Originally Posted by
SuperAntigen
Originally Posted by impalaballa187
Honestly... It sounds like a bunch of excuses in this thread. If you have a lot of drive, decent grades, and aren't afraid of rejection, you should be able to land a pretty good job by the time you graduate.
I go to an Ivy League school, and even here I see thousands of kids coasting by like their futures are already set. For the kids whipping daddy's bimmer around campus with 24 hour access to the family yacht this is true, but they are the exception and not the rule. Most students DO NOT utilize their college's career center adequately, nor do they do even remotely well at networking. I don't want to sit up here and give my personal diatribe, but people don't plan ahead. And even if they have some glimmer of an idea about what they want to do, they don't have backup plans, and backup backup plans, and backups for those backups. I have mapped out a dozen different paths, all of which have the same goal in mind. Will all of them work? No, but a few will. Those are the ones you take and run with.
Excuses are tools of the incompetent built upon monuments of nothingness... those who excel at them, seldom excel at anything else.
THIS...
If there is one thing you should take from this thread, it's the underlined, bolded, red statement.
Real talk, I cant tell you how much flak I have taken over the years from my friends and family simply because I chose to explore multiple paths, instead of the one track/one path many people, in college and out of college, seem to follow.
I currently have six different things I could potentially do when I graduate. This has little to do with "not knowing what to do with my life", which is what most people assume the minute I tell them about my plans, and more to do with maximizing my abilities (yes, I am that dynamic of an individual...
) and fulfilling my potential.
Unlike impallaballa, however, I don't have one goal in mind. Rather, I have multiple goals and I plan on pursuing each one. Having options = confidence when you leave college.
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