Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to community college. I did that while working full time at a CPA firm and part time at a tennis club nights and weekends. So I worked about 65 hours a week. It took me five years to graduate.
It was fine. I'm 40 and nobody cares where you went to college.
Not so. In the DC area, where you went to college defines you.
Anonymous wrote:A bit off topic from the CC discussion but I noticed that you said your DD may want to work with animals. I recently listened to this great podcast interviewing vets and vet techs and it was very eye opening into that profession. It talked about the high suicide rates among veterinarians. Did you know that vets/vet techs experience significantly more patient deaths than hospice doctors/nurses? One vet tech said on average she euthanized 20 animals a week! It sounded like many people just loved animals and wanted to help them but the job really requires dealing with their owners and all of the complications that that entails (like not being able to afford care). It may be worth a listen for your dd.
https://www.wnycstudios.org/story/dallas-veterinarians-suicide/
(Also don't be put off by the name- this episode has nothing to do with sex, and really the whole podcast)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From what I understand, being a veterinarian is like being a doctor, except you don't get paid like one.
Vets are doctors. Their patients are animals not people.
Vets can absolutely earn a decent salary, too.
They make about half of what a primary care physician makes. There's nothing wrong with that, but it's a job that requires serious education and possibly huge student loans. It's definitely only job for people who have a passion for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From what I understand, being a veterinarian is like being a doctor, except you don't get paid like one.
Vets are doctors. Their patients are animals not people.
Vets can absolutely earn a decent salary, too.