Anonymous wrote:She's what, 19? She's got plenty of time. Stop pressuring her and stop worrying about her. You're just making things worse.
Anonymous wrote:My freshman dd is constantly unsure what she wants to do. She has many interests but none are really passions. She initially liked environmental sciences and languages but there are few jobs and that scares her. She is going to switch her major from international relations to finance because she thinks prospects are better after meeting with her adviser, but she could really go any way with some encouragement on our part, and it's encouragement she wishes she had as she always is asking what we think. Both dh and I are very reluctant to intervene much because we feel it's her decision. How did you handle this if your child was directionless at that age? I am just scared she will not find her way.
Anonymous wrote:My freshman dd is constantly unsure what she wants to do. She has many interests but none are really passions. She initially liked environmental sciences and languages but there are few jobs and that scares her. She is going to switch her major from international relations to finance because she thinks prospects are better after meeting with her adviser, but she could really go any way with some encouragement on our part, and it's encouragement she wishes she had as she always is asking what we think. Both dh and I are very reluctant to intervene much because we feel it's her decision. How did you handle this if your child was directionless at that age? I am just scared she will not find her way.
Anonymous wrote:I think your role as parent in this moment is encouragement and confidence.
Her: I just don't know what to do, it's so stressful? What should I do??
You: You are a smart, capable young women with a ton of skills and options. It's okay to flounder a bit - most adults I know didn't know exactly where they'd end up when they were in college, too! I have total faith that you'll figure it out.
The only place I'd dive in is if she's asking for specifics that aren't making a decision for her, where you have some specific knowledge or can point her to someone who does. Like if she's talking about finance, it's reasonable to say "you know, my friend Jerry works in finance - would you be interested in talking to him? I could connect you two" or if she's asking about international relations, you can say "it's worth investigating recent changes in that industry - the current administration really cut a lot of those jobs and money."
But don't put your finger on the scale. Firm information that you have and she may not, that's it.
Anonymous wrote:She is aimless because she isn’t focused on a career track. A Finance major in itself is not a career pathway. A Finance Major can go into IB Private Equity M&A Internal Corporate Finance Roles and all are career pathways with specific lifestyle working hours job locations etc. Where does she see herself going? Has she done that research spoken to others done informational interviews? IR plus language speaks to state dept to me. I can’t think of private sector jobs that would specifically WANT IR majors so she’s probably correct that a finance degree has wider possibilities right out of the gate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My freshman dd is constantly unsure what she wants to do. She has many interests but none are really passions. She initially liked environmental sciences and languages but there are few jobs and that scares her. She is going to switch her major from international relations to finance because she thinks prospects are better after meeting with her adviser, but she could really go any way with some encouragement on our part, and it's encouragement she wishes she had as she always is asking what we think. Both dh and I are very reluctant to intervene much because we feel it's her decision. How did you handle this if your child was directionless at that age? I am just scared she will not find her way.
"hobbies don't pay the bills" Passion doesn't lead to income.
Anonymous wrote:My freshman dd is constantly unsure what she wants to do. She has many interests but none are really passions. She initially liked environmental sciences and languages but there are few jobs and that scares her. She is going to switch her major from international relations to finance because she thinks prospects are better after meeting with her adviser, but she could really go any way with some encouragement on our part, and it's encouragement she wishes she had as she always is asking what we think. Both dh and I are very reluctant to intervene much because we feel it's her decision. How did you handle this if your child was directionless at that age? I am just scared she will not find her way.