Submitted by Such_Weekend t3_yhxh0h in personalfinance
Hi,
I'm 28 and finishing up my bachelor's degree I've been pursuing on and off. There were unfortunately a few setbacks in my education over the years (covid, family issues etc.), but I'm ready to finish soon.
Unfortunately, I'm in a situation which may leave me with no fall back. My parent had to go to an old age home. This costs a lot of money for them, and will mean they may have to give up their apartment if they continue to need to live there (which I don't know yet). This means that if I can't get a career for whatever reason after school, I'm on my own. This is a situation I'm not used to, but obviously understand.
I'm planning to pursue a film degree. I really enjoy filmmaking, and though I know a degree isn't required, I'm very much interested in it, namely the art aspect.
I have two choices for college: a more practical degree in a school near Los Angeles, and a more art/theory oriented one not near LA, but still in my home state.
My tuition is covered in both, but cost of living at the art oriented one is going to be (with cost of food as well) around $2000 a month, for between 18 and 24 months.
I'm waiting for $20,000 of previous college debt to be cleared in the recent Biden decision, as I am apparently eligible.
Account wise, I am currently breaking even, as I've had to withdraw from school recently to help take care of my father, which means I have to pay back all the money I owe them.
I am, however, making $1000 a month, and will continue to until 2025, as I'm on social security for a disability.
I've done the calculations and have figured out that with the art college costing $29,000 a year, and me making $1000 a month, and receiving $12000 a year in grants, I'll be left with approximately $10k total in debt. But this also means I'll have no savings when I graduate. And being farther from the industry I plan to work in (namely with my age as well), I'll have to start from scratch when I move to LA or NY, with likely few or no connections.
I was also thinking of working 10 hours or so a week in college to supplement income. Or even putting some money in a high yield savings account or some safe investments.
Is going to the art college a bad idea financially? Am I being naive? Could I potentially end up homeless?
Thanks for any help.
RaycharlesN t1_iuhmf5z wrote
I think you should get a job and earn money to live on without running up debt again