My wish would be for everyone on the board to take at least one college class, in something they are interested in....maybe pottery....maybe literature....anything.
My story, quick and dirty:
I did not graduate after 4 years. I went to a community college for 2 years and lived and home. I went to a university for 2 years. At the university I lived in a co-ed dorm which allowed drinking....my floor had 12 young women (I was the oldest at 21) and 36 young men.
It was a young JW girls dream come true. I partied, I tried drugs, I fornicated. I did it all....all within walking distance of my dorm room.
I was majoring in Accounting. I changed my major to Criminal Justice...I wanted to be in the FBI. The FBI had come on campus and tried to recruit...the problem was I didn't read the fine print. You had to be an Accounting major or be pre-law who was going on to law school.
I stayed with criminal justice for 1 year....mid-way through my senior year I changed to Business. At the end of my senior year my 4 years were up. I had to go home.
No one advised me to stay on for one more year, make up my credits and graduate. My mom told me that I had burned my bridges and that I had to come home and work; I blew the opportunity Jehovah gave me. (gag)
When I started working my employer paid for me to go to a private local college and complete my degree...it would take 2 years now because the school would not accept credits from the other two. I went for 2 semesters and quit because work was requiring OT and the OT pay was too enticing....who needed a degree? I was earing big bucks!!!
As my husband and I moved around the country, my degree would have come in handy. Saying I went to college for 5 years and never graduated, was humiliating.
Cut to 1998....I was in Wichita, Kansas....not a lot to do except work....or learn. My employer was big on continuing education. They OKd me going back to another private college. They paid all tuition and books.
I went 3-4 times per week for 14 months. I got straight A's for the first time in my life. I loved it. I learned and met people like me....people who dropped out. People who never graduated for any number of reasons. All of us were between the ages of 25 and 60.
I finally graduated, with a bachelors degree in business, in 1999.
We moved to Ohio and with the learning bug in me I went to law school for a year; realized I don't like attorneys, got a paralegal certificate and worked at it for 1 year before hanging up my legal docs....
My points about college are this:
IF I CAN DO IT, ANYONE CAN. I was a very average student at best in HS and initially in college. When I got older I really appreciated the profs and the work they do to help us learn. I learned more as an adult than I ever did as a teenager.
Give it a try....you might like it and you are never too old to learn.
Rah, Rah, Go Team!!!