Re: ASDF Help Thread. [Serious]
Posted: Fri Oct 29, 2010 8:57 pm
You can always count on ASDF.
Dear Life-Direction-Seeking ASDFers,Flying Sheep wrote:I have a problem. I don't know what career path I want to pursue, and I don't know what classes I should pick for next year or senior years, and I'm really horribly worried about it, coz I don't want to pick something, then decide I don't like it later. What should I do?
assdef wrote:Dear Life-Direction-Seeking ASDFers,Flying Sheep wrote:I have a problem. I don't know what career path I want to pursue, and I don't know what classes I should pick for next year or senior years, and I'm really horribly worried about it, coz I don't want to pick something, then decide I don't like it later. What should I do?
Sorry I was gone for a few days and y'all post like mad so I don't mean to necroquote but I wanted to offer some advice to my wooly friend here and all of you youngin's that read this forum.
When looking to pick what classes to take - particularly in "high school" (or whatever they call it overseas) - pick the class that you think is the most fun. Don't worry about what is best for your career, or worry about what your parents want you to take (to whatever extent you can), or anything like that - just go with what your gut tells you would be the most fun. Like cooking? Take cooking classes. Like art? Take some art studio. Like music? Play an instrument. Like speaking? Take another language. The classes you take in high school will have very little bearing on your future opportunities simply because it is expected that individuals in your generation will change careers several times over the course of your life, so now is a great time to take every elective possible and try new and different things to find what you like, what's your passion, and what you don't like. And if you find cooking classes to be horribly boring - no worries! Change your path, take something else, you've got all the time in the world to find out what you want to be when you grow up. Hell, I know people in their 40s and 50s that STILL don't know what they want to be when they grow up. It's not a decision you have to make right now, and whatever decisions you make - even if they are the wrong ones - you can change and make up for in high school, at university, and beyond.
Even when you get to University the only thing that will really ever carry a tremendous amount of weight when you look to get a job is the prestige of the school you go to. If an employer recognizes your school because it's Harvard, or Australian National University, or Oxford, or whatever, that will absolutely open doors for you. But what is more likely to land you a job is the fact that you know and graduated with someone, or the person you interview with is a fellow alumnus of your school, or some personal connection like that.
All throughout high school I took business classes and then when I went to college I majored in business administration because I thought it was the right thing to do to set me up for success and get me a job and all that happy crap. One of the best moments of my life happened halfway through my junior year of college when I realized how much I hated business classes, and so I started taking literature classes, creative writing, film studies, and all sorts of fun creative electives instead. The reason I switched? Because those were the classes I thought were fun, interesting, challenging, and really enjoyed going to. And I can guarantee you that the things I learned in those electives did a lot more for me in preparing me for a career than any of the business classes I took because I thought that's what the "right" thing to do, and that I was "supposed" to take business.
I know this is soapbox preaching coming from a cooky old man, and there will be people that tell you to be practical and think practically about your future, but there is something significant to be said about remembering to have fun when you're young, even when it feels like the weight of the entire world is on your shoulders and so much is being expected of you by so many people - at the end of the day it never really matters what other people want for you, it's all about what you want for yourself. So spend some time figuring out what that is, and the only way to do that is try everything and learn from your mistakes.
I'll shutup now. Go knock'em dead.
Your humble servant,
assdef

Alright, I think I will. I s'pose I don't really know anything about doing college or any of that, and no idea how it works, so that's really all I got. Thank you so much. Outta curiousity, what's your job atm?assdef wrote:Dear Life-Direction-Seeking ASDFers,Flying Sheep wrote:I have a problem. I don't know what career path I want to pursue, and I don't know what classes I should pick for next year or senior years, and I'm really horribly worried about it, coz I don't want to pick something, then decide I don't like it later. What should I do?
Sorry I was gone for a few days and y'all post like mad so I don't mean to necroquote but I wanted to offer some advice to my wooly friend here and all of you youngin's that read this forum.
When looking to pick what classes to take - particularly in "high school" (or whatever they call it overseas) - pick the class that you think is the most fun. Don't worry about what is best for your career, or worry about what your parents want you to take (to whatever extent you can), or anything like that - just go with what your gut tells you would be the most fun. Like cooking? Take cooking classes. Like art? Take some art studio. Like music? Play an instrument. Like speaking? Take another language. The classes you take in high school will have very little bearing on your future opportunities simply because it is expected that individuals in your generation will change careers several times over the course of your life, so now is a great time to take every elective possible and try new and different things to find what you like, what's your passion, and what you don't like. And if you find cooking classes to be horribly boring - no worries! Change your path, take something else, you've got all the time in the world to find out what you want to be when you grow up. Hell, I know people in their 40s and 50s that STILL don't know what they want to be when they grow up. It's not a decision you have to make right now, and whatever decisions you make - even if they are the wrong ones - you can change and make up for in high school, at university, and beyond.
Even when you get to University the only thing that will really ever carry a tremendous amount of weight when you look to get a job is the prestige of the school you go to. If an employer recognizes your school because it's Harvard, or Australian National University, or Oxford, or whatever, that will absolutely open doors for you. But what is more likely to land you a job is the fact that you know and graduated with someone, or the person you interview with is a fellow alumnus of your school, or some personal connection like that.
All throughout high school I took business classes and then when I went to college I majored in business administration because I thought it was the right thing to do to set me up for success and get me a job and all that happy crap. One of the best moments of my life happened halfway through my junior year of college when I realized how much I hated business classes, and so I started taking literature classes, creative writing, film studies, and all sorts of fun creative electives instead. The reason I switched? Because those were the classes I thought were fun, interesting, challenging, and really enjoyed going to. And I can guarantee you that the things I learned in those electives did a lot more for me in preparing me for a career than any of the business classes I took because I thought that's what the "right" thing to do, and that I was "supposed" to take business.
I know this is soapbox preaching coming from a cooky old man, and there will be people that tell you to be practical and think practically about your future, but there is something significant to be said about remembering to have fun when you're young, even when it feels like the weight of the entire world is on your shoulders and so much is being expected of you by so many people - at the end of the day it never really matters what other people want for you, it's all about what you want for yourself. So spend some time figuring out what that is, and the only way to do that is try everything and learn from your mistakes.
I'll shutup now. Go knock'em dead.
Your humble servant,
assdef
Hah, my parents can go die in a hole. They want me to be a fucking surgeon, and there's no way in hell that's happening. And I'm not quite sure what you mean by not rushing into college...lunar_furor wrote:I agree with him. TRUST ME you DON'T want to rush into college... especially if the only reason you want to is to make mommy and daddy happy.
This owns. You should publish it.assdef wrote: Dear Life-Direction-Seeking ASDFers,
Sorry I was gone for a few days and y'all post like mad so I don't mean to necroquote but I wanted to offer some advice to my wooly friend here and all of you youngin's that read this forum.
When looking to pick what classes to take - particularly in "high school" (or whatever they call it overseas) - pick the class that you think is the most fun. Don't worry about what is best for your career, or worry about what your parents want you to take (to whatever extent you can), or anything like that - just go with what your gut tells you would be the most fun. Like cooking? Take cooking classes. Like art? Take some art studio. Like music? Play an instrument. Like speaking? Take another language. The classes you take in high school will have very little bearing on your future opportunities simply because it is expected that individuals in your generation will change careers several times over the course of your life, so now is a great time to take every elective possible and try new and different things to find what you like, what's your passion, and what you don't like. And if you find cooking classes to be horribly boring - no worries! Change your path, take something else, you've got all the time in the world to find out what you want to be when you grow up. Hell, I know people in their 40s and 50s that STILL don't know what they want to be when they grow up. It's not a decision you have to make right now, and whatever decisions you make - even if they are the wrong ones - you can change and make up for in high school, at university, and beyond.
Even when you get to University the only thing that will really ever carry a tremendous amount of weight when you look to get a job is the prestige of the school you go to. If an employer recognizes your school because it's Harvard, or Australian National University, or Oxford, or whatever, that will absolutely open doors for you. But what is more likely to land you a job is the fact that you know and graduated with someone, or the person you interview with is a fellow alumnus of your school, or some personal connection like that.
All throughout high school I took business classes and then when I went to college I majored in business administration because I thought it was the right thing to do to set me up for success and get me a job and all that happy crap. One of the best moments of my life happened halfway through my junior year of college when I realized how much I hated business classes, and so I started taking literature classes, creative writing, film studies, and all sorts of fun creative electives instead. The reason I switched? Because those were the classes I thought were fun, interesting, challenging, and really enjoyed going to. And I can guarantee you that the things I learned in those electives did a lot more for me in preparing me for a career than any of the business classes I took because I thought that's what the "right" thing to do, and that I was "supposed" to take business.
I know this is soapbox preaching coming from a cooky old man, and there will be people that tell you to be practical and think practically about your future, but there is something significant to be said about remembering to have fun when you're young, even when it feels like the weight of the entire world is on your shoulders and so much is being expected of you by so many people - at the end of the day it never really matters what other people want for you, it's all about what you want for yourself. So spend some time figuring out what that is, and the only way to do that is try everything and learn from your mistakes.
I'll shutup now. Go knock'em dead.
Your humble servant,
assdef
Which is unfortunate......but yeah that's a good idea.Gamma wrote:Put it somewhere more publicly known than here.
Why thank you my ASDF friend with the greco-alphabetic nomenclature! However, I am confident there is much better written but generally similar advice previously published by authors much smarter and more eloquent than I.Gamma wrote:This owns. You should publish it.
So? That doesn't mean you shouldn't publish it. I'm serious.assdef wrote:Why thank you my ASDF friend with the greco-alphabetic nomenclature! However, I am confident there is much better written but generally similar advice previously published by authors much smarter and more eloquent than I.Gamma wrote:This owns. You should publish it.