One downfall of the "I can see myself doing nothing else" mindset, and I had it too, is that motivates many of us into to get a degree in aviation rather than degree/training is a second area of interest.
Totally. I went back to school because I was flying medevac, I had just finished my BS in aviation I'd done on the side while flying for a living and found a math problem I couldn't do. The deeper I dug the more intractable I found it to be until before I knew it I was enrolling in college caclulus classes. If you would have asked me at 17 what I wanted to learn in college math would have not been on the list - but then there I was going back to school in my 20s to try to solve a problem that I couldn't solve. There are other courses that are just so amazing too. It sounds dumb, but my "useless GenEd art history class" that I didn't want to take ended up changing my life in a big way.
I don't know what to tell OP, but diversity in experience is really great and if you only study flying stuff will you have that? Or will you be a one trick pony?
I reject the cost of “pedigree” higher education on principal alone. You absolutely do not get value for the cost.
Agreed - really, school is largely two things, credentialism and a place that makes it a little bit easier to crack the books and study. If you're self-motivated, you don't need that motivation, but most people aren't self-motivated enough to get indepth knowledge in a broad variety of topics without it, and at 22, even if you learned all the same stuff and were exposed to the stuff a well rounded person typically gets exposed to and learns in college, nobody will believe you or care. You can be incredibly smart and if you don't have the piece of paper, people don't give a damn.
I've *never* seen someone say, "Oh, State University of Townsville? That's not a real education!!" It could be that you would learn things better by not going, but practically, to get a job and to stand out from the pack the piece of paper still retains a little value. But I definitely wouldn't say that Private or Ivy League is remotely necessary to prove that you took Econ 101 and Introduction to Dance. Do that • at Community College then transfer to the cheapest state school you can afford.
All I ever wanted to do was fly airplanes. Really wanted military but severely broke my leg in college and the Colonel running the AFROTC detachment said I wouldn't be physically eligible for a pilot slot. This was a bummer obviously. So, I dropped out and went back to Houston to pursue flying that way (had private already). But here is another instance of "life" - at 23, after never even missing school for illness, I lost 100% of my hearing in my left ear, 80% in my right ear, and 100% of my vestibular system in both ears - in a two week timeframe. No airline (or any other flying career) and for a time no flying at all, which is the thing I loved above anything else.
Yup. All I ever wanted to do in this universe was fly airplanes. I got sick 5 years ago and even after a fantastic, dynamic, and interesting flying career, I was grounded. Were it not for the other education I had, the other interests I'd cultivated, I'd be hosed.
In some ways, my life has actually become *more* interesting than if I would have stayed flying for a living. I've done some far cooler things than I would have done if I hadn't had this happen to me - but... for OP, you DO NOT KNOW the future. So, it's good to find things other than flying airplanes that you like to do.