I need honest answers, cause I really want to know. I've been going back and forth with m y aunt about this. I want to change my major, but she tells me it's too late. I'm college sophomore, got 2 years left. Already invested 2 at community college in elem education. I don't want to do that, but I don't know what else I want to do at this point. She tells me it's my fault that I don't have a passion, maybe she's right. But, peope find their passions at all different ages and times in their lives, am I right? She' s really making me feel low right now, telling me that I'm way behind everypne else already, and I just need to finish.But I'm lost right now, and she doesn't understand that.I kno teres$ invested & time bt I want to define meaning for my life. Is it too late for me to explore other options, or should I just go down the road I started, and explore later? This is really frustrating me, she thinks I'm crazy cause I want to change it now, am I? Am I the only one in this situation
2007-12-11
13:20:15
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7 answers
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asked by
AF Bound
2
in
Education & Reference
➔ Higher Education (University +)
I'm actually 23, had a rough start..
2007-12-11
13:38:53 ·
update #1
No, it's never too late.
But it is too late to start from ground zero. That's not the way for you to go. If you had a deep underlying passion to become, say, a surgeon, then I would say go back for premed now.
Your problem, though, is that you have no idea what you want to do. So you feel lost, etc. The fallacy in your thinking is believing that you are locked into a career path for the rest of your life the moment you pick a major. You're not. My sister got a history degree, bounced around for 5 years before going into market research for a southern company. She's now making 6 figures + bonus in a career she loves but had no idea even existed when she was an undergrad. I've switched careers 3 times (but went back to school twice); last time as an MBA and am now doing a job that is completely unobtainable to people without significant education and at least 15 years experience.
What you need to do is finish school. Not only will you have your degree under your belt, you will always be able to get a Masters later on, in something else. The Bachelors signifies accomplishment - you finished a degree. The paper itself is a mark of accomplishment, and if you start all over again, there is a very high probability you will fail to graduate at all. It's a statistical fact.
Get the degree, then pursue more education as you get older and have a better idea on what career you want. Believe it or not, all of us, including your aunt, have been 23 before - you're not the first one who feels lost, we all have. You, however, do not have the benefit of being 45 years old and wishing to God you had finished your degree at 23. I know people who feel that way, and the lost feeling you have is absolutely nothing compared to their's.
Your aunt it 100% on this - finish this degree.
2007-12-18 13:06:47
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answer #1
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answered by ZenPenguin 7
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I didn't start college until 23 (at a community college), had all sorts of problems and worked nearly full time all the way through (to a BA). I dropped out of graduate school and worked for awhile. I then decided on an MBA -- finished the first masters degree (at a middle-rank state college) and applied, got into and completed an MBA at Columbia. So, no it's never too late to find your passion in life. Tell your aunt you love her but in this case she isn't right!
2007-12-11 17:45:15
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answer #2
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answered by Anna P 7
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You're a college sophomore, which would make you, what, 20? (Okay, fine, 23. Doesn't change the answer.) Now's the time you should be thinking about what you really want to do with your life (or at least figuring out what you definitely don't want to do), not settling for the options that are available to you. The older you get, the less flexibility you're going to have to do so. Explore now, and you'll be way ahead of everyone who's dealing with a midlife crisis because they went along with what was expected of them. Who knows? Maybe your aunt's jealous because she's one of those people. (I wouldn't suggest that possibility to her, though.)
2007-12-11 13:31:22
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answer #3
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answered by MM 7
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It probably is ok to switch majors. The most popular major in college is UNDECIDED - I've met some people who have so many passions that they can't decide what 1 or 2 things to focus on.
2007-12-11 13:24:28
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answer #4
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answered by the Politics of Pikachu 7
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Being as youthful as you're, you may desire to think of decrease back to a time at college whilst some issues got here much less annoying to you than others. Like if the instructor instructed your type to write down a narrative, did you delight in writing the tale once you have been requested to? Did you write greater for the sheer relaxing of it by potential of your self, with out being requested? Did you delight in possibly drawing or portray? Or public speaking? all of us have skills, and there could be issues that should excite you you could delight in the two as a potential of residing or pastime. there is something you could evaluate doing: pass and notice a careers adviser, they do no longer look to be basically at colleges or faculties, there are careers counsellors whose pastime that's to steer people interior the nicely suited profession, now and back it takes a chain of exams to discover what you're suitable suitable to. it is likewise accessible you're gifted, which might clarify why you're good at many stuff and lose interest. then you certainly ought to be inspired to keep in touch in events which you may discover greater mentally stimulating. For me that's writing. It has taken me some years to confess that's what i prefer to do greater of. there have been years of blockading it out as an pastime because of the fact I centred on employer classes so as that i will discover an accounting pastime. Accounting is my bread and butter, although that's writing that makes my pulse race. I even have got here across an enhancing provider the place i will deliver my short tale manuscripts and that they mark them, and supply me comments and suggestion. now and back the thoughts choose lots of paintings, yet a minimum of i've got faith like i'm doing something approximately it and not feeling like existence has handed me by potential of. i'm in my early 40's. that's my way of mixing my paintings with my hobbies. I shop them separate. i could be completely pissed off and bored if i could no longer provide my writing a hazard. good success with each and every thing.
2016-10-11 02:36:17
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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It's never to late to find your passion in life. But are you willing to pay the cost to acquire it? Only you can answer the questions you posted. Remember it is your life and you will have to live with the consequences of your decisions.
2007-12-11 13:27:14
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answer #6
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answered by bud 3
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NEVER TOO LATE
2007-12-11 13:23:19
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answer #7
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answered by CJ 2
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