Hats off to you for all your perseverance.SamuraiAndPig said:I went through lots of majors. When I was right out of high school I went to trade school for computer programming. I did fine but had a hard time getting a job afterward. I ended up working for Compaq in a factory but got laid off. I made enough there to get into a community college.
At some point I decided I didn't want to do anything with hardcore programming or computer science, so I majored in liberal arts and built up knowledge of classical literature (Greek mostly.) I took some time off from college and tried to work. I got a job tutoring at my old school and two years later got laid off again, took out a big loan and went to a four-year school.
Now I have a degree in New Media Studies, which is a mix of world literature, internet culture studies, graphic and web design, and a little programming. I got to study video games a little bit, mostly in terms of level design and aesthetic storytelling. Hopefully some of the work I did during those five semesters gets me into graduate school.
countrysteaksauce: From someone who knows - the computer industry is very hard to get into, and there are very few entry level positions for someone without a graduate degree. Most jobs want an MS and experience. More importantly, do what you love, and that's not some old person platonic advice. I lived for coding until I actually did and realized I hated it. I always loved writing and studying the art of writing and up until I became confident in my own ability didn't think I could get anywhere with it. Now I've got a degree in it, so it works.
Hope that helps.
I may switch majors, I've been contemplating it for a long time actually, but the plan for now is internships and then this program to get into intelligence.