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Hobbies and interests
Orchestra
Graphic Design
Interior Design
Drawing And Illustration
Music
Mental Health
Reading
Art
Design
Fantasy
Humor
Social Science
I read books multiple times per month
Kai Tibbitts
1,025
Bold Points1x
Finalist
Kai Tibbitts
1,025
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
People are a science to me. My greatest wish in life is to know why people do the things they do, and what mechanisms of their mind push them to make those decisions. I'm currently studying psychology and cognitive science at Case Western Reserve University as an undergraduate student.
Education
Case Western Reserve University
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Cognitive Science
- Psychology, General
Minors:
- Music
Grosse Pointe South High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Cognitive Science
- Psychology, General
Career
Dream career field:
Mental Health Care
Dream career goals:
Sports
Track & Field
Junior Varsity2021 – 20221 year
Cross-Country Running
Junior Varsity2020 – 20222 years
Arts
Footlighters
TheatreHeathers2024 – PresentPlayer's Theater Group
TheatreMelancholy Play2025 – PresentGrosse Pointe South Symphony Orchestra
Music2020 – 2024Chamber Orchestra
Music2021 – 2024Camerata Orchestra
Music2025 – PresentPointe Players
Theatre2021 – 2021Tri M
Music2023 – 2024
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
ADHDAdvisor's Mental Health Advocate Scholarship for Health Students
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew my brain was malfunctioning, I wouldn't have blamed myself. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Autumn Davis Memorial Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Andrew Michael Peña Memorial Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Ethel Hayes Destigmatization of Mental Health Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Project Climbing Everest Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Ryan Yebba Memorial Mental Health Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
I used to think I was stupid. In my youth, I saw so many of my peers succeed, and that simply didn't happen for me. I would go home in tears to my mother, who would counsel me through my rigorous addition and subtraction problems as I screamed because I wanted to be good, but I just wasn't.
But I wasn't stupid, I had severe ADHD.
I used to think that people hated me. I thought I saw them jeer and point at me in the hallways of the school, and I took every comment made about me, complimentary or not, as a jab to my very being. I would go home to my mother, and cry, because no one liked me.
But no one really hated me, I just had anxiety.
As children, we don't know about the intricacies of the mind, and how sometimes the brain doesn't work quite as it's supposed to. We don't know why we're feeling all of these powerful emotions, and why everyone else just seems to have their life together. We tend not to know that something is wrong, because we have no reference point at that age. The only thing we have to go off of is what we think we know, and for a child, we don't know that much about the world around us, or ourselves.
Now that I'm much older, I know the truth: my brain is dysfunctional most of the time. The neurotransmitters don't quite reach all the way throughout my brain, and that causes a lot of emotions and symptoms to arise. I know now that the medicine I take, that I have been taking since my diagnosis, helps the neurotransmitters do what they were intended to do, so that I can function normally. My medicine is the main reason I am here today, because without it I'm sure I would have gone crazy so many years ago.
Living with neurodivergent thinking is an extremely difficult learning process, because the majority of symptoms are intangible, and can easily be warped by preconceived ideas of what this mental illness is supposed to do, or what that other mental illness looks like for the general population. But mental illness is not the same for everyone. It differs through gender, and upbringing, and so many other different variables. My goal in life is to help other people with that learning curve; to speed them through the cognitive journey that took me until now to complete. Because if I knew as a child that there was something wrong with my brain, I would have known that there was a reason why I thought that people hated me, or that I was too stupid to understand mathematics. There can finally be a reasoning towards all of those unwanted thoughts and feelings. Children are smarter than we give them credit for, and if we help them grasp an understanding of what is going on inside their minds, I strongly believe their whole life could improve exponentially.