Photo: Sandra J. Milburn/The Hutchinson News via AP

This past Sunday, 17-year-old Braxton Moral graduated from high school in Ulysses, Kansas. At the end of this month, he’s graduating from Harvard, and hopes to start law school.
“When I was younger, school got a little boring for me,”he told CNN. “I needed to stimulate my education, stimulate growth.”
That he certainly did. When he was 11, Braxton started taking classes at Harvard’s extension school — online and, during the last few summers, on campus in Cambridge.Good Morning Americareportedthat he’s taken mostly government classes and hopes to enter politics.
“I’m relieved to have a little bit of a head start,” Braxton toldGMA. “I thought it really broadened my horizons. It helped me understand new things and what I want to do [in life].”
Braxton Moral, right, and a high school classmate.Sandra J. Milburn/The Hutchinson News via AP

Kevin McGrath, an associate professor in South Asian Studies at Harvard University, toldGMAthe teen is “a remarkable and unique young scholar.”
“Intellectually, he is extraordinary, but more than that, it is his discipline and endeavor which has enabled him to begin adult life with such startling success,” said McGrath.
His mother, Julie Moral, told theNew York Timesthat her son’s outstanding intellectual abilities became evident around the age of 2 or 3. At his older siblings’ volleyball games, the toddler “calculated mathematical differences in the scores,” theTimesreported.
Braxton Moral.Sandra J. Milburn/The Hutchinson News via AP

After skipping fourth grade and continuing to blossom intellectually, Braxton also became depressed. The Duke University Talent Identification Program pinpointed his problem.
“They said he was having existential depression,” his mother told theTimes. “It’s where you’re like, ‘What’s my purpose? Is there a God?’ It’s something that most people have — a midlife crisis. He had it like, in fifth grade.”
The Duke program suggested Harvard Extension,reported theHutchinson News. Through Braxton’s Harvard courses, he discovered his passion for politically related studies. He’s also found inspiration from the entrepreneur Elon Musk and ultimate fighter Conor McGregor, theTimesreported.
Braxton has written a book about his experiences,Harvard in the Heartland, with hopes to attend Columbia University’s law school to study constitutional law.
He toldGMAhis advice to other kids and teens is to explore what you are interested in as early as possible. His mother’s advice? “I told him, he can do whatever he wants,” Julia Moral told theTimes, “as long as he changes the world and makes it better.”
source: people.com