I've recently finished my law degree, and I also have a degree in business administration. I've also turned 28 now. I have work experience in those fields (finance, law), but also in journalism and PR.
Over the last year I discovered that my career path (lawyer for financial institutions) really doesn't make me happy, in fact, all of it doesn't. I've come to realise that I lied to myself quite some time now.
What truly interests me and makes me happy is science and technology, ever since I'm young. Especially maths and biology. I just love it. I was too blind, to dishonest with myself to follow up on it professionally. Now I am honestly afraid it's too late, since I'm already nearing my 30th birthday.
So my question to you is: is it ok to start completely new? Pursue a degree in maths or biology, all the way? I'll be around 35 until I have a PhD realistically, because that's what I want to do, I want to do research and work on sometimes abstract and sometimes applied problems.
Or to put it another way? Am I too old? Am I still employable afterwards, with little work experience in that area so far?
Thank you very much, I feel lost.
https://mathoverflow.net/questions/7120/too-old-for-advanced... https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/237002/too-old-to-s...
You are young and life is long. Go do what you love.
edit: My email is in my profile. Reach out if you want to chat.
For me, when looking for career advice, the one single piece of advice that served me very well is this: "Don't aim to do what you love, look for something you can tolerate". The idea is that if your approach to career choice involves romanticizing a profession, you're most likely ignoring its downsides (all professions have downsides) and you're setting yourself up for disappointment, whereas being brutally aware of all the suckiness factors means your opinion of the profession can only go up from there.
It’s never held me back and if anything, it gave me an advantage in that I knew how to work in an “office environment” and had experience in quite a few different business areas - something that most young graduates just don’t have.
28 is definitely not too old, and if you change your mind at 35, you won’t be too old then either.
I would encourage you though to figure out if you really need to pursue your interest in biology or mathematics professionally? Depending on what your interest is here, you may be able to do these as a hobby, which frees you from doing the research someone else wants you to do, rather than what you’re interested in. Your career doesn’t have to be your passion.
If you have a law degree, why. Ot look into specializing in a sector of law related to science or technology?
I sort of think I should have been a lawyer instead of a dev. A bunch of people say that makes sense, but it would be too expensive and time consuming. So I'll just tough it out in a job I hate. To be fair I think I would hate being a lawyer because of the general incompetence of law enforcement and the judiciary.
Thing I regret most: a career writing JavaScript. Don’t get me wrong in that I love writing JavaScript applications and building things, but that love is not reflected in employment without tremendous hand holding. Software employment is most directly tuned to the smartest people having no more than 3 years experience doing it.
I've never been held back or had any roadblocks (other than the ones in my head). Its time that society gets rid of the myth that you have to do everything right now, have everything sorted out young. Its a journey and its great that you have found something that you are more passionate about.
No, just switch if you want.
This is a ridiculous question. Stop thinking like this -- it is self-defeating. It's your life, just do it.
There are so many jobs available in tech that if you put your mind into it, you will likely have more opportunities than in law or finance.
But I'd advise against doing a PhD. You've studied just for too long.
Do a bootcamp, study a lot by yourself and make a name for you... and get a job as a software engineer.
I have a terrible time understanding that one person could afford to study for that long.