My personal mission was: “Prevent other 18-year-olds from spending a decade figuring it out”
Would you like to know the real inspiration behind my own career?
Some ill-advised, unadvised, and peer-advised life choices that I made as an 18-year-old. When I finally got the dream job in my “chosen” career, I’d sit on the train heading home from work, and the clickety-clack of the wheels on the tracks seemed to sing to me mournfully: “Quit your job, quit your job, quit your job….” The chorus in my head went: “But what else should I do, what else, what else?” (And then the high part — “But you have student loans…” really made me freeze up in fear.)
When I finally figured it out, my personal mission was: “Prevent other 18-year-olds from spending a decade figuring it out.” Quite inspiring, I know. With that background, your question is quite meaningful to me. If I can help your daughter make a choice that her future self will appreciate, I will have fulfilled my mission.
The good news is that you’re both right. College may or may not be a good idea, just like a gluten-free diet may or may not be a good idea. It’s useful for some, and a serious waste of time, money, and brainpower for others. A job that is chosen because of a good ad is a real winner — for the person who placed the ad. As for the employee? Not quite, probably about 75 percent of the time.
Create a free account to keep reading.