Anonymous wrote:I wish I went to a lower pressure southern school and no, I’m not a troll. I went to a prestigious university up north and hated the climate, the school and my major. I switched majors several times and settled for one finally. My career is secure but nothing I would have seen myself staying in. 30 years later I did just that.
I would tell my teen self about seasonal depression and how I thrive in sunlight and warm weather. Go south for the sun and do not wait until retirement to live in warm weather.
Anonymous wrote:That I didn't work harder in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish I had picked a more useful major than Communications.
May I pushback on this? I also chose an easy major — because it was easy and a match to my academic preparation at that point. Do you really think you’d be able to hypothetically handle something much harder, ie something with a lot of math and science? Unless you’re able to go all the way back to 9th grade, it’s unlikely. I would have loved to have been able to major in engineering, computer science or especially pre-med, but unless I have a time machine to re-do high school, that wasn’t in the cards at age 18, even with the benefit old age wisdom.
It depends on why one chose that "easy" major: because you didn't have the preparation or because you wanted more time to party? Those are two very different reasons.
I mean, easy major teens in 2023 all know that computer science and engineering leads to $100,000 job offers out of college and the most lucrative career trajectory by a mile. They still don’t pursue them. Why? Because they’re really freaking hard! The average easy major kid would literally fail out of college if they tried to major in engineering or pre-med.
Anonymous wrote:Everything is relative OP. Only about 34-35% of the US Population has even graduated from college. So, I am happy I graduated + then graduated from law school. I was poor/grew up with 8 kids in my family. Dad refused to sign for loans. I commuted to a crabby State U, worked several jobs, had zero fun! Fast forward-- husband (who also grew up deprived) and I are now rich. Rest assured we turned off the spigot at one kid so they could go to the very best schools money can buy-- private schools + Ivy. American Dream!
Anonymous wrote:My major was Business Administration - Marketing. It was not interesting to me and I didn't feel I learned anything. I had little career guidance. Back then, I was so worried about getting a job that would pay off and business was BIG at my B10 school.
I could have done so many other things that interest me now.
I did get a graduate degree in an unrelated field and I think the business degree helped me get jobs.![]()