After sailing solo around the world as a sixteen-year-old most people assume that I was a fearless kid, but that couldn't be further from the truth.
When I started sailing at age eight I was scared of just about everything, I didn't like climbing trees, cold water or riding my bike fast. I was timid, badly dyslexic and the first time I went sailing I was terrified. And it's only now, nearly six years after sailing around the world that I’ve had time to reflect on how I overcame those fears.
Watch: A snippet of when Jessica Watson's boat sailed into Sydney Harbour. Post continues after video.
In the time since the voyage, I've had the incredible privilege of meeting a wide range of sports stars, from surfers to cricketers and rugby players. What's more, I've been lucky enough to spend time and even count myself friends with a crowd who have an impressive appetite for pain, suffering, isolation and extreme temperatures: AKA adventurers. And I've come to an interesting revelation about this crowd of overachievers: they are not the gung-ho, adrenaline junkies you might expect, and many have overcome fears themselves.
Of course, this is a generalisation. But the sports stars that become legends, and the adventures who make history, strike me as calculated and cautious. Certainly not the fearless supermen and women my younger self had imagined.