As a junior in high school, I felt like I needed to get more involved in my life in order to reach this full potential. That’s when I decided that the first step I would take would be joining Academic Decathlon, a nationwide competition that encourages high schoolers to study a given set of materials for 6 months before competing in a battle of the brains: a series of tests requiring teamwork, perseverance, and intellect. The only problem with this, of course, was that even though I knew I had the potential to make the team, I was afraid that my disability would find a way to drag everyone else down. I would start feeling anxious about how my coach would have to explain to other team’s coaches that I deserved to be there like everyone else. I was afraid of judgment, and beyond that, I was afraid of bringing that judgment onto everyone else on my team.