This is bad advice. Please do not listen to anyone that tries to tell you "It's what YOU want that matters"
or "You don't have to be successful or please other people" because this is not true
I think we may be miscommunicating. I'm not saying "don't be successful." I'm advocating defining your own criteria for success rather than allowing others to dictate it to you.
Others might tell you that you "need good grades" or "need a degree" or "need to make lots of money" to be successful. That doesn't need to be true. There are plenty of people who have good, decent, fun lives doing things they enjoy that didn't require school or a degree to do. And there are plenty of people making $60k/yr but still miserable because they hate their jobs and can't leave because they've accrued debt.
This is not to say that school or degrees or money are bad. They aren't. But they are only
tools. They are a
means to an end, not the end itself. What is the end? That's something that you need to decide for yourself.
Identify what you want from life.
Then make it happen.
Do you enjoy skiing? Why not become a lift attendant? Do you want to hang out at the pool all day picking up on girls? Why not become a lifeguard? Do you want to be an actor? Sign up at a casting agency and become a background extra. Do you want to hang out and talk to people? Become a bartender. Do you want to write? Start submitting articles to magazines.
None of these are positions that require vast sums of intelligence. Nobody cares how diligent your study habits are or asks you what your grades were like when you do these things.
You have a limited amount of time and energy available.
Invest it wisely. People may tell you to get good grades and "study hard" but the fact is that the vast majority of what you learn in school will never have much affect on the rest of your life. A school year spent learning about world history, or writing comparison contrast essays...will not benefit you as much as spending that time, for example...teaching yourself a programming language if you want to be a programmer, or teaching yourself a foreign language if you want to travel, or any of a number of things that you could be doing with that time. If you can't keep yourself interested in learning things in school that will probably never affect your life one way or another...that's ok.
Invest that time and energy finding, doing, being, learning something that you
do care about and that
will improve your life.
Find your niche. Don't let others dictate your life to you.