<p>Very long story short, I for the most part never went to school. I went to school a few isolated years in my childhood, and learned to read well, but never attended high school at all. I was not homeschooled, I just had no education. </p>
<p>I however, have a passion for science and plan to become a researcher. I am 17 now, and in my third semester at community college. I have been accepted to a major university in Virginia, and will be attending in the fall. </p>
<p>I am very ahead in chemistry, I have taken chemistry 1 and 2 with labs, and was supposed to take organic chemistry this semester until it was canceled, and I will now take it over the summer. My early grades in school were not very good, but since the middle of last semester, things have seemed pretty easy. </p>
<p>I was expecting to take a full load of classes, including organic chemistry, but since it was canceled I am stuck with very easy classes. I have been worried due to this, because I wanted to slowly increase the difficulty until the fall, but now it looks like it will be all at once. </p>
<p>So, in the fall, I will be taking organic chemistry 2 and analytical chemistry, and am worried if that will be too much. I am going take all easy other classes, but my math is really behind. I am currently taking pre-calculus now, and it is the first math I have taken since algebra 1. I will be taking pre-calculus 2 then, and am worried that my math will slow me down and make my classes much harder. </p>
<p>Any opinions or experiences with these classes compared to general chemistry?</p>