Not sure what to do now...advice?

Hello all, new guy here, please forgive me if this post isn’t in the correct forum.
So here’s my problem, When i first came into college I had a computer engineering major at a University locally, It got too expensive and I ended up transferring to a community college for my pre-reqs. Well during my time at this community college I switched around majors 3 more times from pharmacy tech, but realized that isn’t something I wanted after a bunch of classes taken, I wanted a degree. So next I switched to physical therapist assistant and took all of the pre-reqs for the program, but i ended up not getting the grades I wanted in a couple of the classes there. And finally I switched into Computer Networking and have realized that one doesn’t necessarily need a degree for networking nor is it really my passion. I have 9 classes left to finish an associates degree in computer networking but I have taken so many classes that i now have an excess credit fee slapped on me and that would mean 5k to finish the associates degree in networking even though I don’t want to do it for a career i would eventually burn myself out. My heart has really been telling me I should have really pursued the Physical therapist assistant path, as it is something I am truly passionate about.

So here I am, 23 years old, 90 credits in with no degree and an excess credit fee…I feel like I am running out of time and it is really eating away at me…making me very depressed…What should I do, any advice from anyone? I was thinking maybe I should just get a degree in general studies(Need one class) to get the excess credit fee off my back and re-continue my path to a physical therapists assistant and retake the couple classes to get the highest grade possible…it is very competitive though. I am just so confused as to what I am doing i would really like someone else’s input? I really feel like i am going nowhere right now and its affecting me really badly :confused:

“get a degree in general studies(Need one class) to get the excess credit fee off my back and re-continue my path to a physical therapists assistant” sounds good, but find out what the requirements are to work as a physical therapist assistant in your state (and whatever states you’re willing to work in) and assess whether you’ll be able to meet them. “All states except Hawaii require physical therapist assistants to be licensed or certified. Licensure typically requires graduation from an accredited physical therapist assistant program and passing the National Physical Therapy Exam administered by the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy…Check with your state board for specific licensing requirements.,” says the Bureau of Labor Statistics (http://www.bls.gov/ooh/Healthcare/Physical-therapist-assistants-and-aides.htm#tab-4). Make sure your school is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education or transfer to one that is.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics sees excellent job prospects in this field, saying “Employment of physical therapist assistants and aides is projected to grow 41 percent from 2012 to 2022, much faster than the average for all occupations.”