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The cost of getting what you want, is getting what you thought you wanted
I've come to the realization that both my major and minor are in subject areas that I don't want to pursue for a living. All of my classes this semester are in either my major or minor field of study. So what do I do for the rest of this semester?
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In the longer run, this is probably going to mean escaping Arizona before I get a 4-year degree (possibly as early as this upcoming May) and most likely landing in Boston. 'Cause if I don't know what I want to do, there's no point in staying someplace where I don't want to be while I'm not learning how to do it. Also, if I establish residence in Boston while I figure out what to do next, my parents will be off my FAFSA by the time I'm ready to go back to school.
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I'm willing to consider the possibility that I've lost my way in this mess because I'm burning out on school and that's interfering with my ability to care about anything related. But if so, the fix is the same - do something else for a while and come back fresh.
* The American Chemical Society has tight control over their curriculum, so there are few class substitutions. For reasons unknown beyond 'the committee refuses to schedule them', there's also a shortage of slots in required 1-credit labs, some of which are spring-only, and others fall-only.
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(...and kind of how I ended up with an art degree...)
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I've a history of realizing that major life choices aren't working out, and then going to do something else. Fortune favors the bold. :)
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(As it is I have computer science/math and art. And a couple of genetics papers from graduate school that got out the door. But I don't have any post-graduate degrees. I'm a project defense away from a master's but said eh, fukkit.)