I realized at some point when I was young that people were right when they told me I could be anything I wanted. Well, they were almost right...I am not a good singer and I don't have rhythm. But I did recognize that I had the capacity to accomplish most of the things I set my mind to. At 10, I was fairly certain that I would go into business law, because I didn't want to deal with criminals and I would never be an ambulance chaser (I read a lot of John Grisham at the time). The only problem was that as I got older, I no longer knew what I wanted to do. Circumstances with my family life had changed, negatively, and law school seemed out of reach. I was admittedly lost for a while.
However, I am extremely stubborn and contrary: I like to prove people wrong. When I was a screw up in high school, and then afterwards as I sort of floated around and partied, people began to think that I wasn't going to amount to much more than a party girl. So I dumped my friends and started college and I made sure that I had a 4.0 GPA. The problem then was, I still didn't know what I wanted to be. I was still interested in the idea of going into business, and teaching also seemed attractive because I would have summers off.
I had started working in accounting after I got promoted from customer service. My then boss and mentor, while acknowledging that I was adept at what I did, stated that he just didn't think I was cut-out to be an accountant. He even set up meetings between him and his lawyer friends to try and sway me away from accounting.
Because I read, "you wouldn't be a good accountant," when I should have read, "why would anyone want to be an accountant," I got my bachelor's and then my master's in accounting. So now I'm working for a Big 4 accounting firm. I'm getting ready to take the CPA exam, and all I can think is, "Why the eff am I an accountant?" I still want summers off. I'm more interested in having free time to do fun things, than in working 4 busy seasons a year and not having a weekend four months of the year, at least. So that is where I am now, and this is how it started.
I am pretty sure you can drop right into teaching with a master's (even a lesser degree.)
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