major problem and i need some advice please!

<p>hello, i'm new but i've been browsing around for quite some time but decided to make a profile because i think something really bad may happen. here's the thing:</p>

<ul>
<li>I'm a sophomore in the top 5% of a very large class at a well known public, 4.5 + GPA, 2250 on my SAT's, numerous great SAT II scores, half minority, very well involved in EC's (i may be athletically recruited, great rec's from teacher, and a unique background. I will also enter the 2 year IB program ( I am moving out of the country so i will be considered an intl. student) next year. But, I'm terrible at math. So this week at a class that I've been struggling in all year (i am in the very low 70s) for several different reasons, I think I completely failed my final, which might cause me to fail the class. It was an honors course.</li>
</ul>

<p>So my question is: exactly how bad would it be for an otherwise excellent college candidate to fail a class at random? Granted, I have had several on going personal problems lately that may have affected my grade, but I'm not trying to make excuses and I am willing to live with it. Don't get me wrong, I've had a few B's here and there but I am still in absolute shock about this. Hopefully, I don't sound too much like a whiny with this, but I'm just wondering how colleges will see this.</p>

<p>I'm thinking of doing IR and I'm definitively not applying to ivy's and all that but I'm interested in: American, Middlebury, Emory, William and Mary, Wake Forest, U Virginia, George Washington, and U Chicago. I have safeties lined up, so don't worry lol.</p>

<p>Anyway, thanks a lot for reading all this and please be honest. Any tips or advice would be gladly appreciated and I certainly willing to return the favor!</p>

<p>First of all, calm down. Reasonable colleges (which I suspect the ones you have listed are) are interested in applicants who display consistent academic excellence, but they also have tolerance for those who slip up but display effort and an upwards trend. A poor performance in an honors class is not enough to doom you in their eyes... failing to remedy it quickly will.</p>

<p>Just my two cents. Good luck :)</p>