With A-Level and GCSE results coming out over the past few weeks, lots of people will be processing their results and thinking about what comes next - take a look at Olivia's brilliant blog on getting perspective and remembering that your results do not define you...
- Olivia Niblock
So
your results have sunk in and maybe you’re disappointed…
Your results do not define you.
I thought I might just start with that
because a) it’s true, b) not a lot of people believe it and c) neither did I
until I got my A level results 3 and a bit years ago.
When I was doing my GCSEs, everything went
pretty well. I worked really hard and managed to get 13 A*-Bs and I was fairly
happy. I convinced myself I wanted to
study medicine at university and become a doctor. Trouble was that I didn’t
really want to do that at all. I wanted to help people – certainly! I still do.
But there are other ways of helping people other than being a doctor and being
stressed to the point of implosion.
So I chose my A Levels and unlike many, I
chose to carry on with 5 A levels to A2, because I wanted to make my choices
for universities and subjects as diverse as possible. I applied to UCAS (I
truly feel for you guys that still have to do it!) and I applied to a handful
of Medical schools and one course I truly wanted to do – Medical Genetics.
I didn’t do as well in my A level results
as I wanted to – and I threw all my toys out of the pram because I thought that
was the thing to do. I thought I was a failure. And then Queen Mary, University
of London got back to me on Track. I had been happily accepted onto the Medical
Genetics course and was expected in September.
It was then that I allowed myself to accept
that I didn’t want to study medicine. I wanted to be a researcher - to help
people out in a different way. My ‘failure’ in A-Levels turned out to be the
biggest success I’ve ever had.
University was great. I had family and
medical circumstances that weren’t great, like 6 family deaths and the
diagnosis of Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD), but university itself was so
good, and so supportive. They (the university and my friends) completely
embraced the fact that I had GAD, the fact that I may need a bit more time to
process things and the fact that I was grieving for 4 close relatives.
I didn’t graduate with a first, but to be
honest, I don’t measure my success by the grades anymore – I made it through
incredible adversity, and it was like I had won the lottery. I am a proud
Medical Genetics graduate, interning at a place that helps people in need.
Just remember: your results do not define
you!
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