Failing to Achieve
Back in January, I set a
goal to make straight A’s for the spring semester. After months of sitting
outside my professors’ offices, pulling all-nighters, waking up early to be fully
prepared for class, and working harder for school than I ever have before, I
failed. When I checked my final grades, I saw two B’s that weren’t supposed to
be there.
It wasn’t the first time
I’d fallen short of my goals. During my first semester at Georgetown, I tried
out for the cheerleading squad and stood shocked when my number wasn’t called
after waiting in the gym for hours. Earlier this semester, I sought out a board
position for a campus organization I loved and received an email telling me
that I wouldn’t be on the board after all. Long story short, I’m familiar with
not reaching goals. Still, that doesn’t make it suck any less.
I think my response
always starts out the same—with excuses. I wonder what went wrong in my life to
prevent me from achieving something I set out to do. This school year I had two
jobs that took up a lot of time in my week. I was probably involved in too many
organizations, as well. That stuff doesn’t matter, though, because at the end
of the day I decided to take them on, and I had the choice all along the way to
drop things and resign positions. But I liked being able to say I held such-and-such
position in blah-blah-blah club, so I sacrificed my academics for a little
glory.
After running through the
ways the universe was out to get me, I start seriously thinking about things
that I did wrong. Instead of reaching out for help from my professors or my
classmates, I suffered in silence a lot, so I wouldn’t look “stupid” or “dumb.”
I also spent too much time wasting energy outside of class, so when I finally got
some down time, I just wanted to watch Netflix or nap rather than study. There
were also a few assignments I threw together the night before because I didn’t
have time to prepare the way I should have because (see above) I spent too much
energy and time on things other than class.
At the end of the day, I’m
still very proud of myself. I crossed horizons and reached new limits I haven’t
seen since arriving at Georgetown. I made the Dean’s List for the first time,
and my GPA has only climbed since my first semester. I’ve also learned more
about taking care of myself physically and mentally, which I believe is much more important than a transcript. I’ve
identified what I did well this semester and what I could use some improvement on.
Each semester I learn a little bit more about success and I get closer and
closer to reaching it. For me, it isn’t about reaching a certain GPA. It’s about
growth and progress, and if I have that along with some meaningful lessons, I’m
good. Obviously, I still have that goal of making straight A’s, but even if I
never get that, I know what hard work looks like and what it takes to reach a
goal.
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I love your outlook! It's really all about progress and growth like you said. I feel the same way when I get turned down from a job. It puts fire under my feet to keep pursuing my dreams and to not become complacent.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree! Thanks for reading!
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