Hey everyone, it’s been a while, hasn’t it?
For the few of you that find my name familiar, you might remember <a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/admissions-hindsight-lessons-learned/905391-aspirations-rejections-resetting-all.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/admissions-hindsight-lessons-learned/905391-aspirations-rejections-resetting-all.html</a>.
That was my first post on this website and was, obviously, not my last.
I’ve come to tell you guys about another story that, though it only loosely fits under ‘College Admissions’, certainly fits under ‘Lessons Learnt’.
As you all know, back when I made that first post, I was certain that I wanted to be a doctor. Since I was a child, there was only one thing that was certain, that I would become a doctor. Well, turns out that nothing is really that certain. Since that first post, I have thoroughly thought about what I wanted to do with my life and I realized that medicine was not for me. Sadly, I came to UCR believing that I was going to be a doctor and this school was certainly excellent to achieve that goal.
But now I’m changing my major from Biology to a double major in Mechanical Engineering and (hopefully) Game Design. But UCR doesn’t exactly have a Game Design course and, being without a car, I can’t go back and forth between community college and my current campus. So, yes, I do intend to transfer, but not because UC Riverside was ‘a horrible school’ or fell short of any of my expectations as so many people have stated.
I simply decided to follow my dreams and UCR wasn’t…as equipped to handle those dreams. But, I must admit, this mix up and the guilt I feel for leaving this campus was my own fault because I didn’t realize sooner than the only reason I wanted to go to Med school was because it was ‘safe’. All I had to do was work hard and be as involved in the community as I could. Basically, it was high school all over again, except on a monumentally larger scale.
But real life doesn’t work that way and I had to decide whether to face uncertainty or survive a life that I never wanted but had to accept because I wasn’t courageous enough to strive for what I wanted. I know I chose correctly.
So, let me end this with another piece of advice. Don’t try to predict what the future holds. I’m sure many people have told you aspiring college-goers that you may not know what you want and you still have time to figure it out. Well, you know what, whoever told you that was absolutely right. You may not know what you want, so don’t plan your future so strictly that you can’t cope with change when it decides to rear its head. There are people in the world who changed their majors eight times before finding what they really loved to do and this is 100% true because my friend’s father was one of these men.
Don’t be afraid to follow your dreams, but don’t try to predict the future; it might just lead you into an uncomfortable position, disabling you and putting you at a disadvantage compared to your peers.
I hope this helps, and good luck!