Quote from giles117:
Desire trumps discipline if you believe in execution. I went to college to make my FAMILY happy. I left because I wasnt happy. I had a lousy 3.5 because I was so unhappy.
My desire was for what I do today. Music and trading.
2 years after I walked away from college I started trading. I paid my way through college with my Music career.
Dont think it's all about Discipline. DESIRE is a major issue. SOme people do what they do because of others expectations and not their own personal desire.
Most people dont figure out WHO they are until they are 27 or 28. MOST, not ALL!!!!!
Quote from scriabinop23:
hahah.. actually, i admit I may be mistaken. I got this crazy idea from following the original bullsnbearz advertising threads, and it seemed Jay (bullsnbearsz) went through a rapid phase of creating multiple IDs to contribute to his discussions and back them up. Reaver was amongst top aliases. Now maybe I misread something and just made a flawed assumption...
Regardless, a lot of self congratulatory talk ... with so much, I couldn't help but conclude my assumption was correct. Well then I stand corrected.
And on the original topic: unless you are a lucky SOB (with a dream of a trading system, or just had a stroke of luck in picking chains of winners), and additionally are properly capitalized to trade, you'll make a lot more $$ with a degree / climbing up the corporate ladder than you will trading.
If you don't have the discipline to complete college, the odds are you don't have the discipline to properly execute a trading system over years. The point has been well made that connections formed are more worthwhile than content learned for the vast majority of majors. Especially nontechnical majors (show me how many EEs or physicians exist without college degrees).
And of course there's an exception to every point I just stated; those are few and far between.
I have a hard time believing anyone who can actually conceive of, program/backtest a quantitative trading system *that works* has any interest in spending energy wondering or supporting the argument that a college education is unnecessary.
Because of course its not, but if you are pursuing $$$ and employment (ie work with others), its much easier by having it.
Not worth the effort.Quote from scriabinop23:
brilliant comeback...
Quote from giles117:
Desire trumps discipline if you believe in execution. I went to college to make my FAMILY happy. I left because I wasnt happy. I had a lousy 3.5 because I was so unhappy.
My desire was for what I do today. Music and trading.
2 years after I walked away from college I started trading. I paid my way through college with my Music career.
Dont think it's all about Discipline. DESIRE is a major issue. SOme people do what they do because of others expectations and not their own personal desire.
Most people dont figure out WHO they are until they are 27 or 28. MOST, not ALL!!!!!
Oddly enough I knew what I wanted to do when I was a teenager, but I allowed my Pastor and my Parents to convince me that I was TOO SMART to do what I wanted to do and that I should get a degree. I bought into that BS till I realized I was unhappy chasing their opinions for me.
Quote from scriabinop23:
Its all how you view the function of college. If you are going to please others, its the wrong reason.
desire creates discipline.
Quote from Reaver:
Hell no man I've been Reaver for a lot longer than BnB has been around. lol
I went after him and Timmay with a vengeance.
He's a piece of shit psychopath.
Quote from scriabinop23:
i just reread some of those threads because I admit I may have been mistaken... When scanning those 100 page threads its easy to mix frequent posters with psychopaths (i probably misinterpreted some sarcasm of yours .. or something like that) ... my bad.