When Taylor Swift is with her boyfriend Travis Kelce, she reportedly experiences “a tremendous sense of peace.”
The pop artist, 34, is believed to see the 35-year-old tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs as her “protector” after they just celebrated their one-year anniversary.
Only his actual presence. He is the safest person she has ever known; she knows he will stop at nothing to defend her, and she enjoys the physical security he provides. “Relatively speaking, it’s a new one for her,” a source told Page Six.
“People don’t really understand — and that’s by design — how much courage Taylor has,” the source went on.
The Grammy Award winner has been able to rely on Kelce during the low points of her career, such as when it was discovered that her Eras Tour performances in Vienna were the target of a foiled terrorist plot in August, even though she and the football star had shared a number of career highs during their brief romance.
In every way possible, Travis is her guardian. He will provide her bodily and emotional safety; he will not act irresponsibly or carelessly toward her, the insider stated.
They are “obsessed about a potential wedding” for the couple, who they said were “unbeatable together,” according to another industry insider who spoke to the magazine.
Another insider revealed that it is unlikely that Swift would be seen by fans at any of Kelce’s away games this season due to safety concerns.
“Unless she is familiar with the location and it has been thoroughly scouted and secured beforehand, she is not going anywhere,” the Swift source stated.
Swift wrote on Instagram that the experience “filled her with a new sense of fear” and a “tremendous sense of guilt” when she had to postpone her performances in Vienna.
After concluding the European leg of the Eras Tour at Wembley Stadium in August, she posted on Instagram, saying, “Walking onstage in London was a rollercoaster of emotions.”
The celebrity continued by thanking the authorities for their assistance in implementing the appropriate security measures.
“I was also very thankful to the authorities because it was because of them that we were mourning concerts rather than lives,” she said.