Otago Daily Times

Kimiya Byrne

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SELFMOTIVA­TION. Passion. Perseveran­ce. These have been the backbone behind the achievemen­ts of triplethre­at Kimiya Byrne.

Excelling across arts, sports and academical­ly, Kimiya has found enjoyment in the range of people she meets in each group.

‘‘Something my mum’s always said is what you put out into the world is what you get back. That’s been part of her cultural and personal values. So I always thought if you’re giving to your community, supporting others and being a positive influence, that will be reflected back,’’ she said.

She believes how well someone does at school is ‘‘not a reflection of how smart you are, but how much work you’ve put in. It comes down to what you do . . . I think being dedicated and not giving up when I get to a point where it’s hard’’.

With a full schedule, a challenge has been finding a balance between keeping up academic studies and her extracurri­cular interests.

‘‘Especially with lots of times where I would have karate at the same time. I’d have a practise for music and find time to practise for all the different things, but I think scheduling it out and not procrastin­ating about things, and getting on to it. That’s been my biggest challenge has been balancing social life, academic and the other things I like to do,’’ she said.

Of all her achievemen­ts, the most fulfilling have been reflective of what else was occurring at the time, Kimiya says.

‘‘Last year, I was really happy to get excellence endorsemen­t for level 2, but I think that was also a reflection of being able to achieve that on top of everything else I was involved in, because it did become hard with everything to get sorted and I was really hoping to get good grades on top of all the other things.’’

Achievemen­ts: Level 2 excellence, 80+ hours of service in 2022, kaea of kapa haka 2022, clarinet grade six Trinity College exam with merit 2020, 3rd kyu (brown belt one tab) Samurai Karate achieved in August 2021, head of cultural committee. Role model: Her mother — ‘‘She left her country against what her parents thought she should do, went and travelled and made a whole new life for herself, which has been pretty inspiring.’’ Hopes for the future: Studying health science at the University of Otago. Kimiya is interested in studying oncology because ‘‘it’s always stuck out to me from a young age, that every single person knows someone that’s been affected by cancer and it can be quite personal’’.

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