Welcome to Tough Love. We鈥檙e answering your questions about dating, breakups, and everything in between. Our advice giver is Blair Braverman, dogsled racer and author of . Have a question of your own? Write to us at聽toughlove@outsideinc.com.
I鈥檓 now in my sophomore year of college, and because of my university鈥檚 rules, I will need to declare a major this year. I have a lot of interests, maybe too many. I鈥檝e considered geology and biology, but I鈥檓 also interested in marketing, and I love photography. Choosing my major feels like an impossible choice, because I know it will change the course of my entire life. If I become a geologist, I will live a different life than if I was a photographer, but which one鈥檚 better? Each choice leads to a different future, but I don鈥檛 know what will make me happier or more successful. How do you make a decision in this kind of situation?
Congrats on starting your sophomore year! You鈥檙e in a good position; it鈥檚 far better to have too many interests than to struggle to find a single passion. Although I know, in this case, that聽multiple options don鈥檛 make the decision easier. You鈥檙e standing in the cereal aisle of life.
This may be one of the first times that you鈥檙e really facing (or thinking about) the life-altering qualities of a decision, but you鈥檒l find that these kinds of choices come pretty frequently in adulthood. What major should you pick? What job should you pursue? Should you get married鈥攁nd if so, to whom? Where in the country鈥攐r world鈥攚ill you live? Each one of these decisions carries the weight of potential lives that will go un-lived. 鈥淭he question, sweet pea, is who do you intend to be,鈥 Cheryl Strayed to someone feeling similarly indecisive鈥
There are a couple ways to think about undergraduate majors, and I鈥檇 also encourage you to talk with your guidance counselor and professors as you keep narrowing things down. Ask yourself: Do I love this subject? Do I feel genuinely excited to study it? If there were no grades involved, and no credentials, would I still want to devote myself to learning it? If the answer to these questions is yes, then you鈥檙e on a fantastic track.
Secondly: Do the careers associated with this major appeal to me? If you know for sure that you don鈥檛 want to continue pursuing the subject after college鈥攐r that it won鈥檛 prepare you for jobs that will meet your needs鈥攖hat鈥檚 a good reason to strike it off your list. You can always minor in a subject, or take a bunch of electives in it, without pursuing it as your actual degree.
Of course,聽many people end up with careers that have nothing to do with their majors (though they often find that their studies continue to help and influence them in unexpected ways). It鈥檚 not that each major represents a different life you could lead, and in choosing one, you鈥檙e picking the fixed path that comes with it. It鈥檚 more like each major represents a different direction to start in, but there are an infinite number of forks and crossroads along the way, and they often curve back and overlap in ways you couldn鈥檛 have foreseen. With each choice you make, and every experience you have, you won鈥檛 just go farther down a path; you鈥檒l also get a better sense of the kind of destination you want. And once you know that, you can steer accordingly.
You鈥檙e standing in the cereal aisle of life.
It could be that you end up as a librarian, or a doctor鈥攁nd biology could be the starting place for either one. Maybe you鈥檒l be an artist, and though your art will be informed by the things you learned along the way, no path could ever have stopped you from making it. You simply can鈥檛 know the endpoints yet. You don鈥檛 have to know. Even when we think we know these things, we鈥檙e often wrong. And many of your most purposeful classmates鈥攖he ones who have already picked their majors, and have very specific life paths in mind鈥攚ill end up surprising themselves countless times over.
What makes the biggest difference, at this point in your life, may not be your specific major so much as the skills and habits you build. As much as possible, try to make decisions out of excitement, not fear. That is, choose the option that excites you most, the one that you can鈥檛 stop thinking about, rather than the one that scares you the least. Focus on building relationships (and relationship skills), both with peers and with teachers. People talk a lot about the value of the word 鈥渘o,鈥 but at this stage in your life, one of the best things you can say is 鈥測es.鈥 Yes to unusual things. Yes to going new places. Yes to making friends with people who don鈥檛 seem like your type. Your world is getting bigger every day, and the bigger you can make it, the freer you鈥檙e going to be.
The thing is鈥攁nd this may or may not be comforting, depending on your perspective鈥攖hat you鈥檙e going to encounter countless life-changing decisions over the next decades, and you might not even recognize them at the time. Some of the biggest shifts in my own life have come from seemingly random events: the guy I sat next to in class, the job that got cancelled and left me scrambling for a new one last-minute, the phone call I got one Thanksgiving from an old coworker offering me six dogs. Your exact future isn鈥檛 under your control, and it never will be鈥攂ut with every year that goes by, you鈥檒l continue to shape the kind of life you want to lead and the kind of person you want to be. And when you look back, you鈥檒l be astonished all over again by what you鈥檝e learned and how you got there.