Lately Iβve been thinking deeply about this, and I want opinions based on real experience, not theory.
If the main goal is money, then today there are multiple ways to earn. Itβs no longer compulsory to spend 4 years in university, then look for a job, and only then start earning. Skill-based education has completely changed the landscape.
β If a skill is π©π«ππππ’πππ₯
β If itβs π¦ππ«π€ππ-πππ¦ππ§π ππ«π’π―ππ§
β If you actually ππ§π£π¨π² doing it
β And if it helps you πππ«π§ π¬π¨π¨π§ππ«
then choosing skills over a traditional degree makes logical sense.
π±π ππππππ πππππππππππ ππππ ππ ππ ππππ, sirf degree ke naam par β that path may not be for everyone.
At the same time, I π±πΌπ»βπ ππ΅πΆπ»πΈ education is useless.
But clarity matters more than tradition.
βΈ Learning just because society expects it
βΈ Or choosing what aligns with your interests and income goals
And even if someone chooses university education βstudying ππΆππ΅πΌππ πΆπ»ππ²πΏπ²ππ, only for money, often leads to burnout and confusion later.
Aaj ke time mein:
β Skills can give speed and freedom
β Degrees can give structure and stability
But π±πΆπΏπ²π°ππΆπΌπ» ππ΅πΌππΉπ± π°πΌπΊπ² π³πΆπΏππ.
Posting this to hear perspectives from people whoβve actually walked different paths β students, professionals, freelancers, job holders, and business-minded people.
Experience matters more than advice.