Advice
- Emails, emails, emails. You should be writing more of them. They've changed my life, and they will probably change yours, too. Email professors, researchers, doctors, CEOs, investors. People reply more often than not :) Read Jordan's blog post: https://notes.jordanscales.com/emails
- If you don't like math or how your teacher is teaching it, I think you might be better off teaching yourself. Math is beautiful, and you find it in everything around you (fashion, electronics, games, etc). Learning it visually will help you appreciate it more. Most people's knowledge of math stops around the 1600s - try to be one of the few who's caught up on the last 400 years!
- You can learn most things from the internet. If you're in college or will be going to college, I highly recommend you spend time learning something where most of the knowledge is NOT readily available on the internet. It will make your skills highly valuable. E.g. while it might seem that that you can trivially learn electrical engineering because Arduino and Raspberry Pis exist, in reality, most of the core bleeding-edge knowledge are found in closed-door IP blocks that are held under lock and key. This is what makes companies like TSMC valubale! Become irreplaceable!