I VERY MUCH regret not having had the opportunity to go to university, I'd kill now to go get my nursing degree at least...
...however, at the time when I left college I was looking at studying either Philosophy or Religious Studies at university.
I have no university education thus I have ZERO job prospects, although I get the distinct feeling that if I'd gone to university to study these, paying all the fees, moved away from home and made my health suffer further, then I'd have regretted going to university as I'd be no better off as there's no demand for someone with a philosophy or religious studies degree.
Although this may not be the case for you [OP] it annoys me year after year seeing on the news new graduates complaining about lack of employment. I've never known a person leave university to go straight into the job they're aiming for, they all go through periods of unemployment or working rubbish jobs. If they have the qualifications chances are that they are still going to have a chance of getting that job they're aiming for, or at least a better job than most. In the mean time graduates are still finding work; the jobs we're going for - or it's easier for graduates to go back into further education/training.
OP - you may not have found work yet, but you still have a FAR better chance of getting a good job somewhere along the line than most, furthermore you get more respect once you are working. The people you've ran into have had years to get where they are by working hard, because they've had to, and aren't as well-off long-term. We all have problems, I'm not saying you're problems don't exist or to 'suck it up' just to recognise that it will get better and to acknowledge that you are privileged...even if it doesn't feel like that now.
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Bloodheart
Good-looking girls break hearts, and goodhearted girls mend them.