Though my math skills are ehh, I still have a passion for weather and meteorology no matter what...so I totally agree with ya there. I'll be treating that as a hobby and share it with awesome friends. ^_^
As early as the 7th grade, my teachers were telling me that I'd
really need to improve my math skills if I wanted to take up meteorology as a career. By the time I got to the 10th grade, they were telling me that it's just a lost cause. Some people have that skill, and others don't. Studying like mad can only get you so far, but if a person truly struggles with even simple mathematics all the time, that's how he is, that's how he's always going to be, and so he should look for a different career choice.
I was so bad in math that my 12th grade advanced calculus (how I ever ended up getting put in that class is beyond me) teacher actually bribed me to leave and never return. By the end of the first quarter (so the last half of October), my grade was 7. Out of 100. It was obvious that this was not the class for me. Because it was already too late to transfer to a different math class, and because I had straight "A"s in everything else, she cut a deal with me. If I left and never told anyone that I was even occupying valuable space in her classroom, she would give me an extra 60 points so that I could officially withdraw from the class with a passing grade, and that would be the end of it. I didn't need the credits, actually, so this would be no benefit, but especially no harm, to me. Of course I accepted, and I spent that hour every day instead puttering around my school's TV studio - and, unlike my math teacher, they were very happy to have me around.