't me um instantly
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so yeah I got I got a bit rough times
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online but you know you just got
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to know who to care about really in
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terms of of opinion I suppose it's um
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it's a blessing and a curse of the sport
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he because the Sport's so popular you do
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have this at of buying from people but
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just Savage yeah it is uh in all sports
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over the world it's it's a really
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bizarre thing that um because obviously
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it's entertainment and people support
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you and they want you to do well um
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there's a sort and obviously with the
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access now on social media there's the
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sort of I don't know right that people
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think they have to to talk [ __ ] about
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other people um and yeah it gets
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ruthless I'm only small friy so I only
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coped a little bit but I know some of
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the the big dogs are who have millions
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of followers when they have a bad game
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you know it can be message requests can
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be pretty full yeah yeah now you're um
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you're from like a rugby Dynasty uh like
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just a massive rugby background um so
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your dad and uncle We're All Blacks um
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your cousins Aaron and Nathan major all
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blacks and your mom represented New
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Zealand on Rugby touch rugby basketball
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and hockey you never had a chance did
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you like you were never going to get a
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desk job like you were you were destined
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for this yeah whether it was going to be
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rugby or or just anything physical I
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think you know and not just them they
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were the ones that went to the highest
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honors but our whole family is all uh
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sporty active um so that's all as kids
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we really wanted to be um just like Mom
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and Dad I guess when when you a kid I
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found this old book at um home today
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from 19 have you ever seen this book now
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we've got one of those somewhere in in a
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box somewhere like uh I forget where I
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got it from I think you bought them at
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like calex or something so this is um
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the official 1998 rugby super2 handbook
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on the cover your dad running just
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behind T Umaga who coincidentally is
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your coach now yeah I was literally just
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thinking that I haven't thought about
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that book in ages but yeah it's crazy
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and then there's yeah your dad's your
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dad's in here it's um it's incredible
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and this is the team you went on to play
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for the Hurricanes yeah um so what are
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your earliest memories of high
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performance parents so you you were born
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in denan yeah and then um spent your
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early years like basically being a kid
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of a rugby player so you went to the UK
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where your dad was playing yeah so I was
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born in Den Eden when I was two um that
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got signed to the Hurricanes so that's
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when we moved up there till I was four
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um and then we went to the UK to where
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he finished his career um first with
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London Irish and London and then the
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leads Tes they were called back then um
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and leads um and honestly I was pretty
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young we I came back to New Zealand when
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I was eight um and I can't I can't
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really remember anything of them being
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high performance more that just he was a
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he was a rugby player and it was awesome
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and we got to go watch him at the
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stadium and um sometimes we got to go to
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training and and see him work there but
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it never at that time it didn't click
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for me that it was a job um and that he
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was a professional athlete it was more
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just my dad's a man he's a rugby player
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and we we get to follow him around
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everywhere doing it so so what do you
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yeah so in the UK you played um like a
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bit of soccer football yeah um yeah that
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was my main sport when I was over there
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cuz every obviously Everyone likes to
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play football I'm there so even when I
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first moved back to New Zealand I always
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had aspirations of playing soccer um but
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just socially it wasn't as popular at
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primary school so quickly enjoyed rugby
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more um just because all my friends were
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doing it yeah and how how was that
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transition like moving back to New
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Zealand as as an 8-year-old and
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reintegrating back into kiwi Society
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oh I can't apart from being teased for
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my accent I I think it was it was pretty
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seamless um New Zealand's a really
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awesome place and I'm I'm noticing that
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now as a dad as very family Centric very
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kid Centric um the way the schooling
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systems run is just very kids focused
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making sure that the kids are happy in
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in an in a situation situation where
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they can Thrive so I think that's what I
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felt when I came back um what what do
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you mean taste for your accent did you
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did you have like a little English
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accent oh yeah full on did full on I had
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to I had to train it me and my mom well
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me to my mom used to go home um every
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day and just try and get rid of it as
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soon as possible what do you mean I
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can't I'm not going to try and imitate
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it now um but yeah no I started school
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over there obviously I was at leed's
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grammar school um for a couple of years
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so yeah full integrated and full-on P um
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yeah me my brother and my sister all had
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Posh little accents it was
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the the home videos are so funny now
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especially a little high pitch English
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accent compared to the way that I speak
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now so I'm sort of imagining you you
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sounding like like Prince William and
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Kate Middleton's kid yeah yeah something
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like that so you had to come home and
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like try and try and sort of like untr
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unfuck yourself really with yeah yeah
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cuz I get teased and then I'll be saying
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like peiss off peiss off and then all
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that that's all that people would be
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saying to me so I'm like [ __ ] get home
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get it cop cup not yet not yet cup cup
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that that's not it still English unreal
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and um I believe you yeah your your M
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it's from what I I've read about her
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she's no longer with us and we'll get to
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that part of part of your story but um
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she encouraged you guys to play every
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sport Under the Sun yeah that simple as
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that um the best example I have is sort
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of my my weekly schedule um when I was
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Junior so so Saturday I would play half
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a game of soccer at half time I'd get in
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the car and go to rugby play that game
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um the next day Sunday I'd play rugby
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league um and then through the through
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the week I'd have basketball for School
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athletics one night a week um yeah
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really just encouraged us to get amongst
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as much as we could um and I don't know
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how she logistically took care of that
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because my kids have done one soccer
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training a week and trying to fit
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everything in this a lot chaos man yeah
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it's a lot what was the um thinking
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behind that just so that you could you
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know attach yourself to something that
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you love or find I'm sure I'm not sure I
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never got to a age where I was sort of
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old enough and aware enough to be like
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why are you doing why are you doing this
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m but I I never didn't didn't enjoy any
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of it um and anything we didn't enjoy
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mom wouldn't have forced it on us um
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yeah she was more just facilitating
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stuff for us to try um and the things
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that we loved we sort of carried on with
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yeah so um you've recently moved to
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Oakland um because for the 2025 season
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you playing for um Moana Pacifica and
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Super Rugby um it feels like this is
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another sort of one of those
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serendipitous moment so last year you
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played your 100th game for Wellington um
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which but was the final which you guys
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won Incredible um the last person to do
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that was Tana in 2007 and you were
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actually at that game as a kid yeah like
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a 12 13 12 would have been about that I
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would have still been at Primary School
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um but yeah that was a pretty a
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religious thing that we do after North
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game in the morning you know you get few
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Bo few of the boys together and get some
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tickets and go and watch the Lions and
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um yeah I remember that game especially
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there was a really special one I
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remember they were uh giving him the
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13th aisle in the stadium I'm giving him
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a big picture on that still wedding on
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that actually and then and he no me oh
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yeah the number
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10 and then just I remember him being
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carried off and everyone giving him a
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standing o and just he was the man as
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well cuz he was the All Blacks captain
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and he led the Haka and um we knew him
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um knew their family quite well so I
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remember being there and it's pretty
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crazy to think between that and myself
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that no one else was able to do it um
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yeah it's pretty cool I'm proud of it
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yeah 18 years gap between him doing it
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and you doing it and um now you're
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you're collabing again he's your coach
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at Moana Pacifica which is incredible
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yeah um yes so you debuted for
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Wellington in 2013 when you were 19 so
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were you just naturally good like at
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high school you played on your first 15
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for like four of your five years right
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yeah which I made it you're how old then
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uh I would have been 14 going on 15 yes
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that's crazy cuz you're playing some big
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kids yeah I think it was a combination
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of obviously there's natural ability
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I've been playing and being around rugby
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for a long time um between year 9ine and
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10 I grew about a foot and put on about
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15 kilo so I was actually not too much
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smaller than everyone um and also Scots
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College where I went to school at the
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time wasn't traditionally a strong rugby
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school so yeah the pool of talent wasn't
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wasn't great so there was an opportunity
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there and
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yeah four the best years of my life to
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be honest there the older guys on your
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team that year if they hear like oh
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that's a bit hurtful mate come
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on I remember when I got there in year n
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and the first 15 had just lost the
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division 2 semi-final and the year 13s
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at the time were all saying oh man this
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is the because that's the best they've
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done in a long time they're like man
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we're not going to see this for a while
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like this is awesome like let's enjoy it
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while at last and then just by chance
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sort of we got a good generation came
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through and we we went up and up but
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yeah terms of me making in your team
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that that definitely helped but were you
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were you good like was there like a
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constant hum around you like um your one
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to watch or you with their talent scouts
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coming to keep an eye on you and things
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like that I don't know about talent
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scouts but I was pretty lucky I was
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amongst all the sort of age gra stuff
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um yeah sort of from under 13s under 14s
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up to under 16s and 18s I was always
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amongst the the Wellington teams in that
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or at least traling for them and and
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around that um always a bit of attention
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just because of my last name um which
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gets your foot on the door and then the
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times that I was able to play well
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obviously it got me
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picked yeah yeah yeah I was thinking
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about that it must be tough having a
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name like that or like if you're a llu
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or an or whatever like it's it's a lot
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of added pressure yeah definitely
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especially among peers when you're young
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like kids are dumb and that guy's only
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here because of his name only here
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because of his dead it's like yeah
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potentially potentially some people
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would be that case but you know your
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last name might be a foot in the door
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but you got to open the door and play
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well you get found out if you [ __ ] you
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they're not going to leave you there
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just because of your name are they
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exactly if you if you're losing games
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because you're not good enough like it's
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about winning so what are your
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Recollections of that day before for
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Wellington in 2013 when you're 19 were
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you [ __ ] yourself yeah was [ __ ]
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myself
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um yeah it's funny that whole season I
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played 12 minutes that that year um Lima
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Sanger was the 10 um Tim bitman couple
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old fellas they were they were sort of
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covering that 10 position so I only
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played 12 minutes and I only got into
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that game on the bench because someone
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got injured on the last day of training
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um yeah and I was not a professional
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professional rugby player back then in
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ter in the way that I viewed the game
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sort of approached the game approach my
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training and and all of that so yeah I
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was well out of my depth um the actual
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game itself was all a blur um all I
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remember is the first thing that got
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called I from not paying attention at
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training I didn't know what it was
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um it was actually Ary and Matt Proctor
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my mates they they it was a move that
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they had to stand behind me which is a
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bizarre position or I thought it was a
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bizarre spot for them to be in so I was
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looking behind me going what's going on
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here and yeah rest's history
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but I could have been I could have
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definitely been more prepared yeah are
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you are you familiar with the term
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impostor syndrome yeah vely yeah it s of
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means where you're in an environment and
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you're like [ __ ] I'm I'm I'm out of my
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depth here going to be caught out and um
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a lot of it is like completely
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irrational um but a lot of it I'm
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guessing if you're 19 in an environment
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like that with a lot of experienced
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players um you'd probably be right to
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sort of feel that way I I I don't know
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of imposter syndrome but definitely
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naive naive to the to the fact that even
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though I was young and I there were
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these all blacks and hurricanes and
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Super Rugby players in front of me I was
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naive to the fact that if I got called
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on and I was going to play I had to be
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at the level that they were at to make
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sure that the team succeeded um yeah I
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probably just thought that it wasn't my
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time yet so I can just cruise and then
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in a couple years when it is my go you
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know I'll start taking it seriously so
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yeah I never felt like I shouldn't be
00:13:38
there but I was definitely naive
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definitely naive and what did your dad
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text you after that game because I heard
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on a another podcast you've done that um
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when you play well your dad sends you
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like a lengthy sort of text like a
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paragraph yeah um and when you play
00:13:52
badly he just sends you like a couple of
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work on yeah yeah yeah does he still do
00:13:56
that uh well at the moment he's he's
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been hard for him to catch games CU I've
00:14:00
been playing in France and then the
00:14:01
first couple of preseason games so he
00:14:03
waits for the updates on how it went
00:14:04
from me um but yeah now it's it's a lot
00:14:08
of short and sharp stuff now I think you
00:14:10
did well or you know move on to the next
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type thing but a really cool moment on
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that game was as we were walking off the
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field after our debuted I just remember
00:14:17
looking up at westpack and he was just
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at the top of the aisle going like this
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and that was pretty cool cuz yeah I knew
00:14:23
he was proud of me
00:14:25
then that is real cool yeah yeah that
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means a lot
00:14:30
um yeah how how close how close are you
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or how close have you been to making the
00:14:34
old blacks the old black Squad I don't
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know if I've ever been terribly close um
00:14:40
yeah I definitely didn't play
00:14:42
consistently enough at Super Rugby I
00:14:43
haven't yet so I plan on doing so now um
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for a long enough period of time but
00:14:49
mathematically if you think of the there
00:14:51
traditionally there's been five New
00:14:52
Zealand Super Rugby teams um five
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starting tens and normally the three
00:14:57
tens in the old blacks get picked from
00:14:58
there and for a couple of Seasons I was
00:15:01
one of the starting tens um for the
00:15:03
hurricane
00:15:04
so no calls or anything or anything like
00:15:07
that though but well you know Whispers
00:15:09
from the coach like hey this could be
00:15:11
your year no no no no no well yeah well
00:15:14
explain the difference to me is is it
00:15:16
because your positions a really tough
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one in terms of
00:15:18
depth uh in terms of what not making the
00:15:21
All Blacks yeah in terms of like depth
00:15:23
like there's there's just always been
00:15:24
like such good good people at number 10
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like we talked about bod before and Dan
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before that or Damen Mackenzie I don't
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know I'm not sure there's probably been
00:15:32
more around my uh ability to lock in for
00:15:36
long periods of time um because when I
00:15:38
have I've been good and consistent but
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it's taken me a long time to find my
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feet in terms of my professionalism and
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the way I hold myself and the way I sort
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of approach the game um and the sport as
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a
00:15:50
whole why why is that you just you just
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want a more Balanced Life I know you
00:15:55
deep into your family and we'll get into
00:15:56
that stuff later yes well so that's my
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balance now for a long time my balance
00:16:00
was partying and and my mates
00:16:03
and it's funny I S in the change room
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when I gave my speech after my 100th
00:16:08
game I met my wife just after my 50th or
00:16:11
just before my 50th game and I just
00:16:13
talked about my purpose for my first 50
00:16:16
games compared to my second 50 games and
00:16:18
just how much more fulfilling my
00:16:20
purposes now in terms of playing to make
00:16:23
my kids proud playing to put food on the
00:16:26
table for them versus my first 50 I just
00:16:28
wanted to play well I was in the team
00:16:29
each week so I could get paid so I could
00:16:31
go to town and feel cool where my where
00:16:34
my lies play to town and feel really
00:16:35
cool so um yeah definitely a priority
00:16:39
shift in in there
00:16:41
[Music]
00:16:43
somewhere I think it's really it's good
00:16:45
that you can admit that and and see that
00:16:46
because a lot of people wouldn't
00:16:47
wouldn't want to admit that you know
00:16:49
that that it's been their own sort of um
00:16:52
I don't know they their own themselves
00:16:54
getting in the way of themselves Yeah
00:16:56
well yeah well it's just something that
00:16:57
comes with age yeah um
00:17:00
and probably a lot of denial the whole
00:17:02
way through that I was able to do both
00:17:05
but at some point if IID flick the
00:17:06
switch earlier who knows what could have
00:17:08
happened but I had a lot of fun I've met
00:17:11
a lot of good people um a lot of good
00:17:14
memories uh which I wouldn't change
00:17:17
which I wouldn't change
00:17:19
but yeah a lot of bad habits created
00:17:21
that have taken a long time and still
00:17:23
taking a long time to sort of work
00:17:25
through and come out the other side of
00:17:26
oh like what you want to talk about the
00:17:27
bad habits or no
00:17:29
uh I I I'm unsure it's it's so
00:17:33
interesting that you ask this now
00:17:34
because a lot of that has been
00:17:36
accentuated after my brother passed away
00:17:39
and sort of I've been in and out of all
00:17:42
of bad habits really struggled with
00:17:44
addiction my my whole sort of what do
00:17:47
you call them teenage into into young
00:17:49
adult years um and haven't really
00:17:52
discriminated on any of them around
00:17:54
drugs drinking gambling uh All the Above
00:18:01
um and sort of I think a lot of that
00:18:03
especially in those young years of
00:18:04
playing was masked because I was doing
00:18:06
that anyway socially everyone around me
00:18:07
was sort of doing it I'd always take it
00:18:09
to the to the extreme um but it was
00:18:11
isn't sort of since I've had kids and I
00:18:14
haven't been in situations where I
00:18:15
should be doing it and I'm still doing
00:18:17
some stuff um that it's really had to
00:18:20
make make me sit down and confront it
00:18:22
and be like this isn't normal um I've
00:18:25
got to get on top of it
00:18:27
m yeah thanks for sharing that by the by
00:18:30
the way just so we're clear like
00:18:32
um yeah this is a safe space here so
00:18:34
anything that you say that you w't cut
00:18:36
out before it goes out um we'll chop it
00:18:38
out so if anyone's listening to this and
00:18:40
they're hearing this um spill from me
00:18:41
now um you know that Jackson's good with
00:18:44
everything being left in um yeah it
00:18:46
takes takes a lot to admit that stuff um
00:18:49
and and um yeah yeah you have been
00:18:53
through a lot of adversity for how are
00:18:55
you now 30 yeah yeah you've been through
00:18:57
a lot of adversity and yeah we'll get
00:18:59
through that because I I ask um people
00:19:01
on the podcast that question like what's
00:19:02
their biggest adversity because no no
00:19:04
one gets to sort of um yeah know a bit
00:19:07
older than you like 40s or 50s without
00:19:08
going through some adversity and you're
00:19:09
30 and you've been through a [ __ ] ton
00:19:11
like um yeah it's it's pretty [ __ ]
00:19:14
actually yeah
00:19:16
no yeah [ __ ] yeah I wouldn't
00:19:20
wish some of the experiences I've had on
00:19:22
on my West enemy you know it's uh that's
00:19:25
been pretty brutal and started being
00:19:28
pretty brutal at a young age and it's
00:19:30
seemed to keep coming um yeah okay life
00:19:35
is funny yeah no okay we go if we if we
00:19:37
if I say anything or we go over anything
00:19:39
that I'm not comfortable with I'll cut
00:19:41
it out but yeah it is what it is okay
00:19:44
cuz um last year
00:19:47
2024 should have been should have like
00:19:50
on balance it looks like an epic [ __ ]
00:19:52
year right you you become a dad for the
00:19:54
third time um you have you won 100th
00:19:57
game for Wellington um you when the is
00:19:59
it still called NPC what's it called
00:20:02
yeah yeah you're on [ __ ] fire you're
00:20:04
playing rugby in France you got your
00:20:05
family family over there with you yeah
00:20:07
yeah everything's going good and then
00:20:09
your um your you know your brother um
00:20:11
passes away at the age of
00:20:13
25 which that's how old he was I 25
00:20:19
25 yeah a real Blindside a real
00:20:22
Blindside that and the things all the
00:20:24
things you mentioned there happened
00:20:25
after he passed away so it's just it's
00:20:27
just bizarre I yeah I did a another
00:20:30
podcast recently and I and I said
00:20:33
like obviously I played my 100th game
00:20:35
for Wellington we won the championship
00:20:38
but I wasn't not supposed to be there
00:20:40
like
00:20:41
I four months ago four months before
00:20:44
that like I was in France and we' just
00:20:47
been in the offseason I was i' just
00:20:49
driven back from Spain the night before
00:20:50
and you know I had no thoughts of
00:20:52
playing for Wellington at all probably
00:20:55
ever again because I I was doing the
00:20:56
overseas thing so yeah that that was
00:20:59
pretty confronting on on the on the week
00:21:01
of that final especially in my 100th
00:21:02
game everyone saying congrats you know
00:21:05
do this for your brother your brother
00:21:06
brought you home for this and I like far
00:21:08
out like thanks bro like I'd rather you
00:21:11
didn't you know yes so as was a real
00:21:15
bizar trying to trying
00:21:18
to give myself permission to be happy in
00:21:20
those moments where I was really feeling
00:21:22
[ __ ] you know the birth of my son and
00:21:25
which is one of the be the best fourth
00:21:28
equal best moment of my life and at the
00:21:30
same time there's this un undertone of
00:21:32
just [ __ ]
00:21:34
um so yeah it's pretty put of a mental
00:21:37
[ __ ] yeah this is um like a serious
00:21:39
moment of the podcast but what are the
00:21:40
four best moments of your life uh three
00:21:42
births of my kids on my wedding day oh
00:21:44
yeah oh really really none of the um
00:21:47
yeah none of the uh the sporting stuff
00:21:49
oh have you asked I'd have a list of top
00:21:51
10 top no no no of my best rugby moments
00:21:53
or my my best sporting moments but in
00:21:56
terms of what life's actually about
00:21:58
rugby is such a small part of it and it
00:22:00
it'll be done in the next 5 or six years
00:22:01
for me probably if I'm lucky or go that
00:22:04
long yeah um [ __ ] you know you're
00:22:06
winning it life if you can like
00:22:07
categorize like oh these are my top four
00:22:08
family moments these are my top four
00:22:10
rugby moments yeah pretty lucky in the
00:22:12
sense that my job gives me the
00:22:14
opportunity to to to do my dream and
00:22:16
what I've always wanted to do so that's
00:22:18
that's always going to be Peak
00:22:20
especially when things are going well um
00:22:24
but yeah in terms of the other four
00:22:26
moments that's a different kind of joy
00:22:27
and and love that you you don't
00:22:29
experience it unless you experience it
00:22:32
yeah okay well yeah since we're at this
00:22:34
part now
00:22:36
um I reckon we get back to we we'll get
00:22:38
back to Connor your brother because
00:22:40
that's that's fairly recent it was June
00:22:41
last year a yeah yeah um we'll start
00:22:45
with your mom uh the legendary sug
00:22:46
Garden Basher yeah so your parents um
00:22:49
separated in 2006 when you were 12 yeah
00:22:52
yeah what are your Recollections of that
00:22:54
I mean that's a big thing to go through
00:22:55
as a kid as well yeah that was pretty
00:22:56
hectic um
00:22:59
I remember when they told us we we're at
00:23:01
McDonald's they took us to McDonald's
00:23:03
and it seemed like a casual
00:23:06
conversation
00:23:07
um just Mom saying that dad's going to
00:23:10
go and live with his friend for a while
00:23:13
and so my brother and sister were very
00:23:14
young so I don't think they clocked
00:23:15
actually what that what that potentially
00:23:17
meant but I remember the car ride home I
00:23:20
went with my mom my brother and sister
00:23:21
went with my dad and I was like does
00:23:23
does this mean a divorce I don't I don't
00:23:25
know how I knew that that word or
00:23:27
obviously you told the playground about
00:23:29
stuff and she said uh I don't know but
00:23:33
potentially and I I was just I was so
00:23:35
gutted I was angry I said I was like
00:23:37
what the hell this is [ __ ] I didn't
00:23:39
you don't understand what's going on
00:23:40
between Mom and Dad but all I could
00:23:42
think was like why why would you like
00:23:44
this is [ __ ] and yeah I remember her
00:23:46
saying there you know this is it is
00:23:48
[ __ ] I wish this wasn't happening
00:23:50
type thing we were crying on the way
00:23:52
home
00:23:54
um and then yeah through the separation
00:23:58
it was yeah was pretty pretty tense
00:24:00
between Mom and Dad
00:24:03
um yeah some traumatic experiences I
00:24:06
think there for me that I haven't
00:24:08
clocked until I was older that we went
00:24:10
through um but yeah pretty tough it's
00:24:13
tough for anyone that goes through that
00:24:14
yes so you were 12 your brother was
00:24:16
seven yeah and your sister George
00:24:18
Georgia yeah she would have been 10 10
00:24:20
two years and two years apart so you're
00:24:22
in that sweet spot where you yeah you're
00:24:24
you're old enough to sort of I don't
00:24:26
know I suppose sense it a bit more or
00:24:27
feel a bit more what's going on I think
00:24:29
so and even I can tell I was
00:24:33
understanding more in the way that I can
00:24:34
remember it even in the way that we
00:24:36
speak about how before before Conor
00:24:39
passed away we speak about being able to
00:24:40
remember Mom he's saying like Jackson I
00:24:42
can't I can't remember much like we like
00:24:45
he was he would have been 8 years old um
00:24:48
he's saying like I'm losing my memories
00:24:50
like when you know through not talking
00:24:52
about it through just I can't remember
00:24:55
what I was doing when I was 7 years old
00:24:57
you know it's pretty hard so
00:24:59
I think in the sense that I can remember
00:25:01
a lot yeah or a lot more that that shows
00:25:04
how much you do actually take in once
00:25:06
you get to sort of pre-teen yeah and
00:25:10
your mom was um when your parents broke
00:25:12
up your mom was she already had leukemia
00:25:13
by that point right she had it for years
00:25:15
yeah she had she fought it for five
00:25:16
years yeah it sounds like she was a
00:25:19
tough woman oh so tough yeah so tough
00:25:22
like had a lot from you guys what's head
00:25:24
sorry had a lot from you guys uh I'm not
00:25:26
sure like in terms of like you oh it hit
00:25:29
her pain definitely yeah definely yeah
00:25:31
that's what I meant unless she couldn't
00:25:32
get off the couch you get off the couch
00:25:34
and do and do whatever needed doing um
00:25:37
yeah and I it's hard to imagine like the
00:25:40
a concept of time looking back but I'm
00:25:43
not sure I can't remember if she ever
00:25:44
had to go into hospital for long stunt
00:25:47
before she passed away um I knew she was
00:25:49
an outpatient and we'd have to go every
00:25:50
now and then and get chemo and pick up
00:25:53
her medicine and that but yeah outside
00:25:55
of that they're very good at acting like
00:25:59
she had a lot of energy for us because
00:26:00
that's all we ever saw was just mom
00:26:02
being
00:26:03
Mom Fu that's a proud woman right there
00:26:06
isn't it 100% yeah yeah especially when
00:26:08
I see the when I feel the amount of
00:26:10
energy it takes or I see what my wife
00:26:12
does for my kids and the amount of
00:26:14
energy it takes from her when you're
00:26:15
fully healthy exactly exactly Trucking
00:26:18
chemotherapy on top of that and
00:26:20
everything else that's going on you know
00:26:21
it's pretty phenomenal and I'm so
00:26:23
grateful she did she pushed through for
00:26:24
us cuz she gave us five years of of
00:26:27
memories that sh just put her feet up
00:26:29
and you know cop the sickness that we
00:26:31
wouldn't have had yeah and she even
00:26:33
wrote a kids book um which I only
00:26:36
learned about when I was doing the
00:26:37
research for this and um [ __ ] it's
00:26:39
heartbreaking the book's called who will
00:26:41
tuck me in and it's basically um there's
00:26:44
a line in the book um will we catch
00:26:47
cancer asked Jackson looking worried and
00:26:49
it's basically a book it's a like a help
00:26:51
help guide for parents that are going
00:26:53
through cancer to help their kids sort
00:26:55
of deal with it and it's written in the
00:26:57
first person so you guys are in the in
00:26:59
the book as characters yeah yeah have
00:27:01
you you must have a copy of it how do
00:27:03
you feel when you see it now oh pretty
00:27:05
proud very proud I remember at the time
00:27:09
we all the photo all the P illustrations
00:27:11
in there are from photos so the photos
00:27:13
that you see of us sitting in bed and
00:27:15
stuff we actually had to sit there and
00:27:16
and take a photo and I just remember
00:27:18
thinking it was so fun that we were
00:27:19
going to be in a book um but it's not
00:27:22
until they I did a interview about mom
00:27:26
for sky sport and on my I think my third
00:27:29
year of the hurricanes and they bought
00:27:30
me a copy of it and I got to reread it
00:27:33
oh man couldn't read it without crying
00:27:35
it's pretty it's pretty special what
00:27:37
she's been able to sort of portray and
00:27:40
put in there in regard to I don't know
00:27:43
putting it in a way that a child can
00:27:46
understand or sort of try and get a
00:27:47
concept of what cancer actually means
00:27:51
I'm sure it's been a like a helpful it
00:27:52
was sort of sponsored by I think the
00:27:54
Cancer Society so I'm sure it's been
00:27:55
like a really useful resource for you
00:27:57
know heaps of other is going through the
00:27:59
same thing it's obviously I'm I'm
00:28:01
imagining at the time um when she was
00:28:03
going through it she thought why isn't
00:28:04
there something like this she took it
00:28:06
upon yourself to do it yeah like I I
00:28:08
suppose that's exactly what it is um so
00:28:12
as a as a parent sort of learning how to
00:28:14
be a parent there's lots of things that
00:28:16
you're like man how do I have this
00:28:17
conversation with my kids about all
00:28:19
sorts of different subjects um let alone
00:28:22
the heavy hitter is like like long-term
00:28:24
illness yeah so yeah she was very
00:28:27
proactive and everything think she did
00:28:28
so she thought [ __ ] it there's not one
00:28:30
there let's make it but let's make one
00:28:32
there man that's cool so she so she end
00:28:34
up um losing the battle with lukemia in
00:28:37
2008 uh when she was 46 years old um you
00:28:40
were 14 um yeah what are your
00:28:43
Recollections of that
00:28:44
time uh oh not a lot to be honest I've
00:28:47
blocked a lot out for a long time and I
00:28:49
think that's really um inhibited my
00:28:52
ability to remember that period of time
00:28:54
but yeah it's like a coping mechanism
00:28:56
you think yeah big time um
00:28:58
um but yeah yeah pretty ruthless moment
00:29:02
that she she went into hospital for a
00:29:04
routine checkup well I think it was a
00:29:06
routine checkup um she went into a coma
00:29:10
and yeah they told her that they told my
00:29:13
nanny at the time before she passed away
00:29:15
that Mom wasn't going to wake up so she
00:29:16
had to the three of us went in um and
00:29:21
they told us that that yeah mom's asleep
00:29:23
and she's not going to wake up and yeah
00:29:26
that was I don't know
00:29:28
yeah was she on like life support at the
00:29:30
time or I don't know if it was life
00:29:32
support or just her body was just too
00:29:34
weak to to stay awake um and then I
00:29:37
think either that night or the night
00:29:39
after she passed
00:29:45
away yeah so you're 14 that's a sh it's
00:29:49
a lot to go through yeah yeah I just
00:29:51
remember feeling quite numb yeah I
00:29:53
remember our dad took us um for a long
00:29:56
walk for a couple hours just long man
00:29:58
explanat in the in the beach down in
00:30:00
Mana um and I ended up just lagging
00:30:03
behind everyone I just just lost in my
00:30:06
head I just I don't know I don't know I
00:30:09
can't remember I was probably trying to
00:30:11
gather my thoughts with no ability and
00:30:13
no maturity on on how to just like yeah
00:30:17
well you're at that that sort of puberty
00:30:19
age where there's you know there's your
00:30:21
hormones racing everywhere and so you
00:30:23
have these feelings but you just can't
00:30:24
sort of process them you know you just
00:30:26
don't have the um
00:30:29
I don't know that that adult ability to
00:30:30
process these things effectively well
00:30:32
it's just tools it's just life
00:30:33
experience it's just maturity it's
00:30:36
things that adults don't even get right
00:30:38
you know
00:30:39
and
00:30:41
yeah I go easy on my 13-year-old self
00:30:43
for the way that I handled it cuz I
00:30:45
didn't handle it well um you didn't but
00:30:48
I don't blame him in what way like how
00:30:50
why didn't you handle it well and what
00:30:51
could you have done better I just I my
00:30:55
big thought that I remember having in my
00:30:56
head I didn't talk much for one but I
00:30:59
didn't I didn't know how I didn't think
00:31:00
I I had to um my the big thought in my
00:31:03
head was I've got to stay strong so that
00:31:04
Georgia and Connor think it's going to
00:31:05
be okay um so I cried a lot around when
00:31:10
it initially happened but after that
00:31:11
just tried to put on a Really Brave face
00:31:13
Brave face um but to do that I had to
00:31:17
shut myself out and not think about much
00:31:18
so I remember my dad still talks about
00:31:21
it now just the way that I put on put in
00:31:24
headphones and just um blast the music
00:31:26
with my hood up for the first year
00:31:29
um yeah that's sort of how I handled it
00:31:31
just not not handling it
00:31:35
m um yeah and this is the time when you
00:31:39
in the the first 15 at school that we
00:31:41
were talking about so was that sort of
00:31:43
like part of the coping strategy just
00:31:44
like bury yourself in your sport yeah
00:31:46
Rugby's always been my outlet that's
00:31:49
probably the one place where I'm most
00:31:52
comfortable in myself and and in my
00:31:54
ability and the one place where I can
00:31:55
really lock in and just just think about
00:31:58
being in the present yeah um so that the
00:32:02
end of year n was when mom passed away
00:32:04
and I think another part which was
00:32:06
awesome
00:32:07
for my life and a really good part of my
00:32:10
life was the boarding house but it
00:32:12
also being amongst 13 and 14 year olds
00:32:15
wasn't a space where I can be sad or if
00:32:19
I was it's not like people are going to
00:32:21
come and have proper conversations with
00:32:23
me about that um yeah there's no
00:32:26
vulnerability at a board again no way
00:32:28
start crying get teased yeah oh your
00:32:31
your yeah if you show some vulnerability
00:32:33
it just be potentially be weaponized
00:32:35
against you yeah exactly next time
00:32:36
there's a flare up so so a lot of that
00:32:38
time was spent either just having fun as
00:32:41
per just blocking everything out playing
00:32:42
rugby and then every now and then
00:32:44
probably I'd say between year 10 and
00:32:46
year 12 there'd be like two two days a
00:32:48
year where something would happen and
00:32:50
then I'd just break down crying wouldn't
00:32:53
be able to leave the boarding house I'd
00:32:54
call Dad he'd come pick me up and we i'
00:32:56
just go home and cry for a day and then
00:32:58
go back to school the next day and sort
00:33:00
of repeat process
00:33:02
um so yeah that's how I handled it
00:33:09
didn't I suppose with the tools you had
00:33:11
you handled it the best way you possibly
00:33:13
could at the
00:33:14
time I don't know like for a 14y old I
00:33:17
feel like I feel like that's probably
00:33:19
fairly standard yeah well that's why I
00:33:21
go easy on on myself and and upon
00:33:23
reflection did did you was there like a
00:33:26
housem or your dad or any relatives that
00:33:29
tried to sort of um you know push you
00:33:31
into therapy or anything like that um I
00:33:34
can't remember specifically about being
00:33:35
pushed into therapy if someone had ever
00:33:37
tried to talk to me about it I would
00:33:38
have just said oh now I'm all good and
00:33:40
just all good the now all good bro yeah
00:33:42
now all good you know all good yeah um
00:33:46
cuz like you said I just didn't have the
00:33:47
tools I didn't understand that you need
00:33:49
to deal with things um I didn't
00:33:51
understand even if I knew that I
00:33:52
wouldn't have known how to
00:33:55
um so yeah that's a that's learned thing
00:33:58
over the years yeah and what about
00:33:59
lessons from I know you were very young
00:34:01
when she passed but lessons from her
00:34:02
that um have stuck with you to this
00:34:05
day
00:34:07
um a funny well a funny one that me and
00:34:11
my wife disagree on it no not disagree
00:34:13
on but have different philosophies is we
00:34:15
had we had these uh make your own
00:34:17
pottery plates that we would write on
00:34:21
and she wrote on one and said the injury
00:34:23
checklist is it bleeding is there a bone
00:34:25
sticking out is it noticeably dis swed
00:34:28
if no keep
00:34:29
playing so she was real tough and in
00:34:33
that sense like just a real goget her
00:34:37
um I think i' I learned more when I
00:34:40
reflect on the way that she was around
00:34:41
her friends like these days when I think
00:34:43
back she started a group with her close
00:34:45
friends called the black spots um which
00:34:47
was a combination of me and my brother
00:34:49
sister's par uh moms and she would put a
00:34:52
black spot in their letter box just with
00:34:54
a location and a time and they all had
00:34:56
in their letter box and they all had to
00:34:57
turn up and she'd make them do stuff
00:35:00
like break dancing classes play rugby go
00:35:02
jump off the WF just just real
00:35:05
connection pieces for her and her mates
00:35:07
and I know she really valued her friends
00:35:09
um and I think that's something that's
00:35:11
really inspiring and and something that
00:35:13
I um have taken a lot from over the last
00:35:17
few years can I just pause and say
00:35:19
you're you're really really good at
00:35:21
articulating this now like um I'm trying
00:35:25
to think when I was 30 I I I don't think
00:35:27
I would have um if I'd been through what
00:35:29
you had I don't think I'd be at a point
00:35:31
where I can articulate it the same way
00:35:32
you can it's really refreshing cool
00:35:35
you've done a lot of work I can tell
00:35:37
yeah it is a lot of work it's a lot
00:35:40
of understanding because a lot of when I
00:35:43
first started to try first started
00:35:45
trying to talk about this stuff lots of
00:35:47
lumps in throats lots of wanting to cry
00:35:51
and then trying to hold it back and then
00:35:54
and holding it back not wanting to talk
00:35:56
about it
00:35:58
but it was one of my dad's mates after
00:36:00
Conor passed away he he had also lost
00:36:03
someone close to him and he said man you
00:36:06
got to you got to hope that you cry a
00:36:07
lot you got to hope that that never
00:36:09
stops because it's just waves of love
00:36:10
and it's just the more that you cry the
00:36:13
more that you love the person so I'm not
00:36:15
scared to be sad about it
00:36:19
um and through just practice and
00:36:22
understanding that I need to talk about
00:36:24
it to keep the memories alive and um
00:36:28
you
00:36:29
know make my kids hear the stories um my
00:36:33
wife my wife never met my mom so make
00:36:35
sure that she can hear the stories
00:36:38
um but yeah it is learned and I and I
00:36:41
had to sort of force myself into it over
00:36:43
the last few years and still still
00:36:45
working on it because yeah botling it in
00:36:48
doesn't work for me no no it doesn't
00:36:50
work for anyone it's like
00:36:53
um yeah it's like um you go to the gym
00:36:57
you clothes and you stuff them in a bag
00:36:58
put them in the bird of a car it's just
00:37:00
going to get worse and worse and
00:37:01
eventually you're going to have to deal
00:37:02
with it one day right that's a great
00:37:04
analogy it's not going anywhere I had um
00:37:08
this guy's before your time but this guy
00:37:09
Mark Graham is's considered like one of
00:37:11
the hardest um rugby league players of
00:37:13
all time um and his um when he was
00:37:15
coaching the Warriors in the early 2000s
00:37:17
his son um ended up taking his own life
00:37:20
I had him on the podcast and I talked to
00:37:22
him about it and he goes he goes oh I'd
00:37:24
rather not talk about it he goes this is
00:37:25
probably not the correct way to deal
00:37:27
with it but I find if I think about it
00:37:28
and talk about it it hurts so I just try
00:37:30
not to talk about it I thought fair play
00:37:32
to you yeah yeah if that's your coping
00:37:35
strategy then that's fine but but it
00:37:38
hurts cuz he loved them yeah if there's
00:37:40
one thing to say to him it's a good
00:37:42
thing that it hurts yeah you know it
00:37:44
didn't hurt you probably didn't care
00:37:46
yeah when do you when do you miss her
00:37:48
most my mom uh big events weddings
00:37:53
funerals birthdays um
00:37:58
yeah anything around that
00:38:00
where like when I when I look at my
00:38:02
sister getting married and her mom was
00:38:03
there she's Lo she's lost her her dad so
00:38:05
she's feeling sad as well but you know
00:38:08
just thinking that my mom wasn't going
00:38:09
to be able to be at my wedding she would
00:38:11
won't meet my kids um big stuff like
00:38:15
that that you just you know you want to
00:38:16
share with your mom yeah MH the stuff I
00:38:19
love sharing with my dad it's like man I
00:38:21
wish I could share this with mom as
00:38:24
well yeah yeah it's almost like
00:38:26
survivors bu in away cuz you know you
00:38:28
know that the F that should have cuz how
00:38:30
much would mean to her being there 100%
00:38:34
100% man I'm real sorry for your loss no
00:38:37
appreciate that
00:38:40
um yeah let's talk about your wife for a
00:38:42
bit and then we'll um we'll get into
00:38:44
your bro so your wife Rosie when did
00:38:45
when what's the meet cute when did you
00:38:47
guys meet uh we met in 2018 I think it
00:38:50
was um was this in your party years yep
00:38:53
very much so is this I heard about a
00:38:54
flat yearning called um Bull Street who
00:38:56
told you about bull I heard it on
00:38:58
another podcast and uh it was like it's
00:39:00
Infamous for that you know the the um
00:39:03
the story you told on this podcast was
00:39:05
it was like a it's like a mini version
00:39:06
of the big day out or a festival so your
00:39:08
room was like the drum and bass room it
00:39:10
was like themed rooms yeah what the [ __ ]
00:39:13
you didn't get your bond back at the end
00:39:14
of the year did you no no way no way
00:39:16
that at the back end of about four years
00:39:18
of that sort of carry on so yeah some
00:39:20
great memories in there and one of them
00:39:22
was meeting my wife so right but so this
00:39:24
um this ball Street party flat is
00:39:26
running alongside um your your
00:39:28
professional rugby career yeah yeah so
00:39:30
the the the coaches hated bu Street cuz
00:39:33
it was right in the middle of of
00:39:34
Wellington so you could a f minute walk
00:39:36
to Courtney Place massive five bedrooms
00:39:39
with a big backyard so it was yeah it
00:39:41
was really easy to get to after games on
00:39:43
the way to town yeah it was good it was
00:39:45
good good memories goodies so yeah so
00:39:47
how did you meet your wife did she end
00:39:48
up at a party there or yeah so one of
00:39:50
her good mates um moved in just as a
00:39:53
flat mate and we whenever someone moved
00:39:55
in have a we housewarming for them
00:39:57
um I think it was a Monday night no it
00:39:59
would have been a weekend should have
00:40:01
been a weekend but anyway she she came
00:40:03
she came along um and yeah just got to
00:40:07
know got to know each other over that
00:40:08
night and over the coming weeks and then
00:40:11
she eventually moved into our flat as a
00:40:13
flat mate and one of one of the rules
00:40:15
was that I had to stop getting with her
00:40:16
if she was going to move in obviously
00:40:18
yeah nodded rules yes of course but I
00:40:23
didn't stop um yeah and then here we are
00:40:27
amazing you got pregnant quite quite
00:40:29
early on eh yeah yeah so we've been
00:40:31
seeing each other for about 5 months I
00:40:33
think and when she got
00:40:35
pregnant how was that was that
00:40:38
scary um you don't really know after 5
00:40:40
months do you or did you know I def
00:40:44
definitely think I knew um I wasn't
00:40:47
looking for anything serious at that
00:40:48
time but yeah it managed to stuck uh in
00:40:53
terms of finding out that we were
00:40:55
pregnant she was a lot more scared than
00:40:56
I was so she called me up texted me and
00:40:59
said we need to talk got in the car she
00:41:01
was crying I'm pregnant and I was a lot
00:41:04
calmer than she was I was like I'm very
00:41:06
I'm quite matter of fact um and I just
00:41:09
said we can afford this we we love each
00:41:13
other um if you want to keep it we'll be
00:41:16
sweet we'll we'll figure the rest out
00:41:18
and um she she always was going to keep
00:41:21
it and yeah I had no issues with
00:41:24
[Music]
00:41:25
that yeah and oh is this when you
00:41:28
started therapy I I heard that that she
00:41:30
sort of forced you guys to go to ka's
00:41:32
therapy yeah not not forced but I'm
00:41:34
trying to think when we
00:41:36
started mie was definitely mie was
00:41:38
definitely a
00:41:39
baby um but at the time it was just
00:41:42
because we were so young and we hadn't
00:41:44
been together for very long she was just
00:41:46
exploring options and ways to teach us
00:41:49
how to communicate better with each
00:41:50
other um through sort of how to deal
00:41:54
with life and being parents at such a
00:41:56
young age age she was only 21 at the
00:41:58
time um in a space where we were trying
00:42:01
to figure out our relationship like full
00:42:04
stop like we were only together for five
00:42:06
months um obviously before she got
00:42:08
pregnant so I I think it was Mal was
00:42:11
definitely born um when we started going
00:42:14
and yeah we've been going ever
00:42:16
since yeah where did she get that idea
00:42:18
from That's Crazy Wisdom like it's so I
00:42:21
don't say she forc you in in a in a bad
00:42:23
way it's just like um just wisdom Beyond
00:42:25
her years to think okay if we if we're
00:42:27
going to make a real goal of this and
00:42:28
make this work then we need you know
00:42:30
tools of communication like most people
00:42:32
would think of um like C counseling as
00:42:34
ambulance of the bottom of the cliff
00:42:35
sort of stuff um but to go there as a
00:42:38
tool to make the relationship healthy
00:42:41
before it gets unhealthy is um go excuse
00:42:43
me it's um some yeah did you get the
00:42:47
idea from like a family member is she
00:42:49
religious or no I'm not sure where she
00:42:51
got it it was it's definitely not like
00:42:53
we're a perfect relationship and and she
00:42:55
said right let's go to couples
00:42:56
counseling but yeah she was definitely
00:42:59
proactive in in the sense that there's
00:43:02
some stuff going on here that we don't
00:43:03
know have the ability to deal with
00:43:04
ourselves let's go and figure out how to
00:43:07
deal with it um before it becomes a real
00:43:09
issue um yeah and over the years there
00:43:12
have been some real issues that that
00:43:14
therapist has help helped us through and
00:43:16
helped us communicate through but yeah
00:43:19
know she's a wise woman already Rosy oh
00:43:22
relationships are tough and life's tough
00:43:24
and um you know you realize um you to
00:43:26
keep these things going like it does
00:43:28
require work yeah 100% 100% especially
00:43:31
when you're figuring out who you are
00:43:33
yourself as a as an individual and yeah
00:43:36
so you guys have got three now mchu your
00:43:38
youngest was born last year do you do
00:43:40
you still want seven
00:43:43
no a podcast I heard from you in 2020 I
00:43:46
think you said you wanted seven kids
00:43:48
yeah so when we first met we both said
00:43:50
seven just without having spoken to each
00:43:52
other that came down after we had one it
00:43:54
came down again after we had two so
00:43:57
um we hoping that the next one's a girl
00:44:00
because we have P promised Mary that we'
00:44:01
try for a sister um yeah of our four a
00:44:05
boy then conversations all need to be
00:44:07
had oh so you're definitely going back
00:44:09
for round four yeah yeah oh yeah I speak
00:44:11
for myself yeah I'm pretty sure Rosy's
00:44:13
came I'm pretty sure yeah no no we
00:44:17
definitely came for four so she's at
00:44:18
home with like a what like a
00:44:20
six-month-old at the moment yeah I'm
00:44:22
just gone five yeah five sure it's the
00:44:23
last that got him on right right now ah
00:44:26
who knows yeah um get them out the way
00:44:29
yeah there was a real special moment
00:44:30
where for that 100th game for Wellington
00:44:32
that we're talking about before you
00:44:33
walked out onto the field with um Rosie
00:44:35
and your three kids yeah yeah yeah
00:44:39
that's Peak life for me you know that's
00:44:41
uh the team that I've loved the most for
00:44:43
a long time it's uh anaz an achievement
00:44:47
I'm so proud of walking out with the
00:44:50
four achievements I'm I'm most proud of
00:44:51
as well
00:44:52
so yeah that's cool I'm I'm glad through
00:44:56
a lot of life perspective I was able to
00:44:58
just be in that moment real presently
00:45:00
and and soak that in cuz there's not
00:45:02
many people that get to do that
00:45:06
um yeah it's cool to think back on man
00:45:09
and so cool with media these days how
00:45:11
accessible that's going to be forever um
00:45:15
with much as an adult and he can look
00:45:16
back at we baby him going out and Mary
00:45:19
and Milo too that's that's pretty cool
00:45:21
yeah yeah you're so right there'll be
00:45:23
video on YouTube or if you Google it
00:45:25
it's going to be there somewhere forever
00:45:27
yeah it's really cool so the the
00:45:29
counseling you guys got like what what
00:45:31
did you get from that like did you find
00:45:32
it like an eye opening experience did
00:45:34
you did did you realize oh maybe I could
00:45:36
use this um you know in a different
00:45:38
capacity to help with you know
00:45:39
processing mum and um yeah there was a
00:45:43
lot of sort of indiv individual
00:45:44
reflection within it in terms of
00:45:46
figuring out and understanding the ways
00:45:49
that I communicate or don't communicate
00:45:52
um and understanding why that is the
00:45:53
case um understanding that
00:45:58
the way that I see the world or believe
00:46:00
things should be handled isn't how
00:46:02
everyone handles it especially Rosie um
00:46:05
and just giving the tools sort of
00:46:07
to communicate calmly and try and see
00:46:10
things from each other's
00:46:12
perspectives were you not that good at
00:46:14
communicating do you think or just a
00:46:16
different communication style um
00:46:18
definitely not good at commun both a
00:46:21
different communication style and not
00:46:22
very good at it um yeah so yeah my
00:46:26
ability to be open and honest uh and
00:46:29
vulnerable has taken a long time and
00:46:31
still not perfect but it's always been
00:46:33
hard for me
00:46:35
um but yeah working on it and that was
00:46:37
definitely one of the things that needed
00:46:39
the most
00:46:40
work mate I'm I'm I'm jealous of like
00:46:43
where you're at and the work you've done
00:46:44
like I'm I'm 52 and I reckon uh I was
00:46:47
probably 45 when I started you know
00:46:49
doing the Deep work um so you you've got
00:46:52
a massive jump on me and I think a lot
00:46:54
of young guys as well I think the stuff
00:46:56
that you're talking about um you your
00:46:58
early 20s I think that's probably fairly
00:47:00
typical right you know just the the poor
00:47:03
communication style or you know not
00:47:05
being good at vulnerability and stuff
00:47:06
like that yeah I think so accentuated by
00:47:08
the fact that we were going to have a
00:47:09
kid um and that we were committing to be
00:47:12
together yeah um definitely meant that
00:47:15
had to try and sort that stuff earlier
00:47:19
um than I was definitely planning to so
00:47:21
yeah yeah it was important and um you
00:47:24
guys seem like a tight unit so you've
00:47:25
you've um done some stints playing rugby
00:47:28
in Japan and France and um a lot a lot
00:47:32
of people a lot of rugby players that do
00:47:33
that they'll go over there themselves
00:47:35
for a season or whatever and leave the
00:47:36
family behind but you traveled as a unit
00:47:39
yeah how is how was Japan like were you
00:47:41
living in an apartment or yeah we shoe
00:47:43
box two bed two-bedroom apartment with a
00:47:45
um little tatami room so yeah that was
00:47:47
that was hectic with a one and twoyear
00:47:49
old um yeah I can't imagine but we we
00:47:52
were always going to move around
00:47:53
together at that stage of the kids lives
00:47:56
cuz it was easy to move move them um I
00:47:57
think now that Marley's starting school
00:48:00
and Mary will start school um next year
00:48:03
it becomes a lot harder to uproot and
00:48:05
move so easily um so yeah that that was
00:48:09
that was very tough very tough on Rosie
00:48:11
moving overseas but um it was definitely
00:48:13
the right decision given the fact
00:48:16
that soon we won't be able to move the
00:48:19
kids that easily we don't want to yeah
00:48:22
cuz that could feel real isolating for
00:48:23
her as well like being in a country like
00:48:25
Japan where you can't speak the language
00:48:26
um I went over there a few years ago the
00:48:28
public transport system it's really hard
00:48:30
to navigate had my translator app up
00:48:32
trying to yeah that was going crazy um
00:48:35
so with homesickness and everything else
00:48:37
and you know in a home with a 2-year-old
00:48:39
and one-year-old like you know it could
00:48:41
create real tension in a relationship if
00:48:43
the relationship wasn't tight oh
00:48:45
definitely definitely and I think
00:48:48
especially with with young kids it's
00:48:50
hard to socialize you got to plan
00:48:52
everything around the around the babies
00:48:54
um we got lucky both in Japan and France
00:48:56
said the the group of foreigners there
00:48:58
were were awesome
00:49:00
um yeah Rosie got tight with a couple
00:49:03
couple of girls in both spots that
00:49:05
really help look after each other um but
00:49:08
yeah just in general it's it's very hard
00:49:09
it's so easy as a as a player to go into
00:49:12
to move over there I go to work not
00:49:14
looking after the kids don't have to
00:49:15
plan anything for them I go and meet a
00:49:18
squad full of friends um I have a
00:49:21
purpose every day I go and train hard we
00:49:23
got a game on the weekend like I'm
00:49:24
looking forward to that that's what I
00:49:25
want to do um so yeah definitely a lot
00:49:28
of sacrifice that I never I never sort
00:49:31
of appreciated and imagined would have
00:49:33
to be happening from my partner until we
00:49:36
lived it is is the money good for those
00:49:38
things those stints overseas if you're
00:49:40
like a Super Rugby level player in New
00:49:42
Zealand and you go over there yeah is it
00:49:44
yeah there's defin especially sort of
00:49:45
the motivation for doing it really I I'd
00:49:47
say yeah I'd say so I'd say so the the
00:49:49
money in Japan and France is a lot
00:49:51
better than it is here
00:49:53
um but yeah after my two years I sort of
00:49:56
that into way out what is money worths
00:49:59
versus time away from home and being
00:50:01
away from the place you love and people
00:50:03
you love Yeah cuz the homesickness thing
00:50:05
must play um a real part yeah because
00:50:08
you were in France last year when you
00:50:10
heard the news about the brother your
00:50:12
brother Connor and that's when you you
00:50:14
like you abandoned your contract early
00:50:15
and came home yeah so there there was
00:50:17
some contract contractual stuff that was
00:50:19
going on there anyway um but I was still
00:50:21
signed to stay there for another year at
00:50:23
least um and yeah got the we were
00:50:27
hopping in the car to go somewhere got
00:50:29
the call from my sister heard the news
00:50:32
within 2 hours we were on our way to
00:50:34
Bordeaux um with our bags just ready to
00:50:37
fly to to London to meet my sister and
00:50:39
then back here so you know the dry was
00:50:42
still on I'm pretty sure and everything
00:50:44
was just as is so oh so it was your
00:50:46
sister that gave you the news yeah she
00:50:48
called me she she was in London at the
00:50:50
time yeah yeah she she lives there with
00:50:52
a with her fiance um I'd had a couple of
00:50:55
calls from my cousin Aaron major you
00:50:57
spoke about before um and then yeah
00:51:00
wasn't uh Georgia called Rosie and got a
00:51:03
hold of it and said put Jackson
00:51:05
on and she broke the news to me strong
00:51:08
girl strong
00:51:12
woman yeah that's um yeah she she's
00:51:15
younger than you as well not that I mean
00:51:17
even yeah regardless it's it's it's a
00:51:20
call that no siblings should ever have
00:51:21
to have to make can you remember the
00:51:24
call yeah um
00:51:27
yeah well it was very short before I
00:51:29
just the I was obviously overwhelmed but
00:51:31
were you confused you think it was a
00:51:33
joke or well when she
00:51:38
said the tone in her voice I could tell
00:51:40
something was wrong I was playing over I
00:51:42
never thought it was Connor I never ever
00:51:44
would have thought it was Connor she
00:51:45
said and I don't know how to tell you
00:51:46
this but Connor passed away last night
00:51:49
and I just remember being like do you
00:51:51
mean our Connor like our brother Connor
00:51:53
and she was like yeah and I was just
00:51:55
yeah I was on the floor after
00:51:57
that she was obviously and tears on the
00:51:59
other end and just sort of held the
00:52:01
phone by my ear I couldn't say anything
00:52:03
or anything like that
00:52:05
um and the rest is a real blur the rest
00:52:08
is a real blur yeah the next yeah 24 48
00:52:12
100 hours or whatever what do they look
00:52:14
like just throw some [ __ ] in a bag and
00:52:16
book a flight yeah so we we just Ro
00:52:19
Rosie and George's fiance Luke were
00:52:22
superheroes in the sense that they just
00:52:24
handled the logistics um
00:52:28
which yeah so grateful for um they but
00:52:30
yeah they were just straight on booking
00:52:32
flights I'm planning it all out um
00:52:35
quickly had to find a ride to bordeau
00:52:36
which one of the my teammates over there
00:52:38
did um and they had just put everything
00:52:42
in the bags that we thought we'd need um
00:52:46
we didn't know if we were going back to
00:52:47
France or not and then just it got to
00:52:51
London was the first step because
00:52:52
Georgia was there so got got to got to
00:52:54
there saw her and then the next day we
00:52:55
flew home m
00:52:57
but yeah real blur real blur the flight
00:52:59
home was we obviously booked it really
00:53:01
late last minute so we were we were all
00:53:03
split up and I remember it was just me
00:53:04
in a empty seat and an old lady and I
00:53:07
just remember looking out the window and
00:53:08
she must have just thought I was mad
00:53:09
just crying the whole time or just you
00:53:12
know in and out of not even watching a
00:53:15
movie or anything just staring at the
00:53:16
seat staring out the window
00:53:18
intermittently bursting into tears
00:53:21
just yeah yeah it was just such a
00:53:27
you just come switch back to reality and
00:53:29
be like why am I on this plane or it's
00:53:30
because your brothers passed away and
00:53:32
it's like far out what are we actually
00:53:34
flying back to right now it's just like
00:53:36
didn't want it to be
00:53:39
real yes that was um yeah 17th of June
00:53:42
last year um and the media reported at
00:53:46
the time is it being a medical
00:53:48
event what was that like a heart thing
00:53:50
or uh suspected heart thing still still
00:53:53
not 100% sure they're doing a lot of
00:53:56
research search at the moment
00:53:58
um
00:54:00
around like the coroners the coroners
00:54:02
thing came back and it was the only
00:54:04
thing that was wrong or out of the
00:54:06
ordinary was a slightly enlarged heart
00:54:09
but that's not unheard of or it's pretty
00:54:11
normal for athletes to have a slightly
00:54:13
en larged heart just musle based on the
00:54:15
occupation yeah um so at the moment it's
00:54:19
still unsolved there's some blood tests
00:54:21
as blood got sent to Switzerland I think
00:54:23
it is um that'll come back with a lot of
00:54:26
genetic uh information to see if there
00:54:29
was anything in the genes um all of us
00:54:31
are getting tested as well to see if
00:54:33
there was if we have something in our
00:54:34
jeans as well that might might have been
00:54:38
but yeah no real Clarity that's
00:54:40
terrifying bizar his last post on
00:54:42
Instagram was just like a basically
00:54:43
tribute post saying how much how much he
00:54:45
enjoyed playing for the Highlanders last
00:54:47
year um yeah and then to think yeah a
00:54:50
couple of couple of weeks later like a
00:54:51
fit and healthy young man in his 20s can
00:54:53
be gone it's um yeah it's crazy
00:54:54
purifying it is it is crazy
00:54:56
what was your last conversation or text
00:54:58
exchange with him um two two notable
00:55:02
notable facetimes I had with
00:55:04
them um the first one was him his
00:55:07
interview piss up with the Highlanders
00:55:08
and they were all were in their Club
00:55:10
jerseys as I remember I couldn't hear
00:55:11
them cuz they were allow but um he just
00:55:14
had the he just had the phone up sort of
00:55:15
going like this with a drink just sort
00:55:17
of like just being wasted and I was like
00:55:19
love you bro looks like you're having
00:55:20
fun um and then the last time I spoke to
00:55:23
him was after our team's end of year and
00:55:26
I'd parked my car on the other side of
00:55:28
town was about 15 minute walk away and I
00:55:30
was walking back there and um just
00:55:32
facetimed him CU I was bored and yeah
00:55:35
and we were and we were just talking and
00:55:36
he just sorted his deal with um his
00:55:38
Japanese Club um which he was excited
00:55:41
about we sort of talking about what what
00:55:43
his thoughts were behind it and he's
00:55:45
yeah potential to go over there for five
00:55:47
years and potentially become Japan
00:55:49
eligible um and all this stuff um just a
00:55:53
real casual conversation yeah it's
00:55:55
pretty
00:55:56
like obviously his messages are pinned
00:55:58
at the top of my text
00:56:00
and it's just so how nonchalant how last
00:56:03
messages were it's just it's just crazy
00:56:05
to to think that that was that was it
00:56:07
well you don't know the significance of
00:56:09
it do you you no way of knowing yeah and
00:56:12
what was um yeah tell me about Connor
00:56:14
and in particular like your relationship
00:56:15
with
00:56:16
him Connor was awesome in terms of and
00:56:19
our relation quite a big age Gap with
00:56:22
yeah I was going to say it developed
00:56:23
over the years finished as best friends
00:56:26
um but here that age group at that age
00:56:29
Gap you think about 5 years between like
00:56:31
between a 10-year-old and a 5-year-old
00:56:32
5-year-olds are bloody annoying so a lot
00:56:35
a lot of the time gr up was me giving
00:56:37
him hidings for being annoying um oh
00:56:40
there's a power IM balance there you
00:56:42
bully yeah well he he was a he was a
00:56:45
little [ __ ] he was a little [ __ ] he he
00:56:47
always cheated at games he always super
00:56:49
competitive wanted to win everything so
00:56:51
I had to bring him back down and play by
00:56:53
the rules it's your duty as an older
00:56:55
brother exactly but um I didn't really
00:56:58
start appreciating him him as a brother
00:57:00
until I went to boarding school um so I
00:57:03
only saw him for two days a week which
00:57:05
was on the weekends um so in small doses
00:57:07
I I really grew to be able to deal with
00:57:10
that better and and and understand him
00:57:13
more and um and love him more I guess um
00:57:17
and then just into adulthood I just
00:57:20
became genuine peers
00:57:22
just he'd be he'd be the one that I talk
00:57:24
to for advice or let him know what's
00:57:26
going on or for yeah for
00:57:30
anything
00:57:32
yeah I he did a podcast um and he said
00:57:36
you were his Idol which I thought was
00:57:37
really cool yeah that's the reason why I
00:57:39
still wasn't able to listen to that
00:57:41
podcast yeah
00:57:44
um cuz yeah I never even listened to
00:57:46
that while while he was alive yeah this
00:57:48
is a podcast by the way called um uh
00:57:50
beyond the surface yeah which you've
00:57:52
been a guest on as well yeah well the
00:57:53
reason I went on is cuz Connor did it
00:57:55
and I was like that's a Time Capture
00:57:56
that I want to be able to give the
00:57:58
people that I love um something that I'm
00:58:00
grateful grateful for I messaged Noah
00:58:03
about a month after con of passed away
00:58:05
just saying thanks for I'm so grateful
00:58:07
that this is here and it's always going
00:58:08
to be
00:58:10
here but yeah to to actually hear that
00:58:13
something that that I took for granted I
00:58:15
just I'm just big brother you know
00:58:18
um but when he's talking about running
00:58:20
out for his debut as the Lions and from
00:58:22
his perspective and getting to run out
00:58:24
behind me as his Idol and just just
00:58:26
saying how cool that was where at the
00:58:28
same time that's one of my best memories
00:58:29
and I'm thinking I think he was in front
00:58:31
of me and I'm thinking this is awesome
00:58:33
my baby brother we doing this at the
00:58:34
same time so just to know that we were
00:58:37
we were Aline there like yeah that's a
00:58:40
pretty cool thing to hear um pretty cool
00:58:43
thing to feel was it more enjoyable
00:58:46
playing um with him or playing against
00:58:47
him oh we we had fun we we had fun
00:58:50
regardless but I I definitely enjoyed
00:58:53
playing with him there no worry of him
00:58:54
running around me
00:58:57
what would he say if he was here to
00:58:58
defend himself hey would he be calling
00:59:00
[ __ ] on that no I don't know I don't
00:59:03
know we we had fun regardless he he
00:59:06
didn't take life too seriously all kind
00:59:07
of um yeah we were playing against each
00:59:11
other um hurricanes vers Highlanders and
00:59:13
we we ended up marking each other we
00:59:15
never got to actually the ball didn't
00:59:17
come our way but he was saying mismatch
00:59:19
mismatch over here mismatch over here
00:59:22
and I was giving him [ __ ] back but I
00:59:24
know it was actually a mismatch if he
00:59:25
got the ball
00:59:27
run around the outside CU I've had um
00:59:30
yeah one of the Crusaders coaches um
00:59:32
James Marshall I've had him on the
00:59:33
podcast and he talked about when he was
00:59:35
playing against his brother um and he
00:59:37
said it was [ __ ] tense that week it
00:59:38
was I think it was the NPC final maybe
00:59:40
Wellington taneki and um they didn't
00:59:43
talk that week and it was awkward for
00:59:44
their parents and everyone oh yeah
00:59:46
sounds like no we'd be more jokey
00:59:48
leading up but bus this time on the
00:59:50
field like we were definitely going to
00:59:52
compete and try win um but yeah I'd
00:59:55
always give him [ __ ]
00:59:56
uh sort of we'll be trying to figure out
00:59:59
when our offseasons will be and if the
01:00:02
um if the finals are in June I'll be
01:00:03
like oh yeah you guys will be off by May
01:00:06
don't worry you can start [ __ ]
01:00:07
holidays by May Conor don't worry what
01:00:09
an
01:00:10
[ __ ] oh that's cool that's really
01:00:12
special now how's his um his yeah he's a
01:00:15
dad of uh twins how's his partner and
01:00:18
his kids doing um his kids are beautiful
01:00:22
um yeah his baby pictures look just like
01:00:26
their baby pictures um that's another
01:00:28
relationship that as a family we're
01:00:29
working on at the moment um not not
01:00:32
always easy to sort of navigate that
01:00:34
with their mom um and her new partner
01:00:38
just sort of trying to figure out how we
01:00:39
can best I don't know fulfill the wishes
01:00:42
of of Connor um to them um has been has
01:00:45
been tricky at times um but we're hoping
01:00:48
that it gets um to a to a really good
01:00:51
place where we can do what we said after
01:00:54
you passed away and be there for the the
01:00:56
as much as much as we
01:00:57
can yeah it's just it's a shitty thing
01:01:00
for everyone to navigate isn't it it's
01:01:02
tough oh do it did he have the twins
01:01:05
without telling you so you
01:01:08
didn't so what was that so so got his
01:01:11
partner pregnant and what did did he not
01:01:13
tell anyone no he hadn't told anyone so
01:01:15
so he wasn't actually he's not with he
01:01:17
wasn't with the mom oh okay so I don't
01:01:19
know if that was a part of why it didn't
01:01:20
tell us but yeah nine months didn't tell
01:01:24
anyone and it was just before for um
01:01:26
just after Marley had been born so it
01:01:28
was going to be my first Father's Day
01:01:30
and we were just hanging out downstairs
01:01:31
at my house and I I said we just had a
01:01:33
quiet moment and I was like man I can't
01:01:35
believe like I'm a dad and this is going
01:01:36
to be my first Father's Day and he goes
01:01:38
me too and I was like what the hell he's
01:01:41
got someone
01:01:42
pregnant not completely like
01:01:45
unreasonable and I was like what do you
01:01:47
mean is someone pregnant she yeah she
01:01:49
was and I was like what do you mean is
01:01:51
the baby already born he goes yeah they
01:01:52
are and I was like oh my goodness so
01:01:55
just keep snowb
01:01:56
first of all yeah why um yeah did you
01:01:59
get to the bottom of that like why did
01:02:00
he not feel like he could I'm not
01:02:03
sure we had a couple of Ys about it
01:02:06
um but yeah no I've never really got I I
01:02:09
don't know if he just didn't want to I
01:02:12
don't know admit to himself that he was
01:02:13
going to be a dad cuz I know that he he
01:02:15
struggled with that especially early on
01:02:16
in the in the pregnancy cuz he wasn't
01:02:19
chasing kids at that point
01:02:21
um and then probably just a bit of I not
01:02:25
not shame but once you haven't talked
01:02:27
about it how do you start talking about
01:02:28
it until and then I guess you had no
01:02:31
choice once they were born well yeah it
01:02:33
gets to the point of no return like I've
01:02:35
LIF it too late to sort of bring it up
01:02:37
now yeah oh no they might they might
01:02:39
judge me because it's been five months
01:02:40
so I judged them at nine months that's
01:02:43
great there's um this photo I found
01:02:44
online like um an iconic photo actually
01:02:47
of yeah you guys there's a sequence of
01:02:49
photos was that was that rilly Shield or
01:02:51
no there was EMP final down in Christ
01:02:52
Church yeah so you guys won yep we we
01:02:55
just won down down there man and found
01:02:57
the camera found the cameraman and said
01:03:00
this will be one for the ages no to be
01:03:02
honest I didn't I didn't think anything
01:03:04
about it but since since he's passed
01:03:07
away and looking at looking at that
01:03:09
photo more and more and there's the one
01:03:10
where he's pouring a beer into the
01:03:11
trophy tongue out oh it's
01:03:14
just how amazing is it that that me and
01:03:17
my brother were able to do that together
01:03:20
that's so
01:03:21
cool yeah how do yeah yeah so makes you
01:03:24
happy when you see it now yeah
01:03:26
um yeah how how long was it before you
01:03:29
could find happiness in it in moments
01:03:31
like that and not just sadness uh oh
01:03:34
straight away
01:03:36
M but
01:03:38
yeah but it's just the Spectrum
01:03:40
sometimes it makes me feel sad that
01:03:42
it'll never happen again sometimes it
01:03:43
makes me feel super grateful that it
01:03:45
ever did happen
01:03:48
um and just that yeah just understanding
01:03:52
that either way is fine like it is what
01:03:54
it is
01:03:56
um yeah cuz like I say the sadness about
01:03:59
it is cuz I loved him the happiness
01:04:01
about it is cuz I loved him all the all
01:04:02
the feelings I feel I feel about it it's
01:04:04
just cuz I loved him and I'm so proud of
01:04:07
that photo in particular but just that
01:04:09
he was my
01:04:10
brother yeah [ __ ] you can see how
01:04:13
proud he was of you as well yeah yeah
01:04:16
how how long was it before you could
01:04:17
talk about him like this without you
01:04:19
know getting
01:04:20
emotional uh so it hasn't been that long
01:04:22
like eight months now yeah eight months
01:04:25
um
01:04:26
um I'm not sure I think I I took a lot
01:04:29
of learning of how I didn't talk about
01:04:32
Mom and how that's affected me over the
01:04:34
years and now I don't want to handle it
01:04:37
like that again so as much as possible I
01:04:41
I want to be able to talk talk about
01:04:42
them is it's hard and to I don't know
01:04:46
socially how do you start that
01:04:47
conversation I know people are probably
01:04:49
wondering the same thing like can they
01:04:51
talk about Connor
01:04:53
but yeah it is what it is I don't
01:04:56
yeah I don't really know how to answer
01:04:58
that cuz sometimes I still get sad too
01:05:00
sad to talk about him but yeah I think
01:05:03
what you said before was um was I I had
01:05:06
a guy on the podcast called Mark Longley
01:05:08
and his daughter got murdered by her
01:05:09
partner um in the UK in 2011 and um so
01:05:14
similar experience to you except um he
01:05:16
was flying in the other direction but so
01:05:18
he got the phone call he said your
01:05:19
daughter's dead you need to come over he
01:05:21
said the whole plane right over he was
01:05:22
like I don't believe it until I see it
01:05:24
with my eyes then went to the morg and
01:05:26
he goes he saw her there and he still
01:05:27
didn't believe it um he thought it was
01:05:31
her playing a joke perhaps then touched
01:05:32
her her skin and it was freezing cold
01:05:34
and he knew then it was for real um but
01:05:37
talking about his grief he said um he's
01:05:40
recognized over the years that um he
01:05:42
wants to feel sad about it because if he
01:05:44
doesn't feel sad it means you know the
01:05:46
love wasn't big enough or whatever
01:05:48
similar thing to what you said before
01:05:50
yeah and that's probably that's pretty
01:05:51
hard thing to sort of understand and I I
01:05:55
suppose learn until you're actually in a
01:05:58
place where you're so sad that that that
01:06:00
those sort of experiences are happening
01:06:01
and then to be there and then also to
01:06:04
find that level of understanding is is
01:06:06
hard and it's it's taken a few loved
01:06:08
ones passing away for for me to for me
01:06:10
to understand that yeah have you um been
01:06:13
seeing a therapist to deal with the
01:06:15
Conor stuff um I saw a few counselors um
01:06:19
down in Wellington I I didn't get much
01:06:21
out of them to be fair um a lot of sort
01:06:25
of cookie cutter stuff they will say
01:06:26
that think think nice thoughts and if
01:06:29
you're feeling angry get in the gym and
01:06:31
think the thoughts while you're getting
01:06:32
rid of them I I don't I don't get too
01:06:34
much out of that
01:06:37
cuz I'm not worried about the sadness
01:06:39
and the grief I I've started seeing a
01:06:41
psychiatrist to sort of understand the
01:06:43
the bad habits that I get into when I'm
01:06:45
in those dates and the actual physical
01:06:48
response that I have um and dealing with
01:06:51
stuff and how I can not do that um
01:06:56
but yeah I know I know some level some
01:06:58
form of professional help is definitely
01:07:00
necessary it's just finding the right
01:07:02
one um and the psychiatrist I just met
01:07:04
him for the first time last week he
01:07:06
seems really cool so I'm seeing him
01:07:07
again
01:07:08
tomorrow yeah we had to like juggle this
01:07:11
um uh podcast timing around um because
01:07:15
yeah because it was supposed to be at
01:07:16
the same time as your appointment with
01:07:18
your um psychiatrist um and I fully
01:07:21
respect um that yeah there's there's no
01:07:23
way that you know I was going to say no
01:07:25
don't go to the cancel that cancel that
01:07:27
this is need to get on the podcast oh no
01:07:29
no no no yeah we could have we could
01:07:31
have rescheduled this another time
01:07:33
completely like it just didn't it didn't
01:07:34
matter you know I when um Bella who um
01:07:37
booked you as a guest said you had a
01:07:39
therapy session that was like oh [ __ ]
01:07:41
this is cool I got full respect for that
01:07:45
um
01:07:46
yeah yeah so much you've been
01:07:49
through what what's the um therapist
01:07:51
said in terms of um you you sort of
01:07:53
touched earlier upon the bad the bad
01:07:55
habits that you lean into when you're
01:07:56
dealing with this sort of adversity
01:07:58
what's some of the tips to avoid that
01:08:00
that other people could use potentially
01:08:02
um oh so so last week was very much just
01:08:04
like a preliminary meeting with him we
01:08:07
did lots of tests lots of um sort of
01:08:10
questionnaires to sort of actually dive
01:08:12
deeper into the way that I think and the
01:08:14
way my brain works um and from that he
01:08:18
said oh there's a there's a couple of
01:08:20
things that might be there that are I
01:08:23
don't know making it hard for you to
01:08:25
stare away from those things got things
01:08:27
like ADHD um potential bipolar which is
01:08:30
a which is a huge scary word but he
01:08:32
didn't seem to think so but I'm doing
01:08:33
more tests for that tomorrow um and then
01:08:37
from there he'll put he'll put a plan in
01:08:39
place for me um which is cool it was the
01:08:42
first time anyone's really dived into
01:08:44
how did you act when you were a kid how
01:08:46
did you act after your mom like what
01:08:48
sort of thoughts were you having during
01:08:50
all those times to what you can remember
01:08:52
and what what's happening now for you
01:08:53
and sort of putting to putting the
01:08:56
pieces together to sort of figure out
01:08:58
what's actually goes on um in different
01:09:02
stages of this grief and in this
01:09:05
life yeah you I mean we've only been
01:09:07
chatting for like an hour and a bit but
01:09:09
um yeah you don't seem to have any sort
01:09:10
of walls up he like um yeah you you're
01:09:14
really good at talking about this
01:09:15
vulnerability stuff yeah well I have to
01:09:19
be uh I couldn't I'm trying really hard
01:09:22
in life when ask questions just to be
01:09:24
honest m
01:09:26
um obviously I'm getting a lot of asked
01:09:28
a lot of questions here so it was a lot
01:09:30
of honesty but it's it's good practice
01:09:32
for when it happens in general do you do
01:09:36
you get media training and stuff in
01:09:37
rugby uh we did I did get a little bit
01:09:39
of media training like sort of like what
01:09:41
we talking about before but it's it's
01:09:42
changed over the years um yeah we talked
01:09:45
about this off the year before we went
01:09:46
in so they um yeah at the stud of you
01:09:48
you've been around for so long at the
01:09:49
study your career it was like he cheers
01:09:53
oh no yeah how do you feel about that
01:09:54
being like one of the old guys now in
01:09:56
the it's a privilege right yeah I feel
01:09:59
bad for giving all the old guys [ __ ]
01:10:00
when I was younger cuz the older I get
01:10:02
the more I realize H doesn't care it
01:10:04
creeps up doesn't matter creeps up so
01:10:06
fast as well but no it's cool it's cool
01:10:08
to be in a place of experience and and
01:10:10
maturity where you can where the game is
01:10:13
more than just playing it's about
01:10:14
developing people um developing
01:10:16
connections within the group and playing
01:10:18
a p and all of that's fun um but yeah
01:10:20
the the media training has has changed a
01:10:22
lot I they used to get a a guy in and
01:10:25
it's say sweet would practice questions
01:10:27
that were asked and we'd have to try and
01:10:29
get it back to a particular topic that
01:10:31
the team was focusing on that week so it
01:10:34
might have been I don't know work rate
01:10:36
for example and the question would be
01:10:38
something far outside that and like okay
01:10:40
how do we draw this back to way that we
01:10:41
want to think about it yeah it was felt
01:10:44
like it was like um say as much as you
01:10:46
can but also say as little as you can at
01:10:48
the same exactly whereas this day and
01:10:51
age it's more be yourself say what you
01:10:53
want don't be a dick mm like don't do
01:10:56
anything that's going to put the the
01:10:57
team in a bad light but at the same time
01:11:00
just just be a person because that's
01:11:02
what everyone knows just people yeah and
01:11:04
I feel like your your captain um and
01:11:06
actually a teammate for many years Ari
01:11:08
svia he's he's really good um yeah their
01:11:11
honesty and vulnerability piece as well
01:11:13
yeah big time there's been a couple of
01:11:14
players him and him and TJ probably are
01:11:16
the two that that come to mind just
01:11:19
around just being unapologetically
01:11:21
themselves um in in any scenario what
01:11:24
you see on the media is what how they
01:11:26
are um off off Media as well
01:11:32
so but and what about for you biggest
01:11:34
lessons through these um like tragedies
01:11:36
that you've been
01:11:37
through
01:11:39
um the importance of
01:11:43
talking but I suppose the the step
01:11:45
before that is just sort of the
01:11:47
understanding that it's okay to feel
01:11:49
however you feel and that understand
01:11:51
that it's okay to feel [ __ ] and be in a
01:11:53
bad place and um that as long as you
01:11:57
trust the people you love and you talk
01:11:59
to them about it they they they're going
01:12:01
to be there to support you and lean on
01:12:03
and help you through it um as much as
01:12:06
you need them so I think those are
01:12:08
probably the two big
01:12:09
ones it's hard though because you don't
01:12:11
want to burden people eh like yeah yeah
01:12:14
there's that aspect as well but see that
01:12:16
I always the that that the fear of that
01:12:18
is always minimized once you say it out
01:12:19
loud and they're like well I don't care
01:12:22
like this is all good um and then it's
01:12:26
probably just a cycle because if it's
01:12:27
too much for them they'll say that back
01:12:29
and we got to go find someone together
01:12:30
to to do it so yeah yeah um yeah what
01:12:34
about your inner voice what's that like
01:12:37
when you when you're in the car or on
01:12:39
your air airplane flight going somewhere
01:12:41
you're just alone with your own thoughts
01:12:43
what's that like you quite kind to
01:12:45
yourself what um on and off I'm trying
01:12:48
to be kinder
01:12:51
uh what a confronting question far out
01:12:54
sorry you've got some confronting once
01:12:56
hey yeah no just it's probably not
01:12:57
something you bring it back to the game
01:12:59
plan I probably need to yeah work
01:13:04
harder David NE who you've had on here
01:13:07
he yeah Big Dave he is our mental skills
01:13:10
coach at the moment he says 60 to 80,000
01:13:12
thoughts we have a day and the majority
01:13:13
of them are negative um I suppose I'm on
01:13:17
the journey that he talks about and sort
01:13:19
of being aware of that and when those
01:13:21
thoughts are having are happening
01:13:23
flipping it and turning it into a
01:13:26
positive or when you have one negative
01:13:28
thought turning it into three positive
01:13:29
thoughts um and sort of mantras
01:13:34
um so yeah
01:13:37
without having actual thought about that
01:13:39
that's hard that's pretty hard to answer
01:13:41
I'd say for the majority of the time
01:13:42
it's pretty negative um but also aware
01:13:47
of that and trying to be more positive
01:13:48
with
01:13:50
it it's hard I'm I'm uh yeah I'm much
01:13:53
the same a lot of high performance
01:13:55
performers I've had on the podcast are
01:13:56
exactly the same like they they're
01:13:57
actual bullies to themselves you know
01:14:00
part of it you think well maybe it gives
01:14:02
you that edge um where you you
01:14:05
continuously striving for better but
01:14:07
then it's just it's not healthy like you
01:14:09
can go on the internet there's plenty of
01:14:10
people that will talk [ __ ] about you you
01:14:12
don't need to do it yourself I think
01:14:13
it's probably necessary as a
01:14:14
professional athlete to be hard on
01:14:16
yourself because you're not going to
01:14:17
accept what's not good enough yeah but
01:14:20
then there's the there's the I don't
01:14:23
know the line where you say I've made a
01:14:25
mistake here that wasn't good enough to
01:14:28
I made a mistake here that means you're
01:14:29
a [ __ ]
01:14:30
[Music]
01:14:32
hunt just I'm not cutting that
01:14:36
out it's a great combination of words by
01:14:38
the way that was it's not used often
01:14:40
enough yeah no it's not well it is in
01:14:42
our environment probably no but s of
01:14:45
sort of that line that's the unnecessary
01:14:47
line where when you're talking bad on
01:14:49
your character because of because of a
01:14:52
negative action you know that's probably
01:14:53
unnecessary yeah what about your best
01:14:55
and worst habits what do you think they
01:14:57
would
01:14:57
be
01:15:00
um you just grinned there at that one
01:15:02
your instant reaction no just just the
01:15:04
journey I'm on and my my and my
01:15:06
Rehabilitation at the moment my family
01:15:08
would be able to answer my bad habits um
01:15:11
I saw you having a vape in the car
01:15:12
before yeah now i' yeah well I'm sober
01:15:15
trying to be Sober Sober at the moment
01:15:16
so the Vapes are The Vape helps what
01:15:19
checky Vape never hurt um yeah you're
01:15:21
from a um yeah like a fine team of
01:15:24
smokers from in the day wasn't like M
01:15:26
and Jerry when they well I never got to
01:15:28
play with them but I've seen plenty of
01:15:30
photos of JC with a with a in his mouth
01:15:32
and arm wrestling people in the pub I I
01:15:35
think he was an outlier in the sense
01:15:36
that he could do that and then play the
01:15:37
next day and smash people I think even
01:15:40
this might be before your dad's area
01:15:41
Grant Fox the famous number 10 I believe
01:15:43
he was a Dary smoker yeah similar I
01:15:45
think the same area I think I think
01:15:47
Grant Fox took my dad's spot on the All
01:15:48
Blacks actually but um he had so many
01:15:52
stories of the halftime cigarettes back
01:15:53
then which is vaping sort of becoming
01:15:56
that thing it's weird like if you saw a
01:15:58
cigarette in a around the team
01:15:59
environment now you'd be like what the
01:16:01
hell's going on but there's Vapes LIF
01:16:02
and right yeah what's your go to flavor
01:16:04
is that a sweet one I'm only a new at
01:16:06
the moment I'm rocking pineapple coconut
01:16:09
but I'm I'm only I'm only a recent Vapor
01:16:12
you can see what's dangerous for kids eh
01:16:14
like pineapple coconut that sounds
01:16:16
delicious yeah I'm nervous for my
01:16:17
youngest brother and sister they're 10
01:16:18
and 12 at the moment and yeah got to
01:16:21
keep an eye on that I think oh yeah cuz
01:16:23
you got a blended family he so so how
01:16:25
many how many siblings all up so there's
01:16:27
you Conor and Georgia three and and then
01:16:30
your dad has my dad met his partner Bell
01:16:33
recently separated but that she has
01:16:35
three kids Mia Toby and Tilly and then
01:16:38
they had two kids together B and Eva so
01:16:40
there's eight of us do you do you feel
01:16:42
like a a brother or an uncle oh brother
01:16:45
yeah do you yeah definitely brother yeah
01:16:46
yeah it's such a big age Gap yeah it is
01:16:48
a big age Gap but yeah I'm not sure why
01:16:51
that probably could happen in some
01:16:52
instances but yeah that's little bro
01:16:55
that's so cool yeah I love the family
01:16:57
Dynamic um oh yeah yes best and worst
01:17:00
habits what
01:17:01
yeah um I won't say my worst
01:17:04
habits I don't even know what my best
01:17:06
habits would
01:17:08
be definitely the place where I'm most
01:17:10
consistent as my Rugby that's that's
01:17:12
probably the the the one area
01:17:15
where I'm confident and accurate and so
01:17:19
just my habits around planning my week
01:17:22
and making sure that I took off all the
01:17:23
boxes make sure I play well yeah and and
01:17:26
to be um at the level that you've been
01:17:28
at for as long as what you have that
01:17:30
requires a certain amount of
01:17:32
discipline yeah I think so especially
01:17:35
around your body it's a number one tool
01:17:38
um and I haven't been I've never been
01:17:40
the most shredded or anything but I've
01:17:43
always been able to stay on the park for
01:17:45
for for long stunts and and touch wood
01:17:49
um Miss I've only had a couple of major
01:17:51
injuries but yeah I think I've learned
01:17:55
especially as I've got older the the
01:17:56
more you can look after your body and
01:17:57
the more you're available to play the
01:17:59
more the more valuable you are and the
01:18:01
longer that you'll be able to do it
01:18:03
what's the wh if that keeps you up at
01:18:06
night oh the what
01:18:08
if it hasn't been a w if keeping me up
01:18:10
at night that conversation that I that
01:18:12
phone call that Georgia gave me those
01:18:14
the words of saying that that kep me up
01:18:16
at night for and still does every now
01:18:18
and then if if that gets ringing in my
01:18:20
ear I definitely need to put on some
01:18:21
Netflix or or a podcast or something to
01:18:24
make sure I'm I'm not thinking about
01:18:25
that
01:18:28
um not sure about a what
01:18:30
if yeah how is how is your an example of
01:18:33
what
01:18:34
if I don't know it can be anything it's
01:18:37
all oh this isn't my podcast flip it
01:18:40
that give me time to think I want to
01:18:42
yeah yeah actually I should um yeah I I
01:18:46
don't know I like to Spring these on on
01:18:47
people but I maybe I should give them to
01:18:49
people in advance they got time to think
01:18:50
about it yeah um but it's nice to get
01:18:52
People's Natural reaction nice
01:18:54
definitely better it's just hard to
01:18:56
think of on the spot yeah how yeah how
01:18:58
is your sister that's um [ __ ] that's
01:19:00
that's a phone call that no one deserves
01:19:02
to make hey oh 100% 100% I haven't
01:19:05
actually right no probably not probably
01:19:07
not we we catch up and yeah her Life's
01:19:10
good she's engaged over in London um she
01:19:12
owns a house over there but I know she
01:19:15
wishes she was closer to home um yeah
01:19:19
she'll be feeling really homesick over
01:19:20
there I wish she was closer to home too
01:19:23
um she's getting married next January
01:19:24
which is
01:19:25
exciting um but yeah like all of our
01:19:29
siblings man it's just we're all pretty
01:19:33
[ __ ] as underlying like all all answers
01:19:36
that we give to anything you can just
01:19:37
assume there's a level of just
01:19:40
[ __ ] but there's some there's something
01:19:43
really endearing and likable about
01:19:44
admitting that because I feel like
01:19:46
everyone it's pretty relatable
01:19:47
everyone's got something no but every
01:19:49
everyone also wears wears a mask like
01:19:51
everyone has like a Persona that they
01:19:53
want the world to see and it's like um
01:19:55
the thing I like about the podcast is um
01:19:57
it's kind of like the greatest hits and
01:19:59
greatest shits of someone's life really
01:20:00
you know cuz life is not all A Greatest
01:20:02
Hits record is it you know yeah everyone
01:20:05
has some adversity and um a lot of
01:20:07
people don't want to share that stuff
01:20:08
cuz it's like it's it's [ __ ] it's
01:20:09
crunchy it's embarrassing at
01:20:12
times it is but I don't think we're
01:20:15
embarrassed by it now it's like I said
01:20:17
my step siblings they lost their dad
01:20:18
when they were young we lost our mom now
01:20:20
we've lost our brother it's like it's
01:20:22
not laughable but it is it's like [ __ ]
01:20:25
man what else have you got like what is
01:20:27
life and then oh that doesn't even
01:20:29
include like people around us friends
01:20:31
and and extended family that are passed
01:20:32
away too like we been through a fair bit
01:20:35
and now it's just like all right
01:20:36
everyone admit that that we're [ __ ] and
01:20:39
that's all right but let's work together
01:20:41
to make sure that on top of that we
01:20:43
still are happy in what we're doing and
01:20:45
living fulfilling
01:20:47
lives it's all you can do eh just try
01:20:49
and be a bit better every day yeah we
01:20:51
can try to um when was the last time you
01:20:54
cried
01:20:55
last time I cried uh within the last
01:20:58
week I think yeah about your Bri yeah uh
01:21:04
I'm trying to than Sonia O'Neal the PDM
01:21:06
for the Highlanders she messaged me just
01:21:09
asking permission from the family to
01:21:12
sort of Honor Connor in their first home
01:21:14
game um for the Highlanders um and she
01:21:17
sort of just gave a little rundown of
01:21:18
what they might do um and she's like let
01:21:21
us know if you have any thoughts around
01:21:22
I was like you can definitely do it the
01:21:23
one thing I think if there's going to be
01:21:25
a minutes of a moment of silence could
01:21:27
you please change that to a moment of be
01:21:28
as loud as you can um because that was
01:21:31
Connor he just wanted noise and wanted
01:21:33
the zoo to be going nut so i s i I sent
01:21:36
her that and I sort of put it down and I
01:21:37
sort of started imagining that happening
01:21:40
and how cool that would be yeah and then
01:21:43
it's SC happening now which is it's just
01:21:46
such a cool thought such a [ __ ] thought
01:21:47
to have to have but imagining that
01:21:50
moment is is pretty powerful that's
01:21:52
going to be Goosebumps
01:21:55
yeah I hope they do that they haven't
01:21:57
confirmed or all but also with the denan
01:22:00
crowd I think that's easier than a
01:22:01
minute silence 100% get that be to be
01:22:06
quiet for a minute [ __ ] that would be
01:22:07
cool would you be there for it would you
01:22:09
be able to be there for it uh I'd have
01:22:11
to look at the schedule I think when I
01:22:12
looked at it I wouldn't be able to but I
01:22:14
know my brother Toby will definitely fly
01:22:16
down for it um would you would you like
01:22:18
would you want to be there for it or
01:22:19
would it be too hard oh no I'd I'd love
01:22:21
to be there for that that's cool and
01:22:23
that sort of big event in in honor of
01:22:26
him isn't going to happen forever like
01:22:27
that's obviously it's very fresh and
01:22:29
that's the first time so it's like as
01:22:31
much as possible have those cool
01:22:33
[Music]
01:22:35
memories is there a mistake that you
01:22:37
wish you could go back and correct oh
01:22:40
plenty
01:22:42
plenty how long
01:22:46
n you got a game this weekend soorry n
01:22:50
there is a lot there's a lot um I I
01:22:53
won't get into it but I've put a lot of
01:22:55
pressure on my on my wife over the years
01:22:57
through through the way that I through
01:22:58
the way that I've acted in many
01:22:59
different facets of life um that I wish
01:23:02
I could take back just cuz there's a lot
01:23:04
of stuff I've also done that's hared
01:23:06
harmed myself uh not physically but um
01:23:10
you know knowing that I've hurt the
01:23:12
person that I love the most you know
01:23:13
it's it's pretty [ __ ] harming yourself
01:23:15
like in in terms of like drugs and
01:23:17
alcohol yeah drugs alcohol bad decisions
01:23:20
with people and money and all sorts but
01:23:25
I tell masking masking your feelings
01:23:27
with um like drugs and alcohol over the
01:23:29
years and no one would begrudge you that
01:23:32
I don't think 100% And it's not hasn't
01:23:36
been so recently that I've been
01:23:37
completely open and honest with my
01:23:39
family about it as well and it was like
01:23:42
a weight lifted off my chest when I did
01:23:44
open up to them about everything that
01:23:45
was going on CU they were like well we
01:23:47
knew something was going on you're an
01:23:48
idiot for not telling us early and and I
01:23:50
agree with them
01:23:53
um but yeah it's
01:23:55
just yeah when you're in a certain frame
01:23:57
of mind you're in a certain frame of
01:23:58
mind
01:23:59
and your brain uh talks you into things
01:24:03
and justifies a lot of things that don't
01:24:05
even make
01:24:06
[Music]
01:24:07
sense yeah like in terms of in terms of
01:24:10
like you're pushing pushing Rosie away
01:24:13
or acting in a way that could put that
01:24:14
relationship at harm like do you is it
01:24:17
like a self- sabotage thing or I'm not
01:24:19
sure I I hope I can get into that more
01:24:22
with my psychiatrist um because it it
01:24:25
has been like intermittent throughout
01:24:28
our whole
01:24:29
relationship um yeah and something I
01:24:32
haven't been able to do like
01:24:34
consistently at all through the last six
01:24:36
years
01:24:37
so I'm still trying to get a handle on
01:24:39
that and uh and more of an understanding
01:24:41
on that so that I can have the tools to
01:24:43
be
01:24:45
consistent you know I I think
01:24:48
um the only rugby player I've had on
01:24:50
that's been as honest as what you've
01:24:52
been today is probably Zack Gilford um
01:24:54
but and there you go no but his his like
01:24:58
his dirty laundry was well and truly
01:25:00
public like had' been dragged through
01:25:01
the papers dragged through the court
01:25:03
system you're you're surrendering this
01:25:05
information and like it's it's it's not
01:25:08
out there like you don't have to um and
01:25:10
I think there's a like a there's a huge
01:25:12
amount of courage in that yeah it's also
01:25:14
not I'm not hiding it it's just if I
01:25:16
don't have to talk about it to people
01:25:18
why why would I but have my close
01:25:21
friends ask me I'll tell them um it's
01:25:24
it's also all very fresh sort of the
01:25:26
openness um sort of this side of New
01:25:29
Years uh so yeah it's a journey
01:25:32
beginning um what are you most afraid of
01:25:36
oh losing another family
01:25:38
member
01:25:40
yeah yeah that's
01:25:43
a like the call that Georgia had to make
01:25:46
was I had a pretty confronting thought
01:25:48
to know that there's seven of us left
01:25:50
and one of us is going to have to be
01:25:52
there for all of our funerals at some
01:25:53
point was just not something that you
01:25:55
want to think about as reality
01:25:57
[Music]
01:25:58
and I hope it's me but I'm the oldest so
01:26:01
I also hope it's not but
01:26:05
yeah yeah I mean well death is a reality
01:26:08
we're all going to have to face but um
01:26:10
yeah yeah hope the next one would be you
01:26:13
know would be your dad like it's this
01:26:14
the correct order of things you know
01:26:16
it's
01:26:17
yeah I can't way way down the line it's
01:26:21
yeah because we're yeah it's funny like
01:26:24
even though I was young and it was I
01:26:26
lost my
01:26:27
mom there's a level of Peace when it's
01:26:30
an illness or old age that you can they
01:26:32
actually they're in a better place now
01:26:34
with what people say and there's some
01:26:36
level of Truth to that I think but with
01:26:39
Connor he's 25 and healthy and looking
01:26:41
forward to being a dad for the rest of
01:26:44
his life and you know excited about what
01:26:47
was coming up and then just gone it's
01:26:50
it's cruel it's unfair his life was just
01:26:52
beginning exactly yeah um what about
01:26:54
future goals like where do you see
01:26:56
yourself at you know 35 40 50 um pay for
01:27:01
mortgage and have four or five healthy
01:27:05
kids married happily married yeah is
01:27:08
four to five the magic number now what's
01:27:10
sort of car do you need for that Ford
01:27:12
territory my wife told me I wanted a
01:27:14
Toyota a
01:27:16
steamer a people mover yeah that's so we
01:27:18
we family waging that's that's what we
01:27:21
had yeah um but now my my goal for the
01:27:24
short term I I haven't thought about too
01:27:27
much the important part after France was
01:27:29
just to get home um regardless of what
01:27:31
was happening with rugby we're going to
01:27:33
be in aiming to stay in country um and
01:27:36
Wellington and Moana have given me the
01:27:37
opportunity to do that while still
01:27:39
playing the game I love so that is a
01:27:42
goal achieved um I hope I can extend
01:27:45
with both of them so that that's um set
01:27:48
in stone for the next couple of years um
01:27:51
but in terms of physical goals not much
01:27:53
I just want to get to a place of inner
01:27:57
peace and happiness and calm
01:28:02
really I feel like you're on the right
01:28:04
track I hope so and it's going to be up
01:28:07
and down but yeah yeah and with your
01:28:10
brother it's still very fresh yeah yeah
01:28:13
six months or seven months whatever yeah
01:28:15
how's your
01:28:18
um yeah your sister's wedding how's like
01:28:20
how's that going to be oh that' be
01:28:22
extremely hard Mia uh uh um the next
01:28:25
oldest in the line she got married in
01:28:27
thailander recently just in November um
01:28:30
so we're all over there for that and
01:28:32
that was awesome that [ __ ] um and that's
01:28:36
going to be every event that's going to
01:28:38
be every
01:28:40
event because we loved
01:28:42
them yeah which with great love comes
01:28:45
yeah great
01:28:48
loss um are there three words that you
01:28:51
know your wife or family would use to
01:28:53
describe you
01:28:56
interesting
01:28:58
[Laughter]
01:29:00
ertic um loyal yeah that's a good one um
01:29:05
and loving
01:29:07
yeah it's quite funny like yeah I've
01:29:09
only met you today but the um the the
01:29:13
guy I see in front of me like it's he's
01:29:15
way more together than the person that
01:29:17
you describe yourself as well yeah well
01:29:19
yeah that's who I'm trying to be and
01:29:21
trying to be
01:29:22
consistently um
01:29:25
and and literally the person that I am
01:29:26
now if someone met who knew me when I
01:29:28
was 20 met me today they wouldn't they
01:29:30
wouldn't recognize me because there's
01:29:31
there's been a lot of change through
01:29:34
love life and loss um and still on a
01:29:38
journey to to be the best version of me
01:29:40
but comfortable in the in the direction
01:29:43
I'm going well I'm 52 and I feel like
01:29:46
I'm I'm still on the same journey and I
01:29:48
feel like you you can never reach that
01:29:49
Apex yeah no well there would never be
01:29:52
an apex I don't think cuz there's always
01:29:53
going to be like life that gets thrown
01:29:55
at you that throws you off course
01:29:56
potentially but and every every day is
01:29:59
an opportunity to to do better and be
01:30:01
better as well yeah yeah that's it well
01:30:04
um are you proud of yourself I am yeah I
01:30:08
know there's a lot of work to be done
01:30:09
but you know I've I've achieved a lot in
01:30:13
my career I've achieved a lot in my life
01:30:15
as a as with my kids and my wife
01:30:19
um you know I've I've I've been a puller
01:30:22
for my family and some and some really
01:30:23
hard times
01:30:25
um I've got great relationship with all
01:30:27
my
01:30:29
siblings uh whenever I meet up with my
01:30:31
extended family great relationship there
01:30:33
and I'm extremely proud of that cuz
01:30:36
that's all that really matters at the
01:30:37
end of the
01:30:38
day oh you're a good bastard um yes so
01:30:42
Super Rugby Moana Pacifica this year I
01:30:44
looked at the um the odds online before
01:30:46
you came in today you guys paying $101
01:30:49
to win good time to jump
01:30:51
on not the not the house yeah
01:30:54
um yeah just like a cheeky tenner yeah
01:30:57
why not yeah yeah yeah how how you I
01:30:59
mean it looks like it's a good team on
01:31:01
paper right yeah no it's definitely the
01:31:03
strongest Squad I think that that Moana
01:31:05
has put together since they since they
01:31:07
were created four years ago um and
01:31:10
obviously I can't judge because this has
01:31:12
just been my first year but based on
01:31:14
what some of the the the veterans of the
01:31:16
team have said is they say we're Head
01:31:18
and Shoulders ahead of where they were
01:31:19
at this time of the year and previous
01:31:21
years so yeah there's a lot lot of um
01:31:23
posi positive optimism around the group
01:31:26
um and that's just the rugby side of
01:31:28
things the the cultural side and the off
01:31:30
field stuff is is awesome it's such a
01:31:32
fun team to be a part of full of awesome
01:31:34
dudes yeah is that yeah well I think
01:31:37
just the the Polynesian culture in
01:31:38
general is just so welcoming and warm
01:31:40
and fun um full of hyena laughs and
01:31:43
mocking people and lots of CH so that
01:31:46
that that was never going to be an
01:31:47
issue's never going to be an issue
01:31:49
that's that's a given that's DNA yeah
01:31:51
I've I've heard you um in interviews
01:31:53
before refer to yourself as a plastic
01:31:56
yeah yeah do you still feel like a
01:31:58
plastic oh yeah very much so but uh also
01:32:02
an open plastic I'm not I'm not trying
01:32:05
to stare away from it you know this is
01:32:07
an awesome opportunity for me to get in
01:32:09
touch with a side of my culture that I
01:32:11
never was that I never have been yeah
01:32:13
how would you define
01:32:15
plastic oh I don't even know I think you
01:32:18
said you're a plastic but your dad's
01:32:19
even more of a plastic or something
01:32:21
there was the qu something no I'm not
01:32:22
sure they always just called himself
01:32:24
a he could cuz he played for some more
01:32:27
but couldn't speak the language
01:32:29
obviously a l of L of skin tone uh that
01:32:33
hav haven't ever lived the cultural way
01:32:36
that that s and tongin and and all poan
01:32:39
people do so yeah I would I've never
01:32:42
been asked to Define that I think
01:32:43
everyone just knows what it
01:32:45
is um yeah I'd K me on the podcast and I
01:32:49
get the feeling he he's got like a
01:32:50
almost a sense of guilt and a bit of
01:32:52
Shame for not knowing how to speak the
01:32:53
language
01:32:54
yeah it's like he was he was like born
01:32:56
and raised in tood like you know I was
01:32:58
like you got to give yourself a free
01:32:59
pass on that yeah that's something that
01:33:01
TJ P always spoke with his to moldy he
01:33:04
was always like ashamed almost that he
01:33:07
couldn't speak the language and that
01:33:08
stopped him from from learning until he
01:33:10
brushed that to the side and just just
01:33:12
went for it and it's all right if you
01:33:13
didn't grow up in it you didn't grow up
01:33:15
in it but it's never too too late to
01:33:17
embrace it yeah um what would your mom
01:33:20
make of the the man sitting in front of
01:33:21
me today I I think she'd be overall
01:33:24
pretty happy she'd be a she'd be a happy
01:33:26
Nanny Sue yeah she'd be super proud of
01:33:29
of of my kids and she'd love Rosie
01:33:34
um
01:33:36
yeah yeah and your your daughter's got
01:33:39
her her name is her middle name yeah
01:33:42
yeah Mary Sue yeah I was lucky she was a
01:33:45
girl cuz she was going to be called Mary
01:33:46
after Bob Mary regardless of she whether
01:33:48
she was a boy or a girl but we had
01:33:50
different middle names so when I caught
01:33:52
Mary I thought she was a girl could go
01:33:54
up and tell Ros it's Mal Sue to let her
01:33:56
know as a girl that's cool um yeah youve
01:34:00
you've come close to getting emotional a
01:34:02
couple of times here
01:34:04
um are things like this exhausting uh
01:34:08
like like tonight or probably car on the
01:34:10
drive home you feel drained yeah
01:34:11
probably yeah right now probably a bit
01:34:14
of adrenaline from being in the
01:34:16
situation that I'm in and iste but
01:34:20
um yeah I have some I won't put the
01:34:22
radio on all the way I'm just just sort
01:34:24
with my thoughts and get ready to do
01:34:26
some work when I get home probably B
01:34:28
time yeah yeah yeah game face on eh the
01:34:32
fun begins um all right with Jackson
01:34:34
Garden bash it's been really good to
01:34:36
meet you today I'm so oh I me to ask you
01:34:38
what's the um what's the Milo tattoo
01:34:39
last question oh so my son's name is
01:34:41
Milo right that's a picture of my dad
01:34:42
when he was
01:34:45
playing wow that's I just got my tattoo
01:34:48
out us to stitch those
01:34:51
together awesome oh I love it yeah I I
01:34:55
get so the same no just because it's the
01:34:56
same logo as the the drink yeah yeah
01:34:58
well the Milo is not named after
01:35:00
anything but that's the only thing that
01:35:01
I can think of a reference and that was
01:35:03
a cool way to do it but the amount of
01:35:04
people that on a night out or something
01:35:06
was go man I love your tattooo like I
01:35:08
love the drink as
01:35:10
well yeah oh that's awesome all right
01:35:13
Jackson Garden bash thanks so much best
01:35:15
of luck this year for Moana Pacifica and
01:35:18
um I mean that's just sport beyond that
01:35:20
just um your best of luck for whatever
01:35:22
the future brings and Hope for you and
01:35:24
your fan out it's just nothing but good
01:35:25
stuff thank you n thanks for me

Podspun Insights

In this episode, Jackson Garden-Basham dives into the world of rugby, family, and personal growth, sharing stories that are as heartwarming as they are heartbreaking. He opens up about his journey as a number 10, the pressures of living up to a rugby dynasty, and the emotional toll of social media scrutiny. Jackson reflects on his childhood, growing up in a family steeped in sports, and the profound impact of his mother, who battled leukemia while encouraging her children to explore every sport under the sun.

Listeners are taken on a rollercoaster ride through Jackson's life, from his early days in rugby to the bittersweet triumph of playing his 100th game for Wellington, all while grappling with the loss of his brother Connor. He candidly discusses the challenges of navigating grief, addiction, and the importance of therapy in his life. The conversation touches on the complexities of family dynamics, the joy of fatherhood, and the ongoing journey of self-discovery.

With a mix of humor and raw honesty, Jackson's story is a testament to resilience, love, and the power of connection, making this episode a must-listen for anyone looking to understand the human experience behind the athlete.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most heartbreaking
  • 92
    Most heartwarming
  • 92
    Best performance
  • 90
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • Rugby Legacy
    Growing up in a rugby dynasty, he was destined for the sport.
    “I was destined for this.”
    @ 02m 43s
    February 19, 2025
  • Debut Pressure
    His debut game was a blur, filled with nerves and unexpected challenges.
    “I was well out of my depth.”
    @ 12m 18s
    February 19, 2025
  • Confronting Adversity
    At 30, he reflects on the adversity he's faced, admitting it's shaped him.
    “You've been through a lot of adversity.”
    @ 18m 55s
    February 19, 2025
  • Mom's Legacy
    His mother wrote a children's book to help kids cope with cancer, showcasing her strength.
    “It's heartbreaking, but it's pretty special what she's been able to portray.”
    @ 26m 37s
    February 19, 2025
  • Coping with Loss
    Discussing the importance of talking about grief and keeping memories alive.
    “Bottling it in doesn't work for anyone.”
    @ 36m 48s
    February 19, 2025
  • A Special Moment
    Walking onto the field with family during a significant game.
    “That's peak life for me.”
    @ 44m 39s
    February 19, 2025
  • Tragic News
    Receiving the devastating news of a brother's passing while abroad.
    “It's crazy how a fit and healthy young man can be gone.”
    @ 54m 53s
    February 19, 2025
  • The Journey of Self-Reflection
    Navigating the balance between negative thoughts and positivity is a constant struggle.
    “It's hard, I'm much the same.”
    @ 01h 13m 50s
    February 19, 2025
  • Facing Loss and Adversity
    Discussing the impact of losing loved ones and the importance of sharing struggles.
    “Life is not all a Greatest Hits record.”
    @ 01h 20m 00s
    February 19, 2025
  • Embracing Growth and Change
    Every day presents a chance to improve ourselves and our lives.
    “Every day is an opportunity to do better and be better.”
    @ 01h 29m 59s
    February 19, 2025
  • Cultural Identity
    Exploring feelings of cultural disconnection and the journey to embrace one's heritage.
    “It's never too late to embrace it.”
    @ 01h 33m 15s
    February 19, 2025
  • Mother's Pride
    A heartfelt moment reflecting on a mother's pride in her children's achievements.
    “She'd be super proud of my kids.”
    @ 01h 33m 26s
    February 19, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Rugby Dynasty02:43
  • Debut Game12:18
  • Proud Father14:25
  • Coping Mechanisms31:46
  • Devastating News54:53
  • Self-Criticism1:13:50
  • Mother's Pride1:33:26
  • Tattoo Story1:35:06

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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