Matric results must be kept in perspective
Much emphasis is set on academic achievement, with the words ‘success’ and ‘failure’ attached to the results

AS the matric results are made known this week, we will again ‘rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep’.
Much emphasis is set on academic achievement, with the words ‘success’ and ‘failure’ attached to the results.
Certainly, the matric exams offer a measurable standard against which academic capability and effort can be assessed.
To attain a number of distinctions, there must have been plenty of hard work and disciplined study regimes.
We therefore salute and honour those who top the list of highest achievers; they deserve all the praise heaped on them.
But what of those who ‘failed’ matric?
Are they doomed to be losers in life? The answer is a definite ‘no!’.
There are many other attributes, skills and qualities, other than the ability to excel academically, which lead to success in the adult world.
(One must caution that high grades alone are not a guarantee of future accomplishment).
Don’t be defined by other people’s parameters or expectations – and especially not by a grade on an exam paper.
If you ‘failed’, you are in good company.
It’s comforting to read a list of successful of people who at some stage of their lives were rejected in their study or career paths.
Among the many are Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, Vincent van Gogh, JK Rowling, Elvis Presley, Mozart and Beethoven.
Almost all overcame periods of gloom, adversity and despondency.
To sum up, if you ‘failed’ matric because you battle academically, it’s not the end of the world, so keep trying.
Of course, if you simply did not work hard and seriously enough, and allowed yourself to be distracted from your studies, learn the lesson.
No matter how deep the disappointment of not getting that matric pass was, there is plenty of help available, so use it.
People are uniquely gifted and each has a place and a purpose.
That’s the quest in life, to find our rightful place in the scheme of things.
And if academics is not it, there will be other doors that open for those determined to give it their best shot.