I'm desperate right now.
Uni starts in January the 30th, right now it will be law. I won't get far with bachelors alone, I atleast need my masters to be a lawyer + 3 years of internship (will be bald at that time and 30). So from the age of 22 to 27 wasting on uni I will be a semi-lawyer in my country (The Netherlands). 30 if I done my 3 years of internship.
Meanwhile a close friend of mine got a internship at PwC doing his bachelors, he gets a nice placement fee, car, travel card ect. Meanwhile a law student must be happy for having a bicycle to ride with.
I'd rather spend my time for the best, any advise biz on my study choise?
>>1707782
If the market for law degrees is similar in the Netherlands to the U.S. you should reconsider your choice.
>>1707782
Do whatever you want man. I'm not in control of your life, you are. Fear of the future is what halts a lot of people, including myself. I'm fuckin terrified to quit my job and start something new. There's all kinds of advice I can give you, but none of it matters if you don't decide for yourself.
If your hearts set on law then stick with Law. That's the path you're going down. But if you want to do something else then go for that. Do something you're willing to sacrifice for.
>>1707787
An avarage student debt in The Netherlands is 12/15k in euro's. So that's not the problem, but it seems that Finance or IT students dominate right now and that makes me insecure about my choice..
>>1707835
You need to look up job reports for your government. In the US we have the Department of Labor that publishes lots of statistics over what sectors and growing or not etc etc. Very handy.
>>1707782
bitcoin
>>1707782
You dumb Dutch fuck!!!!
Everywhere in the Netherlands it's Bitcoin and you never heard about it.
>>1707905
I'm a retard, putted my money on Gulden and I'm broke since then.
OT.
Forgot about this part, I can't work outside the border since law is binding, each country has its own law..
>>1707782
I'm in the same situation as you are, but i'm finishing my bachelors and starting my masters next year.
Look, there is a lot of money involved in corporate law, plus if you dedicate yourself studying a little bit of management/economics on the side you are a great asset for a company. Of course, all of this requires a lot of hard work, but if you are willing to do it, i can assure it pays off. Oh, and i am portuguese, so if it works here i can assure it works in the netherlands!