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    Home»Money»I Never Went to College, but My Kids Chose to — Despite My Advice
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    I Never Went to College, but My Kids Chose to — Despite My Advice

    Press RoomBy Press RoomDecember 13, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    I was surprised when my daughter told me she wanted not only to attend college but also to pursue medical school. She even planned out her prerequisite classes, residency, and potential debt.

    In our house, we rarely talked about college because I never went. My husband also only did a few semesters at community college.

    Higher education was never a requirement in our house. I never expected my daughters to enroll and take on student loan debt because I found a path to entrepreneurship without all of that.

    And yet, both of my daughters want to go to college, and I respect their decision.

    I followed in my mom’s footsteps by becoming an entrepreneur

    My mom has been a salon owner in Baltimore for over 35 years. The salon was my after-school program, my social circle, and my introduction to business. I learned early that work is more than a paycheck. It is the foundation for the kind of life you want to live.

    My mom didn’t talk about freedom in a motivational sense. She lived it. She set her own schedule and ran the business in a way that made sense for her. Watching that shaped me more than any degree ever could.

    When I graduated from high school and had my first child at 18, I didn’t even consider college — not because I felt incapable. I simply didn’t believe a traditional route was required to build the life that I envisioned for myself.

    My mom taught me how to work hard, how to serve people well, and how to think independently. I built my early adulthood on those values and eventually became an entrepreneur myself, returning to my mother’s salon as a co-owner. Everything I learned about resilience, money, and adaptability came from living real life, not writing dissertations about it in a lecture hall.

    I never pushed college on my kids

    The lessons my daughters absorbed from me were not about degrees. The lessons were more about self-discipline and financial awareness. I taught them how to budget. I taught them how to track their spending. I taught them why credit matters and how debt can limit your life before adulthood even begins.

    When my oldest turned 16 and got her first job, she learned to manage money the same way I did. She made mistakes, then corrected them. She saved. She budgeted. She paid attention. Now she supports herself as a server while attending college using financial aid and cash she earns. She files her own taxes. She pays her own bills. She manages tuition payment plans with intention instead of fear.

    Watching her handle her life this way reminds me that independence is a muscle; if you teach your kids how to use it, they grow strong without you having to push.

    My youngest, now a high school senior, is also preparing for college. She has a different personality but the same drive. She does her research. She looks up scholarships. She treats her future like something she is shaping, rather than something that is happening to her. I see two young women who understand the financial reality of higher education but aren’t intimidated by it.

    I’m happy my kids are taking their own paths

    There is immense pride in the fact that my daughters are finding their own way in life, but there is also a quiet ache. You spend years pouring into your children. Then, suddenly, you are watching them become adults who no longer want to live the life you envisioned for them.

    Avoiding college debt gave me a certain kind of freedom. Teaching my daughters about money and independence gave them the freedom to make choices. Seeing them use those choices to stretch beyond my experiences feels like the true return on everything I poured into them.

    The goal was never to avoid college. It was about creating a foundation strong enough for them to choose their own direction. Watching them do that is the greatest return on investment I could ever receive.

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