| > I understand that the "the work you did was not for nothing" angle of reading is comforting, but I have to disagree. I have to disagree. If you read carefully, they said, > You're learned things about yourself... This point alone means "the work you did was not for nothing". Your entire past determines who you are right now,
what you can change is the future.
The meaning of a past event is determined by how it has taught your future self to make better decision.
So if it takes them to have a job experience to know they don't like Data Science,
then that's what is needed to happen to them for them to make a different choice. I think you're projecting yourself to OP frankly because you said > I regret not making the change a few years earlier OP is switching right now just after a few months. And your talk about honesty have nothing to do here
(nothing wrote above is suggesting that.)
May be it has something to do with your past but that's not the context here. Lastly,
just to point out another fundamental difference between you and OP:
they are not even graduating yet.
So we are talking about time spent learning A vs. B.
So your "honest truth" is that learning A is "for nothing"
is obviously wrong
(I hope we need not arguing why,
especially in this age where things are getting more and more interdisciplinary.) This reminds me something a prof. told me
when I was undergrad. and asking him advice on optimizing what I chose to learn.
He answered me by saying nothing you learnt in undergrad. is going to be useful in real world,
so feel free to learn anything you are interested in! |
Or maybe, if they had people taking them seriously instead of providing this kind of "everything happens for a reason" paternalistic comments, they would have known it before spending time walking down a path that was not the wrong one.