I've just recently started to think of how I would have loved to pursue a Masters after my bachelor degree, but throughout my bachelor's I was distracted with my relationship and dealing with depression (as a result didn't get the greatest marks), then got married shortly before grad and had two kids pretty soon after, and now I have a full-time job and live in a city an hour and a half away from the nearest campus. I don't resent my current life, but I do think I would have loved to stay in University longer and wish I would have given myself more time to pursue that. I also wish I would have sought help with my depression sooner because then I would have had the marks to at least look into a masters program now.
I'm wondering if anyone here has experienced regrets regarding lost opportunities with academics or careers? How do you come to terms with it?
Re: Career/Academic Regrets/mid-life thing?
What field do you want to get a masters in? I do my program online, through a reputable business school and do three campus visits throughout the program. I would never be able to do with without the flexibility of online courses. My MBA will look the same as anyone who sits in lectures and gets an MBA. Have you looked into an online program? Or a consolidated executive program? I know I wanted to be finished in 2-3 yrs max, which meant a pretty accelerated program.
I have been pondering quitting, taking a couple years off to SAH, and going back to be an RN. It's also something I'm fascinated by and passionate about, but after surviving serious illness in my late teens, I wanted to get as far away from the medical profession as I could. Now that I'm older, I have a little more perspective. I know there are a lot of very difficult aspects of that profession though, and the thought of the time the programs would take and amount of student loans that I'd be taking on in my 30s is terrifying. I really don't know what I'll do with my life