The most splendid thing about math is that it is practice-based. You can be pretty bad at it, and with enough practice, you'll become better. You can struggle with it, but still pass classes about it, and you can be surprised by how quickly you learn it when something in your life is motivating you (i.e. you like your job a lot, but it requires you to know more math than you once did.).
I don't consider myself great at math (it does not intuitively for me, I do not run calculations quickly in my head to this day even basic add/sub problems, I forget basic concepts if I am not actively using them, I super struggled in trig, and I don't find myself to be in a position to easily try my hand at harder equations or theroretical things), but above average (I can grasp most of the math one would need to know in the practical world and then some, and I don't find math discouraging or frustrating). I tutored Math Models students in high school (Took it out of laziness, it was simple for me, but this was a class with students who typically really struggle with basic algebra) during the class, and generally just ended up becoming a teacher's aid during it because I became quite good at teaching it. I taught myself statistics out of the textbook with no real help outside of a few questions I asked higher-learning students in college because I needed the class to go to nursing school and online was the only option available to me last minute.. I passed the class, and with an A to boot. It was difficult to learn by myself and I spent many hours in the library, but it was possible. I practiced as much as I could each day.
And that's the beauty of it. there is no practicing concepts like microbiology.. either you get it, or you don't. Math, you can have no fucking clue why any of this is relevent (like logs for me), but you can still practice your little heart out and do alright enough to at least quasi-understand it. (i.e. I have no idea what logs are to this day, but I knew at one point in time how to use them in my math class to get the results I wanted). I find it a really wonderful area of academia because it accomplishes so much and it is so versatile to everyone's lives.