Why I Chose To Be An English Major (GSU Blog Post #2)

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College is strange. After spending the majority of your academic life studying a wide variety of subjects, you’re told to choose one to study even more in-depth, which will then define which career path you are going to follow, and ultimately how you will spend the rest of your life. Usually these decisions are made before you have the ability to vote or purchase alcohol, but they’re made nonetheless. So, as logic dictates, we make as much of a well-informed decision as possible given the absurdity of these circumstances. We choose subjects we’re naturally inclined toward. Those who didn’t enjoy analyzing novels and writing essays are likely to veer toward a STEM field, and those who need a calculator to verify that 9 + 7 does in fact equal 16 are more inclined to study the humanities. As someone who has a natural inclination toward language and communication, I made what felt like a reasonable decision by choosing to study English in college.

And that’s when the questions came flooding in. And the funny looks. Not just from society and the internet where an English degree has a bad rap in general, but from people face-to-face who I actually knew in real life. Questions like “So you want to teach?”, “Are you trying to write the next great novel?”, and “How are you going to get a job with that degree?” were both discouraging and exhausting to hear, and became frustrating to be asked over and over. Until I came up with answers.

At least a version of answers. They’re ever-changing and audience-dependent. They also took a long time to come up with, and funnily enough, are influenced by the things I learn in college. Finding out that I could concentrate my degree on “Rhetoric and Composition” was a game-changer. The courses associated with the path that I’m on focus on practical writing and thinking skills used every day in workplace settings. Despite what many think, effective written communication is actually becoming a scarce and highly-employable skill in most workplaces. Most people aren’t aware of this, so I forgive them for comparing my English degree with the typical pejorative Underwater Basketweaving trope.

I’m still not exactly sure what my future holds, but neither is anyone else. All I know is that I’m succeeding on my current academic path, which provides enough challenge to prevent me from getting bored, but not so much to the point of frustration. To anyone trying to figure it all out at once - stop. Appreciate every day for what it has to offer, run toward what makes you happy, and ignore the naysayers. They just don’t know it yet, but you’re going to prove them wrong. Thanks for reading.