I recommend that you do a number of things:
- Make an appointment with the counseling center. Feeling adrift has a way of coloring everything, and just getting to talk to someone about your emergence from "all I care about are good grades" to registering your happiness level with your path as well as dealing with your parents' pressure could be helpful.
- Make an appointment with the career center. They often have some very helpful tools to assess both aptitude and interest. My guess is that some carefully selected internships will help you hone your post-graduation goals. (My kid, like @Lindagaf 's, tried on several different industries, work environments, etc. over the summer and also had great post-grad plans set up early senior year.)
- Make an appointment to talk to your advisor. Use your course selections to see what you like. Really, it's better to figure out what excites you first and then figure out how to make a living than try to work the process the other way. If you have distribution requirements to fulfill, see if that can be part of the process. Read prof and course reviews so everything that appeals to you will be seen in the best light. But treat this as an exercise in figuring out what you like, not what you'll do or be. The goal is self-discovery. Often, you can bolt on courses that could make your passion more marketable without having to go down that path as a major. (CS, stats, accounting, etc.)
- Think about bullet journaling, making a note daily or weekly of what you loved, what you hated, thoughts you might want to devote time to working through. A pattern may emerge. You have your life in front of you, but you can only experience the present now! Try to be mindful of it.
Wishing you the best of luck!