<p>Hello,</p>
<p>I've been through an indecisive journey, but here is the general idea (I'll try to keep it short).</p>
<p>I'm currently a junior at CUNY Queens College, and I've thought about going into several majors, but never made any commitments to them except for mathematics. I knew that I wanted to do something with math, but never knew what, so I decided to go for being a math teacher. Now I've decided completely against that because a) I'm not enjoying it, b) I have neither interest nor motivation left, and c) increasing political garbage like teacher evaluations, if I were to graduate and land a job in the education field. Some may say that I'm just quitting. The reality is that I won't enjoy every aspect of my major, but I'm just not happy with what I'm studying now.</p>
<p>Therefore, this leads me to find a new major or area of study. I've always been interested in infrastructures and how can they support so much. I've also wanted to be able to have the type of skills that I consider useful in life, such as being able to build things (cabinets, doors, fix parts of the house, etc). I suppose you can say that I like the idea and skills of a carpenter, but I'm not 100% sure I want to go to carpentry vocational school. If I did, however, then I am having trouble finding a list of schools that offer this in my area (NYC). The one that I've seen commercials of is called APEX Technical School, but after reading a couple of reviews that people have made (simple Google search and you'll find them), I'm not sure if they are a decent school, or if people are just making biased reviews. </p>
<p>The next field closest to carpentry, or even construction, would be Architecture. I don't want to pursue this major because a) I suck at drawing, and b) it's not truly the designing that I'm after, but really the construction and being able to do everything with my hands that interests me.</p>
<p>I suppose something similar to Architecture would be Interior Design, but I believe (if my understanding of interior design is at least partially true) that my reasoning for Architecture can apply to Interior Design.</p>
<p>Could someone please provide feedback and/or advice?</p>