Amari never set out to be a hero. She just wanted to help the person who taught her how to see the world.She thought it was just tired eyes. But the blur didn’t fade— diabetic retinopathy was quietly stealing her mother’s sight.Menus disappeared. Buttons blurred. Her manuscript on love and marriage became a puzzle she could no longer solve.Her mother’s words taught love. Amari determined to make them reachable to every reader.She didn’t just analyze. She reimagined—so everyone could take part in the experience.She gave creators the tools to hear the unheard and see the unseen—turning frustration into access.She built structures that outlasted projects: a Center of Excellence, Accessibility Champions and Partners who carried inclusion forward.Her doctoral thesis gave voice to a truth she’d always carried: lasting change begins with culture.Her research became a guide—embedding accessibility and inclusion into the soul of enterprise transformation.The moment was right She stepped fully into her power—and technology shifted in her wake.Drawn by a shared vision, Juno, Eli, and Mason joined Ama, to form the Guardians of Inclusion.She didn’t just buid. She built belonging. Her legacy is empathy in action-where disabled voices lead, and the world listens.