No I meant that I should finish the school as best I can without getting into any arguments and get the best job I can even though I could probably be better if they taught in ways I wish they taught.
If you are past age fifteen and still have to ask, you may not be able to use the answer.
Have a look at some of the most successful people around you or in the world listings of the wealthy.
Did they get that way because they sat in a chair for four years to earn a "USDA Choice" ground-round meat quality stamp?
Or because they were driven to chase-up whatever it was they needed to know from wherever it was to be found?
Forever, any university Degree - none, one, or "many" only incidental?
Bill Gates is a "college dropout". Because he was too smart to waste his time. Not because he was too stupid to pass the courses.
There's a guy in Hong Kong who teases and tries to sell me real estate. I kid him back that he already knows I couldn't afford the cost of the "walk through" inspection!
K.S is no college dropout. He is a HIGH SCHOOL dropout. Whip smart and hard-driving despite a lovely and unpretentious manner. Needed to know accounting to file business financial returns? Found a book and taught himself. Didn't retire at age 65. 89 years young, rather. He had clocked nearly three "normal" lifetimes into those years, had he
been "on the clock". At first, because he HAD to. Later because he greatly enjoyed what he had chosen to do.
Can others do that? Many have, in their own way. It isn't really "all about the money". That will just "be there", and always "enough" of it, if you but get the basics right.
Basics?"
The one I consider most important and as the greatest percentage of my lifetime cumulative compensation wasn't ever even taxable, any of many countries. It has been the quality of the mentors to be learned from, and how fast and well one can do that - then make use of what has been learned. Bank that. Repeat. Then pass it on.
Sure enough, it is like planting a crop. It jest grows.
But "if you have to ask...."