I was subbing with the Memphis Symphony before I ever took my first college course. Looking back, I should have continued to pay for unaffiliated lessons out of my own pocket, also taken lessons from other connected teachers of other instruments (particularly those who hooked up people with gigs), played every gig that I possibly could (including all those lucrative - and tremendously educational - recording sessions that I played), continued to sub in the orchestra, worked all day/every day at construction, (after talking the courses and passing the tests) real estate sales, (or anything with flexible hours that paid pretty well), and practiced several hours every evening. Oh yeah, I probably should have bought some FedEx, Apple, and Microsoft stock

. Particularly these days, the core bachelor degree courses (those which have nothing to do with students' majors, sponge away at least two years of valuable youth, and program/misinform the naive to be obedient citizens and believe what they are told by their rulers and their rulers' media) are toxic.
Hindsight might not be 20/20, but it's often better than foresight, even with cataracts. (Sort of along the same lines, has anyone else ever fantasized about the ideal year to have been born in the United States? I've always thought that 1937 would have been just about the best for a number of reasons, one of which being that one probably would have been done by now.)