I want to do everything but I end up doing little while instead planning and waiting around
I want to learn to play piano and violin at the novice level, and I want to learn latin and russian as well as get an additional Bachelor's degrees in Mathematics and Physics, then a Master's in one of these (I currently only have a Bachelor's in Computer Science). But I'm working now so I can't do it the traditional way young people do (I'm still young)
I was a high achiever so to speak in high school and college but I've since started working full time and my time is now quite a bit more limited and I am tired after work. I make lots of money now but honestly it just sits in my bank and doesn't do anything interesting and I miss the satisfaction of studying for tests. I need the structure of school to force myself to do this though or else I get distracted
Has anyone successfully done anything like this while working full time? Do I just have to lower my horizons and accept that I am only human and will probably die having only done one or two of these things? Or should I quit my job and go get these degrees while living like a hobo on my savings for a few years?
>>18573214
There is a time and place for all. Get a new structure and stick to it. Make the decision "I'll go to this class and I'll stick with it for at least 4 years without quitting one class." I did Martial arts while working full time, just three hours a week, plus 2 traveling. A bet you can squeeze 5 hours out of your full time job.