My decision to quit my job at GE while I was a grad student. I had a part-time job at GE Research & Development in 2001, my first year of grad school. While there, I applied for the grad student program, whereby you work there about half-time, and you do your Master's Thesis on whatever you're working on.In exchange, the company pays for grad school.
Well I wasn't accepted to the program. I decided to quit the part-time job, because I now needed a new research project on which to do my Master's Thesis. And I figured I wouldn't have time to take classes, work part-time, to research, and serve as a teaching assistant to pay for grad school.
Therefore, the part-time job had to go. Flash forward two years. I never got any research project off the ground, and more or less was kicked out of grad school.
I suffered through about 2 years of a very low-paying job in my field, racking up debt on about 10 different credit cards. I'm doing fine now - I got a job at another multi-national corporation, am well paid, my debt is gone, etc.But if I had been making money for those gradschool years and the two years after, making and saving, I would be much better off now. I'd have a house at the very least, rather than continuing to rent an apartment because I can't afford a down payment.
So that's what I'd undo. I wouldn't quit the part time job at GE. I would instead apply for a full-time position, even if I couldn't get into the Master's-paying program.
And if I couldn't handle school & work at the same time, I'd stop pursuing the Masters at that point, rather than when I got kicked out two years later.
I would have found a way to pursue a higher education after I graduated high school instead of marrying my first husband.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.