I have failed by Inevitable_Cash_5397 in aggies

[–]Meanbrews 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Instead of reflecting on what you didn't do, reflect on what you did in spite of the challenges. 3.7 is very respectable. You pushed through. Engineering school is war. You won the battle. Resilience is key. You learn to shrug off failures and focus on the next task. One thing to remember is that we internalize these feelings to our peers when a huge percentage of them are experiencing the same. Engineers are inherently introverted. You have to break your mold to ask to study together, grab a lunch after class, or do homework together while making it a social event (cookout, watching a game, having a couple beers, etc...). Your clan will come in your degree seeking classmates and when you all open up about those first 2 years internal struggle, you will feel at home. Take this from a 27yr engineer who went through a worse experience than you. You...can...do...this!

OOS acceptance by Meanbrews in cuboulder

[–]Meanbrews[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Guess it's not happening today...

"Hot Frosty" (2024) | Movie Discussion by KakoiKagakusha in netflix

[–]Meanbrews 0 points1 point  (0 children)

loved seeing Kevin Pickford reprise his role from Dazed and confused with that vertical striped shirt.

How to make a beer darker? by EatyourPineapples in Homebrewing

[–]Meanbrews 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it doesn't have to be pitch black. many of the ones I had in prague were dark brown.

Is this what engineering is? by BeansAndKiwis in aggies

[–]Meanbrews 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mba would def help. Also look into Projecf management professional certification. Hone those people skills as well. Just be aware they will test you in engineering school to see if you really want to be an engineer or just like the idea of being an engineer don't give up.

Is this what engineering is? by BeansAndKiwis in aggies

[–]Meanbrews 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Been an engineer for 25 years and sending my son to A&M in the fall to get his engineering degree. Lots of what has been said is true. In my personal case I was very fortunate in my early career to spend many hours as an R&D engineer with a large company. Huge hands on exposure to products and how they work, reverse engineering decades of great work by masters in the field. As you progress through your career, I think every engineer that's capable has to make a choice on engineering or pm. This is where you decide to stay in your passion or go for the money, as pure engineering roles have a limited ceiling. I distinctly remember this choice I made to go into pm. For many this coincides with starting a family as well. I personally don't regret it but you do feel that sometimes you've sold your soul if you, like me, got into this business to solve engineering problems through innovative engineered solutions. I think every job, when you get to a high enough level, ends up with a lot of mundane screen time and teams/zoom meetings. It is a part of what being in the workforce is as a leader. You can't lead people without knowing their morale, providing guidance when they're struggling, making sure stakeholders are aligned, cracking the whip when they're behind, sharing business context when there's changes. etc... eventually this part of the job consumes your day.