So I Just Quit My University Studies (For Now)...Ever Made A Similar Desicion?

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Twintix

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Long story short here, I quit my energy technology studies because engineering is simply not what I want to do in life. The subjects simply weren't my cup of tea, as my numerous exam failures will attest to. I didn't feel at home, especially these past few months due to me feeling emotionally stressed out.

I guess I feel a bit bad for my friend who also studies it, but I've promised him that we'll be seeing each other more often during weekends and such instead.
Not to mention, I've booked some different cooking courses this Spring that I'm really looking forward to attending, and I have tons of time now to perfect my work samples for my desired game designer course. Also, time to start getting creative again: I've been in a bit of a slump as of late.

So, have any of you ever made a desicion similar to this? Have you ever quit any studies or a job?

Well, off to look for a job! *sproings away*
 

Colour Scientist

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Jul 15, 2009
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Can't say that I have.

I quit one of my jobs because the manager was a complete **** but I made sure that I had another job lined up before I jumped ship.

I'm not one for giving up on things like that. I just tend to stick it out and focus on my end goal. It has never crossed my mind to leave university or to leave a job, even if I was miserable at the time. I guess I figure that it's worth sticking it out in the short-term because you might end up in a worse position with less options if you give up without a solid Plan B. I guess I'm probably over-cautious or just plain stubborn, I don't know.

That's just me though, I'm not trying to discourage you.


Good luck!
 

taylorton147

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Feb 17, 2011
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I am sorta in the same boat, I want to quit uni because I have become quite depressed with it all. but I only have 3 months left so i might aswell stick it out. If i fail then so be it
 

Artina89

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I switched courses at university, I went from studying Chemistry to studying Biochemistry and Chemistry as I found just studying Chemistry to be too restrictive for my liking. It was double the work naturally, but I have never regretted my decision and I left university with good qualifications.
 

Elfgore

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Yep, forcefully quit, but I did once attend University and now I am not. It actually worked out very well for me. Have a full-time job now that I love. Great pay, great hours, and they pay for university. Doing really shitty my first year of university turned out in my favor I guess.

Either way, you have my support. I'm glad you realized you didn't care for your field before you graduated. Follow your dreams, man!
 

Dizchu

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Sep 23, 2014
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I quit job searching because I am a filthy degenerate scrounger it made me extremely stressed to have all these pressures to get into the work place as soon as I finished university. It was actually making me far less productive, because instead of working on things and improving my skills, I was worried every week that I wasn't gonna meet the expected hours of job searching that the job centre was asking me to do. Worrying about job searching actually prevented me from searching for jobs. It's not due to laziness, it's because I have extreme difficulty reaching out to people and I was being expected to do this just so I could get a shitty job that required me to deal with lots of people on a daily basis.

It's frustrating because I know that's a life skill but I have tried my hand at a few little jobs that required near-constant customer interaction and each time I seemed to be getting worse at it. Eventually my leftover money from uni will deplete and I'll need a job but I just want to be able to do something I'm good at as a profession instead of clumsily tripping over my own shoelaces trying to fit into a box I can't fit in.

I actually enjoyed university for the sole reason that I was doing something I was actually good at doing and it gave me a sense of purpose and motivation in my life. Now that's gone I have no idea what I'm doing.
 

Spanglish Guy

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I ended up re taking my third year in engineering, which I am going through now, due to just losing all motivation for the course and generally just feeling depressed all the time. I consider myself fortunate that the university let me re take without any hassle.

Can't say the though of quitting has not crossed my mind but I am deciding to stick with it even if I don't end up getting an engineering job.
 

JoJo

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I haven't but my younger brother did late last year, quit the second year of an English Lit degree because he disliked the course and couldn't see where it lead. Short-sighted to be honest, now he works in a supermarket and has no idea where he wants to go or if he'll ever return to uni again. At-least you OP seem have a decent plan B of where you want to be in life.
 

Rosiv

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I was a computer science major because i though being a programmer sounded cool, and i heard it was a good paying job with a future. It was also very difficult, and i wasn't weeded out properly of classes, since i took a lot of my course work at a community college, which has lower standards i assume than other colleges. I still tried to take computer science at a regular 4-year school, but failed miserably.

I switched my major to biology though, since quitting school all together was not an option for me, i wanted some sort of science degree, and every other science required too much course work for the amount of financial aid i had left for school. Sadly biology doesn't have many job opportunities so i feel i am personally wasting time, but quitting school and trying to reenter is difficult for people, probably me too.

I hear for engineering/computer science most people flunk out, so i wouldn't feel too bad.
 

The Lunatic

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Jun 3, 2010
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Yup, was doing well, rather good at the topic at hand, but, had no interest for it, and was basically dead inside having to put up with the awful tutor and complete lack of really learning anything.

Quit, applying to a new university for something completely different this year.

It's been stressful, I'll admit, but, less so than putting up with attending a university I felt not interest or enjoyment in.
 

Tohuvabohu

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Twintix said:
Long story short here, I quit my energy technology studies because engineering is simply not what I want to do in life. The subjects simply weren't my cup of tea, as my numerous exam failures will attest to. I didn't feel at home, especially these past few months due to me feeling emotionally stressed out.
This will be a somewhat lengthy post, but this sounds exactly like my experience in college a few years back.

The typical story of graduating from high school without having a clue of what to do with myself next, so I shoved myself into college without really knowing what to do there either. I decided on studying film production since I enjoyed the filming and editing process (still do, too!). But what happened next is pretty much what happened to you. The subjects and experiences I had were not what I had expected or appreciated to have. In the end, after about a year of classes, I realized I didn't want to spend my life in this kind of industry.

So I changed subject and switched campuses.

But by then, I had lost all desire I had to continue with my basic classes, and became pretty disillusioned with the whole thing. I was just so damn bored with it all. The more classes I went to, the more listless and less motivated I became. So after one miserable semester of classes. I didn't go back, and went into work instead. Part of the reason was because I didn't have the funds to pay for school (I refused to take any kind of loans out too), but most of the reason was that I just didn't want to.

That was years ago and I've been working ever since. I spent a few years in the workforce working a decent and fairly cushy although unremarkable job before I eventually figured out something I'd really like to do. I went into a small certification school to study welding, and the experience I had in about 2 and a half months was infinitely more gratifying than the year and a half I spent in college.

I've always been kindof a "bad student", where sitting in a classroom listening to lectures and taking notes fails to engage me whatsoever. Luckily, a grand majority of these welding classes consisted of actual welding work, it made the whole thing so fun and so much more educational. I guess that's just the kind of person I am.
Studying for tests, and taking tests in college was stressful and frustrating, absolutely boring... But suiting up in all my welding gear, and watching my steel melt together or slice apart, is almost zenlike (The zen quickly stops if you catch on fire though).

Sure welding can be hard work and dangerous in quite a lot of ways, but I actually do like it. It keeps me moving, I'm constantly learning, it's constantly challenging and engaging, and the opportunities are endless for work, and for advancement. Plus the satisfaction of crafting something out of steel is unlike anything I ever felt.

So yes, I have quit my Uni studies, and at the time I felt I would be back to Uni and my quitting was only temporary. But now, I really don't find myself having a reason to go back anytime soon.

While you and I are different people and you could really end up absolutely anywhere, you'll surely find your road to success and happiness. It's a very good thing you chose to end your current course of studies if you weren't happy with it.
 

Sleepy Sol

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Feb 15, 2011
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I'm not close to quitting, but I am definitely thinking about transferring out of my current university.

Not related to coursework, but rather related to some medical procedures and such that will be massively delayed if I continue attending my current school. That I do really want to get done.

Basically, my family moved out to Washington state when my dad got a job here a little over a year ago, and I'm spending my longer holiday breaks in Washington. But, I'm still attending school in Mississippi, where I used to live (well, still sort of do considering my situation). So I have to spend semesters thousands of miles away from the majority of my family, along with not getting any progress on my medical problems.

Another worry in that case for me is retaining any credits I've already gotten here if I did decide to transfer. Along with finding a good school to transfer to in the first place.
 

Cowabungaa

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Colour Scientist said:
I guess I figure that it's worth sticking it out in the short-term because you might end up in a worse position with less options if you give up without a solid Plan B. I guess I'm probably over-cautious or just plain stubborn, I don't know.
Nah, that's pretty much the wisest course of action, especially in this day and age of economic instability. I wouldn't stick with something miserable, because the route is just as important as the end-goal, but having a plan B ready before you jump ship is just basic forward thinking.

Anyway, that's what I did a few times. Not jump into the deep like you did OP, but I did change college courses a few times. But never before I had a new course selected. Last time I changed was two-ish years back when I went from college to university to go study Philosophy. It ain't going amazing at the moment, but that might be because of circumstances as well. I'm not sure yet, but I can't really afford to change again. This is my fourth freakin' course, despite the route mattering at one point you want to reach something as well.

It's frustrating though. So far I've tried practical college courses in both alpha and beta directions, I've tried simply working and now I'm going for a theoretical university course. I think this is what fits with me, but it ain't feeling like a brilliant fit either. Maybe it's just different circumstances but I don't know. I know I can't stop though.
 

Bat Vader

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Mar 11, 2009
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I dropped a programming course at my local community college because I found out that programming isn't something I can wrap my head around. Specifically the flow charts because I hate flowcharts. Just show me how to organize the lines in a program and I'm pretty sure I can figure it out from there.
 

Tsun Tzu

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I was an English major up until about a year and a half ago.

The subjects just ceased to interest me and some of my professors were genuinely infuriating to work with. Their behavior, as well as the insistence that there is a "correct" way to interpret works of art, killed my drive and sapped any will I had to continue on with it.

...And now I'm delivering pizzas. In fairness, it's probably what I'd have wound up doing with an English degree anyway.

I'll be heading to a different school (in an entirely different state) this coming summer semester, probably continuing on in English, since I've already invested so many credits and hours into the subject...or perhaps some sort of trade, like an Ultrasound tech or something.

I just need to put a decent amount of money in my account. I've got off work hours to actually enjoy my life, I guess.
 

Jandau

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I wish I made a call like that. I studied anthropology and linguistics in college, but the curriculum wasn't very good (particularly for anthropology) and I soon grew frustrated with the whole thing. I stuck it out, but it took me several years more than it should have. I now realize that I would have been much better off if I quit earlier and maybe went for something I'm more interested in.

The main reason I stuck with it was to get a degree, any degree. And a decade or two earlier, that would have been a fair choice. But today, when everyone and their dog has degrees, it's not as big of a deal as it used to be. And both of my fields of study have VERY limited application outside of academia, meaning that the degree I have is close to utterly useless.

I did manage to get a job in a library and am working towards a masters degree in Library science in my spare time, but it's slow going, partly because a full time job doesn't leave much time and energy for studies, and also because I need to pay for it myself, meaning I have to skip semesters when I can't afford to sign up and work other jobs on the side to make the money...

Granted, if I could go back and do it all over again, I'd avoid college altogether and become a Tai Chi or Yoga instructor. I still might, some day...
 

TheRightToArmBears

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I dropped out after the first year of studying building surveying. Lots of things went wrong- I went through a bad breakup a month into the course, I found I hated where I was studying, I didn't really get on with anyone I met, ended up drinking myself into a stupor most days, had a bit of a meltdown and got diagnosed with an anxiety disorder.

I definitely didn't help things but looking at all that, I don't feel too ashamed about dropping out. I did feel really shitty for a long time afterwards, but I'm picking myself up and moving on with different things now. I don't regret not finishing the course, but I wish I'd been a wiser teenager. I made a lot of poor choices that put me in that situation and effectively threw away what were supposed to be some of the best years of my life, but hey, at least I've learnt a bit from the whole thing.
 

Rabbitboy

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Apr 11, 2014
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yes I quit my previous study. It didn't really fit me but it wasn't entirely by choice.
 

mitchell271

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I switched from a B.Sc in Psychology to Computer Science. My marks are higher than ever and I'm really enjoying what I'm doing now. So kind of?
 

Pseudonym

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After about three weeks of studying economics I realised I'd made a mistake. I simply couldn't bring myself to care about business structures, accounting, money and the like. I might have stayed if there had been maybe more than two courses on macro-economics or other subjects where I can use my brain on something else than how to make a buck. I then managed to swith to philosophy which I'm now nearly done with.