Hate to be the guy who hammers this point, but there are and will continue to be a lot of companies in the flying business that WILL NOT hire you FULL STOP without a four-year college degree. And that's whether there's any rational justification for the practice or not.
I was in your seat less than ten years ago, and I'm thankful for my college experience - but for different reasons than those already cited. I had to work at least one (usually two) jobs all the way through college to cover living expenses, flight training, and the tuition not taken care of by a partial academic scholarship. Not much time for getting drunk and chasing tail, I'm afraid. Eventually, I was working in the office of a company that made great use of my combined abilities to fly airplanes, fix computers, and speak fluent Bureaucrat.
I left that job on good terms at the end of college to go fly in the regionals while finishing my classes online. Naturally, within a year after my graduation ceremony I got my very first furlough notice. As my fellows contemplated poverty and the walk of shame back to their parents' house, I had already arranged to go work with some of the friends I'd made at that last college job. For the next few years I used my position in the training and leasing pipeline to pick up short-term flying contracts in addition to a decent wage working in the office.
While most of my furloughed friends struggled until they were recalled to a company none of them had much love for in the first place, I'm debt free with dough in the bank, and I all but gave the furloughing airline the finger on my way to my current flying position - a cushy expat gig. It's a job I never could have landed without:
a) A four-year college degree, and
b) The connections and recommendations that came from snatching up every bit of non-flying work I could for most of my adult life, and exceeding my employers' expectations.
I'll be the first to point out that I'm a statistical anomaly, which is a polite way of saying I was lucky as Hell. But Cessna310, it's obvious from your already impressive body of work that you're mature, hardworking, and take this flying business very seriously. All the doors in the world are open to you right now. But if you focus solely on flying and don't fill the squares that so many employers want to see filled in this business, you'll see quite a few of those doors close sooner rather than later.
(tl;dr Get your Bachelor's Degree while keeping one foot in the working world)