I’m in 8th grade and I look at all the forums on this website and everyone has accomplished so many things. I barely did anything interesting enough to even get into a state college. Not only do I not have any good extracurriculars ,but I also have really bad grades. I wrote them down below.
81% - English
88% - Spanish
77% - Geometry (Math)
93% -Science
91% - History
I know really bad and definitely not the 97 and above that everyone has on this website. I am basically on the verge of failing math. I also have only one extracurricular that I utterly suck at. I do one sport which is Track but, I can’t run for my life and I probably won’t make it past 9th grade. Definitly not Varsity.
Honestly, I was average in like 6th grade, but now I’m borderline below- average. 
What makes matters worse I want to become a doctor and with these credentials I am pretty sure I won’t make it even into a state college. Shoutout to the University of Austin! 
If anyone on the site goes there, please tell me how to get in (it’s like my dream school)!
Sorry for making you read my rant,but does anyone have any tips to get into a good college (I live in the south btw, if that makes things better)?
First of all, your grades are by no means “bad.” “Bad” is failing all of your courses, and you are by no means failing. Keep in mind that CC tends to be a super-selecting group of students all applying to the same set of 50 or so schools—there are 3000-4000 universities in the US, not just those schools. Texas, in particular, has a plethora of universities, not just the state flagships (UT Austin and Texas A & M in College Station.) UT El Paso, for example, has a 100% acceptance rate and, if you work hard, will get you where you need to go. Community college is an increasingly common pathway post-high school as well, and will allow you to save money before transferring to a 4-year university.
You are an eighth grader in high school. For one, most of your middle school grades (maybe math or foreign language, though it depends on what your high school’s policies and the colleges you are looking at) will not be considered during the college admissions process, mainly your high school grades will be. Second, 8th grade is too young to be on CC, at least in my opinion, so go read or something! 
My advice for you:
- Work hard in your current classes. If you're having trouble, make sure to contact teachers early on to ask for help: they're not mindreaders and don't always know if a kid's having trouble with a concept.
- You have 4 years of HS to do extracurriculars (middle school extracurriculars, for the most part, are not considered during the admissions process.) If your high school next year has a club or activities fair, I strongly suggest attending it and joining the clubs that interest YOU. If you're interested in volunteering, you could contact local libraries, hospitals, community organizations etc. (or look at their websites) regarding their volunteering programs---many will allow you to start volunteering at 14, so during 9th/10th grade.
- Becoming a Doctor means at least 12 more years of school (4 years of high school, college, and medical school) before residency (another 3 to 7 years to learn about a specific field in medicine.) It's not a race, but a journey. Don't worry about medical school down the line and focus on finishing middle school strong.
Hope that helps!
You can get the pre-med coursework at just about any college or university in the US, and at many, many community colleges. Med school admission is almost entirely numbers-based. The name of the college or university you graduate from won’t matter much, if at all. What will matter will be your overall GPA, your grades in the pre-med courses, your score on the MCAT exam, and your required medical volunteering/job shadowing. So if you end up at never-mentioned-here-on-College-Confidential-U, provided you do what you need to do you still can get into med school. Please stop worrying for now. Focus on doing well in your classes - as in really learning and understanding the material. That will leave you better prepared to do well in your next set of classes. Wash, rinse, repeat, and you are likely to have options when it comes time to apply to college.
One thing you can do now, is to start talking with your parents about how they expect you to pay for college. They probably will whine and fuss and tell you that it is too soon, or that they will figure it out eventually, or something like that. If you can get them to run the Net Price Calculators at the websites of a couple of colleges and universities that they are familiar with, that might help open up the conversation (well, after they’ve worked through their adult beverage stash and a few boxes of very soft tissues). If you are going to need help with paying for college, there are true experts here in the Financial Aid Forum. You can send your parents to have a chat with the people there.
Wishing you all the best!