I've got a plan! It's changed since we talked, but this is just an evolution of following my passion.REDONE wrote:Gabe, don't quit! Seriously, transfer back here, and enroll in the wildlife biology program at Colorado mesa or fort Lewis.
If you can fix jeeps, you can do the math! It takes a lot of work, but once those brain parts connect it clicks! Chemistry is hard, they throw a lot at you fast because chemistry is a "filter" course designed to get those unworthy to drop thier program. It's why "smart people" degrees that have nothing to do with chemistry still require the hard chemistry (usually labeled "principles" instead of "introduction").
Don't get me wrong, I think both of those degrees will end you up working a second job to pay the bills until you find a grant to pay for a masters in education so you can be a high school teacher. Even so, I remember our chats before you left and you were passionate about wildlife biology. Don't give up your passion!
There is a lot of fantastic scientific work going on that no one ever gets to hear about, and there is a lot of work that goes unfunded because no one knows about it! I think I can carve out a niche for myself showing the world work that is going on behind the scenes and charge handsomely for my services.
In the interim, my minor in Wildlife Bio will qualify me for 95% the field technician jobs I'm interested in (which will definitely pay the bills for a young single guy). I also have some industry contacts at JP Magazine and with those Jalopnik weirdos so I could possibly veer down that avenue and get payed to play with old shitboxes and write down my struggles.