I have to let you all in on something.

At this point in my career I’m privileged to mentor a lot of young people, especially veterans and college students. And every so often they’re like really excited to meet me and say they would like to be like me. This totally blows my mind because they go to like MIT, Stanford, or Purdue ….and they’re usually in the second year of a PHD and they run their cybersecurity competition team and speak 9 languages or something….

I was a TERRIBLE youth. Yea, I eventually went to DePaul which is respectable and I have three okay undergrad degrees - merely because I had no choice but to enlist at 17 and the military kicked the crap out of me. I went to community college first the hard way around. I almost didn’t graduate from high school. I was a miserable, unhappy, uncool gnc goth kid who hacked computers and swore a lot. Those schools would have .blown their noses at my application and probably banned me from the campus for being a delinquent.

What I want to say is if you’re one of those rock star young people, I’m super impressed by you, and you’ve picked one hell of a role model. Keep it up, and don’t burn out.

If you’re that totally screwed up teenager, though, I might not get to see you at awards ceremonies and touted by the top professors at cons, but you can make it too. Even if nobody is ever in your corner.

@hacks4pancakes
FWIW, I was a high school fuck-up. Barely graduated HS, but tested so high that I got into a good college. Lots of factors made sure that didn't work out well, but a big one was me. Worked as a chef, nightclub bartender, doorman, and scrounged for rent for years. Worked for several failed startups in sysadmin, networking, etc. until I landed with you ne'er-do-wells.

For those of you who know what you want in college and go straight into it, I laud you! For the rest of us, it's totally possible and bringing different perspectives and life experiences into Security definitely has their benefits.

@johnnie @hacks4pancakes I was obsessed with computers but none of the colleges in my area offered computer science (and I didn't even know that it was a thing.) So I took a couple of math classes and then dropped out to go work a tech support job. Finally went back to college at night while supporting a family and got my AS in CS in 2015 at age 38.