<p>I'll keep it as short as I can. Thanks for your advice in advance...</p>
<p>I will be a senior this fall at Alfred University, on track to graduate with a BS in Marketing. Unfortunately, after classes and a couple of internships, I realize that I detest the concept and practice of marketing. My passions, I believe, lie in writing and thinking about "softer" fields including sociology/psychology, theology, and ethics.* I have 35k in debt so far.</p>
<p>But at this point, I wonder if I should just make the smartest decision financially and pursue a field that I won't kill myself doing like marketing/selling. </p>
<p>Should I switch majors to Accounting, costing me another 10k in debt and year of school plus whatever else for a CPA? Or--my brother is a mechanical engineer at Cornell, I come from a long line of engineers, and I'm pretty bright--should I go for a second bachelor's in engineering after graduating with my Marketing degree? That option might run me another 40k in debt and 4 years' time, but pay out better than accounting in the long run. </p>
<p>Other options I've played out in my head include joining the peace corps to forgive some loans, starting my own PR business after graduating, studying for a Master's in philosophy in the UK on a full-ride (fingers crossed for that scholarship)...feeling overwhelmed. What's the smartest call here, you think?</p>
<p>*One last note on "following your passion," which I hope you'll include as I think applies broadly to a lot of the questions you receive on here. While it's true that an English major can--to the relief of many English majors--be employable after all (in advertising, technical writing, etc.), I don't believe that any fiction writer is thinking "press release" when asked about her true passion. </p>
<p>I just question the logic in many of the comments saying "less money is worth following your dreams"...I mean, yeah, hypothetically, I'd consider writing essays on my theological musings for a 30k salary the rest of my life instead of doing some ******** for 60k. An exciting/interesting gig is probably worth that 30k difference per year in overall happiness points...</p>
<p>...but I doubt I can get paid anything to be an essayist. More likely, well-meaning students write essays for 4 years in college ("following their passion"), then for the next 40 years write sparingly trying to impress consumers, publications, etc. or write soulless freelance how-to articles, kissing ass, teaching, and/or some other b.s. for that lower salary that they had assumed would be worth the tradeoff in extra fulfillment of "following their bliss." Point is, when you realistically appraise what you can get paid to do, I'm wondering if anybody besides rock stars actually get paid to do what they love...I don't know if writing for the sake of writing is worth the 30k difference I could be making as an engineer/accountant.</p>
<p>That is a bare-bones assumption that all your theater/art/English Lit/philosophy/anthropology student advisees should think about quantitatively: What's the value on the fulfillment I'll get from a career loosely related to my passion (like writing advertisements), as opposed to a better-paying gig that is unrelated to my passion (like accounting)? Will your job's loose connection to your true passion for 40 hours per week REALLY offer you more happiness overall than an extra 30k in salary in an unrelated field? </p>
<p>After all, happiness is the end-game here.</p>
<p>Is a job just a job, and might we all be better off doing something tolerable and challenging for the most money per hour possible?</p>
<p>Thanks for your thoughts on my situation! Your site is a godsend for indecisive students like me and many others.</p>