Cita
Posted : 11/11/2008 1:11:45 PM
I gotta say, too, that it's a good idea to study something that will give you lots of options later on. I know a lot of people in the horse industry decide they want to grow up riding for a living, so they don't go to college and go straight into equine-related internship sorts of things. 5 or 10 years later they decide they don't want to do it, but then they're stuck because they have no generally applicable education and no relevant work experience. Plus, the work they WERE doing wasn't terribly profitable, so they're in a tight financial situation with little to no savings.
With something like a degree in biology/physiology/anatomy, or business, or economics, you could use your education to do all sorts of different things. You could use a business degree to start up a dog bakery, for example. If that didn't work out, you could go into management, or get an MBA and become a consultant, or any number of things.
Once you have a basic "core education" to look good on resumes, you can take all kinds of supplemental courses to give you a more specialized education for whatever you want to do at the moment.
I think my general message isn't "don't follow your dreams," because obviously that's incredibly important, but rather "don't follow your dreams exclusively." Make sure you are giving yourself lots of options, because chances are, you're going to change your mind at least once. 
I entered college convinced I was going to be a biology major, get a Ph.D. in biology, and go into research. Then I was going to be a neuroscientist. Now, a few years out from graduating college, I think I'm going for a Ph.D. in social psychology, to become a professor/researcher. When I was very young, I wanted to be a jockey. As a pre-teen, I wanted to be a veterinarian. You never know what might happen!