TDN Weekend December 2016 Issue 9
Issue link: https://www.e-digitaleditions.com/i/1056824
DR: I have never sent an email and I've only read one book in my life. But I've found a perfect career for someone like myself. Dyslexia is a very broad term. There are a lot of different versions. My mother, she worked around the clock with me to make sure I got all the best treatments, all the best help. To me, the most impressive thing I've ever seen a person do is sit down in front of a computer or a typewriter and write a letter. For me, that would never be possible. DR: School was a nightmare, but I had a lot of good support. We didn't have much money, but my mother was never going to let me slip through the cracks. She did everything she could to make sure I survived. She made a deal with me when I got to high school. She said, "I'll never talk about your grades. Just get straight A's in context and do whatever you have to do to graduate high school." And I did. DR: I thought we had a very good chance to beat American Pharoah and not because we were a better horse than him. He was obviously a great, great horse. But we had a great horse and we had a great horse that was going in the right direction and we just thought Pharoah had to be getting a little bit tired. If we were ever going to beat him, it was going to be that day. TDN: You struggled academically because you have dyslexia. To this day, how does that affect your life? TDN: School must have been a nightmare for you? TDN: If I gave you a shot of truth serum, would you still tell us you really thought you were going to beat American Pharoah in the Travers with Keen Ice?