Originally posted by: IamDavid
I know the statics and I believe they don't mean @#%$. People who are going to succeed in life will, those who aren't gonna do nothing won't. I completely agree with you on hard work being only part of success. The relationships you build is the other key. Luck has nothing to do with it. I was just as successful in my last career path until I decided I no longer wanted to continue it. I seen no long term personal satisfaction from it.
By successful I mean all my children have large rooms in our large house in a nice part of town. We vacation regularly and I have 0 debt., not even a car payment. Like I said earlier though, I'm kinda scared about it all now. Maybe my poor upbringing was a larger driving force behind my success then anything else. I never want my kids to go hungry or not have anything. Maybe it would be good for them though... That's an entire other thread I guess.
95 percent of population DON'T like to goto school, but we put up with it because we realize it is likely (though not guaranteed) to help us succeed later in life.
Just because you do relatively well for your education level, does not mean your kids will. This is a whole new generation, manual labor is in the decline as manufacturing job dwindles. More and more desk jobs will require a degree, that is just an undisputed fact.
Part of being educated is being open enough to accept new concepts and ideas. DO NOT be so stubborn on your ideologies that your kids will ultimately end up paying for it. The statistics for income vs. education level is a FACT. These statistics does not guarantee anything, but it does show that you have a higher chance of being financially successful if you are more educated, it shall not be disputed by your stubbornness. You can name all the successful people you want without an education, such as Bill Gates. But at the end of the day, they are all edge cases in grand scheme of things. For every college dropout like Bill, there are 1000 working retail for the rest of their life.
You have to understand, it is not necessarily the exact subjects you learn in school that will land you a fat check. The most useful thing I got out of school was not about any one particular subject matter, rather, school taught me the ability to learn, investigate and be open minded. It also provides you a social network where it may help you establish your career. It also provides a piece of paper that most employers prefer to see. Even though that piece of paper does not guarantee the quality of workmanship, you will not have many chances to be given an opportunity to even showcase your workmanship if you don't have it.