To the OP: I can't imagine doing anything else. I was born for this. I'm lucky in that I'm singe and cool with that long term. Makes things simpler. I've loved flying since I can remember and am very luck to be in a top tier job. Had a medical issue in Aug and am waiting to hear from the feds, yet, cause of my union contract, I continue to draw full pay. Anyone in a top tier job who complains needs too look at the big picture. No job is perfect. Making 100 to 200K plus a year working half the month? Please, where else can you do that? It would be in a job I'm not smart enough to do...that's for sure.
But I don't want to over encourage you. The top tier job are hard to come by and you need luck on your side. I don't care if your ex-space shuttle. You need a lot of luck.
As for the degree argument: I think Czech is UPS, ex DHL/Airborne. There was a time DHL/Airborne was taking warm bodies and you could even say that for UPS (after all, they hired me). When a airline is looking for warm bodies, the degree things isn't that big a deal. But when will the planets align again to allow a non-degree guy into a top tier job? Well, it will happen, I'm sure, but I don't think I'd want to be that guy. I have friends at Alaska and Emirates who are both Capts and never had a degree. The equalizer was years and years of experience. Alaska guy was a Metro checkairman at PennAir and Emirates guy was a Skywest checkairman. So, you are talking literally years of extra experience to bypass the degree. But it happens. The interesting thing to ask Czech is, if he had it to do all over, knowing what he knows now, would he pursue the career without checking that square?
The degree thing is an important square to check. I agree with most that an aviation degree is a waste of time and should be avoided....but it does check the square. For me? I wouldn't think twice about getting a degree if I were to do this all over. I just wouldn't have gone to Riddle...